Professor Receives Gold Disk Award from Computer-Using Educators, Inc.
Lesley Farmer, a professor in the Educational Psychology, Administration
and Counseling Department at CSULB, has been honored by Computer-Using Educators,
Inc. (CUE) as this year's recipient of its Gold Disk Award.
Founded in 1978, CUE is a non-profit California corporation whose goal
is to promote the integration of technology in the classroom in all disciplines
and at all education levels from preschool through college. With a membership
of more than 7,000 active educational professionals, CUE is one of the largest
organizations of its type in the country.
The Gold Disk is CUE's oldest recognition program, and the award recognizes
outstanding and sustained achievement in educational technology for teaching
and education as well as substantial contributions to the association.
“It's a real honor to be selected for the Gold Disk Award. It is a rare
honor from a nationally regarded organization,” noted Farmer, who is the
third CSULB faculty member -- along with the College of Education's Jean
Casey and Ann Lathrop -- to be so recognized. “I hope the impact of this
award is the recognition of the kind of people who run our library media
program.”
She feels she was recognized, in part, for her recent creation of a series
of videotapes and Web-based resources promoting information literacy done
in partnership with KOCE-TV and the Orange County Department of Education.
She also has authored nearly 20 books.
Farmer writes for both library educators and educational practitioners.
“My core audiences are those school library media teachers who want to do
a better job, be it collaborating with the school community to incorporate
technology or helping students become information literate,” she pointed
out.
Most recently, Farmer gave a workshop on “Produced with Producer!” at the
2005 CUE Conference in Palm Springs. She spoke on “Now You See It! Visual
Literacy in the Digital Age” and “Fast and Easy Teacher Tools.” She also
served on the conference planning committee and chaired the Library Media
Educators Special Interest Group (SIG). In addition, she had two books recently
published, Digital inclusion, teens, and your library: Exploring the
issus and acting on them and Technology-infused instruction for
the educational community: A guide for school library specialists.
As a longtime member of the International Association of School Librarians
and chair of their information literacy committee, Farmer has been invited
by the IASL Vice-President (SIGs) at Hong Kong University to visit the famed
Chinese campus to teach and serve as an external evaluator for their program.
Farmer, a Los Alamitos resident, received her bachelor of arts in English
from Whitman College and her master's in library science from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She served in Tunisia as a member of the
Peace Corps before receiving her doctorate from Temple University in Philadelphia
in 1981. She joined Virginia Commonwealth University and later worked for
15 years as a K-12 library media teacher and as an adjunct faculty at San
Jose State University.