The Great Online, Where Young Minds Roam Freely
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential
“Best of the Internet”
Ellen SiminoffPresident & CEO, Shmoop
Nov. 20, 2009
Serendipity Rule #1:
Follow Your Heart
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 3
‘Man plans and God laughs.’
Very often, in life and business, you won’t end up doing what you think you’re going to do.
‘Man plans and God laughs.’
Very often, in life and business, you won’t end up doing what you think you’re going to do.
I Fell in Love with Business and Media(Dad Forgave Me... Eventually.)
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 4
My First (and Only) Study Partner at Stanford Business School…
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 5
…Became my husband
Serendipity Rule #2:
Don’t Underestimate the Importance of Luck and Timing
Media Was About to Change Drastically. But Nobody Really Knew “How”
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 7
LATimes.comDec 21, 1996
I Joined Yahoo! in 1995
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 88
Serendipity Rule #3:
Luck Favors those Who Pay Attentionand Adapt Quickly
1996: Move Fast or Get Eaten
1997: We Evolved Constantly, Relentlessly
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 11
1999: Email, Sports, Entertainment, Local, …
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 12
2000: Shopping, IM, …
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 13
2001: Finance, Kids, Jobs, Music, Movies, etc.
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 14
Serendipity Rule #4:
Reinvent Yourself (or Somebody Else Will)
Along Came Google
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 16Google in 2000
GMGM
Great Companies Often Fail to Adapt
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 17
Chevy Truck
Clayton Christensen,Harvard Business School
But We’d Never Make that Mistake in Our Own Intellectual and Personal Lives, Right?
• Literature teaches us that complacency is a fatal flaw
• On a happier note… Free Shmoop T-Shirts!– Name the character– Name the novel/play– Name the author
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 18
We Have Something for Everyone
• Email us if you’d like bookmarks
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 19
Serendipity Rule #5:
Behind Every Brave First Leap…
… Is a Strong Nudge in the Right Direction
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 21
“Shmoop” (v., Yiddish slang):
To give a nudge in the right direction
Teacher Librarians are theUltimate Shmoopers!
You Shmoop Students
• Rules of the road & online ethics• How to be savvy online researchers, consumers, and publishers• Proper citation & avoiding plagiarism• Online safety and etiquette
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 24
You Shmoop Parents
• Reinforce good student habitsat home– Tips on how to monitor usage– What sites are ok to use– Avoiding plagiarism
• Access options for all homes
• Checking up on assignments, grades, and teacher communications through your school’s website
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 25
You Shmoop Fellow Teachers
• Get over the technology inferiority complex– Some teachers feel overmatched by their
students, or think their students already know everything cool about the Internet
• Play the role of – Scout & Filter– Promoter & Trainer– Cheerleader & Supporter
• And, occasionally, you might need to help students in spite of their teachers– My daughter’s Ethiopia research project
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 26
Now… In this Fast-Changing World, How to Shmoop
Oneself?
Teacher Librarians are Already on the Cutting Edge
• We know this well. You were the first and most vocal supporters (and constructive critics) of Shmoop
• But… we’re facing a lot of uncertainty – Shrinking budgets, especially for Libraries– Technological change is hard to keep pace with
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 28
Your Role is More Critical than Ever
• Libraries are the Facebook of the School– A social hub & discovery point with free-
flowing information
• This is the Wild West– Boston-area Prep School going all-Kindle;
removing all print books from its library
• The Wild West Needs Sheriffs– Be mentors, researchers, guidance
counselors, police officers of the digital revolution inside your school
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 29
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 30
www.shmoop.com
"The language is totally student-
friendly... ...a very cool site."
"The language is totally student-
friendly... ...a very cool site."
“A website you can trust”
“A website you can trust”
How We Started Shmoop
• A Moment of Serendipity
• Most online homework resources left something to be desired
• We wanted a pro-learning resource for our kids
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 31
Students & Teachers Say…
“Shmoop has enriched my teaching and made literature
accessible to ALL my students!”
- Martha, HS teacher
“Shmoop has enriched my teaching and made literature
accessible to ALL my students!”
- Martha, HS teacher
“Shmoop makes me actually want to
work.”- Stephanie, 19
“Shmoop makes me actually want to
work.”- Stephanie, 19
“Shmoop is intentionally about the
joy of learning.”- Paul, HS teacher
“Shmoop is intentionally about the
joy of learning.”- Paul, HS teacher
Quotes from Shmoop focus groups of HS and College students, April 2008Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 32
“This website is my dream come true”
- Noel, 20
“This website is my dream come true”
- Noel, 20
What is Shmoop?
• Digital learning guides that make learning fun and relevant for students– Deep analysis, questions, quotes, trivia,
multimedia, loads of links
• Written by educators and experts – primarily Ph.D. students from Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley– >90% of Shmoop writers have taught at the
high school or college level
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 33
Things You’ll Learn on Shmoop
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 34
The Portrait of a Lady (written in 1880) shares a lot in common with TV’s “Gossip Girl”
The Portrait of a Lady (written in 1880) shares a lot in common with TV’s “Gossip Girl”
Emily Dickinson was a packratEmily Dickinson was a packrat
Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce picked bar fights together in Paris
Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce picked bar fights together in Paris
Albert Einstein's 7th-grade teacher told him he "would never get anywhere in life." True story.
Albert Einstein's 7th-grade teacher told him he "would never get anywhere in life." True story.
Shmoop Literature
• Help make literature fun and relevant for your students
• “Why Should I Care?”• Themes• Quote analysis• Plot analysis• Character analysis• Literary devices• Study questions• Trivia• Best of the Web
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 35
Shmoop US History
• Analysis from multiple points of view
• Events, People, Quotes
• Trivia, Glossaries
• Links to multimedia, primary sources, and more
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 36
Shmoop Poetry
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 37
Demystify poetry
• Close Reading (line-by-line)• Deep analysis of Symbolism, Themes, Meter, Sound, Setting…• Trivia• Study Questions• Best of the Web (primary sources, photos, audio, video, etc.)
• Now the largest poetry analysis site on the Web
“Smart and consistently humorous”
- Academy of American Poets (poets.org)
“Smart and consistently humorous”
- Academy of American Poets (poets.org)
Shmoop’s “Best of the Web”
• Links are carefully selected by Shmoop’s writers
• Audio, video, photos, art, primary sources, historical documents
• TV and Movies
• Books
• Websites
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 38
NEW Shmoop CivicsBecause Civics Shouldn’t be Boring
• Government, politics, law
• Heated issues that students care about
• A line-by-line analysis of the Constitution
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 39
NEW Shmoop BestsellersLet Your Inner Fan Feast
• Use “Pop Lit” to teach literary analysis
• Twilight• New Moon• Eclipse• Harry Potter… • Many more coming
soon
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 40
NEW Shmoop BiographyGet to Know the Big Cheeses
• 31 bios and counting
• Authors, poets, political leaders, inventors, …
• Back-stories, fun anecdotes, multimedia, personal letters
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 41
NEW Shmoop MusicListen and Learn
• Analyze lyrics like poetry– Lyrics are often a less
intimidating intro to poetry
• Historical context
• “Behind the music” stories
• Technical analysis of rhythm, songwriting, instrumentation
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 42
NUEVO Shmoop Literatura
• Spanish translations of our most popular literature summaries
• A “bridge” for ESL students
• Or great practice for students learning Spanish
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 43
NEW: Shmoop on iPhone, Kindle, NookPut a Ph.D. in Your Pocket
• Shmoop is a top educational publisher on many devices
• 400 guides on the Web• 300+ eBooks on Kindle• 250 iPhone/iPod Apps• 200 eBooks on B&N Nook
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 44
How to Cite Shmoop
• Shmoop automatically generates citations for students in MLA, APA, or Chicago formats
• Our About Us section includes our background and academic credentials to help establish authority
• Shmoop teaches students about the perils of plagiarism and encourages original thought
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 45
Shmoop for Educators
Shmoop University, Inc. Confidential 46
• A tour of Shmoop designed for educators
• Ideas and examples from teachers who use Shmoop in the classroom
• Much more coming soon
www.shmoop.com/teachers/
Link to Us: http://www.shmoop.com
Follow Us on Twitter: @helloshmoop
Ellen Siminoff – ellen at shmoop . com
We’ll Stick Around for a Bit (Look for Brady in the Shmoop Shirt)
© 2009, Shmoop University, Inc.http://www.shmoop.com