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The 2026 Hawaii School Library Conference, centered on the theme "Think. Create. Share. Grow." invites school library professionals to dive deep into the four domains of the AASL Standards Framework for Learners. This theme is a call to action, emphasizing the pivotal role school librarians play in empowering students to become ethical, critical, and collaborative citizens in the digital age.

What to Expect

Through engaging keynotes, hands-on workshops, and collaborative sessions, we will explore practical strategies to:

  • 🧠 Think (Inquire & Analyze): Equip students with the critical thinking and research skills necessary to navigate complex information landscapes, evaluate sources, and become proficient users and creators of knowledge.

  • 💡 Create (Design & Construct): Foster innovation and digital literacy by integrating tools and practices that encourage learners to design solutions, construct new understandings, and express their ideas creatively.

  • 🤝 Share (Collaborate & Connect): Highlight the importance of the library as a hub for collaboration, ethical digital citizenship, and connection, promoting respectful dialogue and the responsible sharing of ideas and resources within the school and global community.

  • 🌱 Grow (Explore & Engage): Focus on the personal and professional development of both students and librarians, championing a mindset of continuous learning, adaptation, and reflective practice that fuels lifelong literacy and intellectual growth.


Join us in celebrating the vital work of Hawaii’s school librarians as we collectively cultivate the future-ready learner by embedding these essential domains into every facet of the school library program.

Friday August 7, 2026 12:50pm - 1:50pm HST
Artificial intelligence can generate lesson plans, summarize articles, answer research questions and completely fabricate information with alarming confidence. In this engaging and interactive session, Governor W. R. Farrington High School's librarian, Carolyn Kirio, teams up with “Lex,” an AI co-presenter, to explore the world of AI hallucinations: what they are, why they happen, and why librarians are uniquely positioned to help students navigate them.
Through live demonstrations, audience interaction, humorous AI dialogue, and practical instructional strategies, participants will learn how to teach verification, source evaluation, and algorithmic literacy in an age of increasingly convincing misinformation. Attendees will leave with ready-to-use lesson ideas, verification strategies, and approaches aligned to American Association of School Librarians standards that can immediately be adapted for their own libraries and classrooms, reinforcing the idea that while AI can generate confident answers instantly, truth still requires investigation, verification, and critical thinking.
In the age of AI, confidence is easy, truth takes work.

Speakers
avatar for Carolyn Kirio

Carolyn Kirio

Librarian, W. R. Farrington High
Carolyn H. Kirio is a Librarian at Farrington High School where she collaborates and instructs with teachers in project-based learning work. She has presented at state and national conferences and has coauthored Collaborating for Project-based Learning in Grades 9-12 (Linworth Publishing, 2008). In 2006 the American Association of School Librarians selected Kapolei High's library as one of the National School Library Media Programs of the Year (SLMPY), in 2015 awarded Kirio with the Information Technology Pathfinder Award, and in 2016 President Ob... Read More →
Friday August 7, 2026 12:50pm - 1:50pm HST
Naio Room

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