Julie Darling and Rebecca Lowe standing in front of the sign describing their AI Summit talk.
Resources, News and Updates

February News

Julie Darling and Rebecca Lowe standing in front of the sign describing their AI Summit talk.

The 2nd Annual Michigan Virtual AI Summit was a whirlwind! If you’re interested, you can find many of the presenter slides posted. To find these, follow the link, scroll down, and click the + next to the meeting room assignment.

It was lovely presenting with Chad Williams and Rebecca Lowe (pictured right) about policy, practice and the power of the school librarian…and how that all relates to A.I. I briefly met keynote speaker Ethan Mollick. His book Co-Intelligence is fascinating and should be the next A.I. book you read.

I’m currently at work on a secret project (send me all your productivity and motivational tips!) and so the newsletter and events will slow down a bit. You’ll likely hear from me every other month for 2025 – unless there’s something urgent that I simply can’t wait to share.


On Saturday, April 12th I’ll give a live STEM storytime at the Ypsilanti District Library.


I had a feature article in the December edition of Computers in Libraries magazine. Tips for Helping Little Computer Scientists and Little Hackers appeared in the print edition.

The American Library Association Youth Media Awards were just announced!

I’m particularly excited about the Newbery award winner The First State of Being which was also a National Book Award finalist. Caldecott honor and Coretta Scott King award winning My Daddy is a Cowboy is also delightful. Kwame Crashes the Underworld, a John Steptoe winner and Coretta Scott King honor is a really fun read and finally the Caldecott award winner Chooch Helped has really gorgeous illustrations. So many wonderful books on this list!

I’ve also been reading Unmasking A.I. and Infinite Education, two very different, but both timely and relevant books on A.I.

Author Julie Darling reading at Schuler Books
Uncategorized

December News

The STEM storytime at Schuler Books was really fun!

I read Little Hackers and Little Computer Scientists, we sang some songs from the guidebook and participants made Tasha’s decoders to use to send secret messages.

Author Julie Darling reading at Schuler Books

In January, I’ll take a break from writing this newsletter. I hope you all find some rest and rejuvenation after the hustle and bustle of the winter holiday season. I’m certainly looking forward to resting, recharging, and recalibrating. Do you make resolutions? Mine will be to establish a reasonable, regular schedule for working on my novels.


Forthcoming Events

On Tuesday, December 17th, I’ll speak on a panel at the Michigan Virtual 2nd Annual AI Summit.

If you’re there too, I’d love to connect!

I’m also reading Little Hackers for Iowa’s Computer Science Education Week on Thursday, December 12th. Anyone can register to attend here, you don’t have to be an Iowa resident. Consider checking out the additional events they have going on that week. They’re pulling out all the stops for this week-long computer science in education celebration.


Media

Ed Tech magazine published an article about the books and my inspiration. You can read Q&A: Embrace Age-Appropriate Computer Science Concepts for Elementary Students here.

I was also featured in Ann Arbor Family magazine. You can read Author Julie Darling Teaches Computer Science by the Book here.


What I’ve Been Reading

I’ve been diving into all things A.I. in preparation for my presentation and for some secret activities that I’ll tell you more about later on. There has been a lot of content dropped by several organizations, recently. 

UNESCO has been weighing in, with frameworks designed for students and teachers. The U.S. Department of Education, Office of Educational Technology has listening sessions,toolkits and more. I’m re-reading Co-Intelligence in anticipation of Dr. Mollick’s keynote at the forthcoming A.I. summit and of course pouring over our district content too. It’s a lot. I feel equally excited and terrified by how quickly everything is moving. I’m curious about your thoughts, share them in the comments?