CHILDREN`S NEWSLETTER
Transcription
CHILDREN`S NEWSLETTER
CHILDREN’S NEWSLETTER Gary Byker Memorial Library September/October 2012 FALL STORY TIME BANNED BOOK WEEK Fall Story Time at the Gary Byker Memorial Library will be: GOING TO THE ZOO: Lions, and tigers, and bear, oh my! Sign-up will begin Tuesday, September 4th. The session will run for eight weeks beginning September 17th. Story times for 3 1/2 to 6 year olds will be offered Monday mornings from 11:15 to 12:00 noon. It will be a 45 minute program of songs, stories and simple crafts. Parents are more than welcome to help during craft time. Pre-registration is required. There is a $10.00 fee per child for non-residents. The Wee Wigglers will also be doing: GOING TO THE ZOO (Sign-up and fees are as above.) This eight week program for toddlers 18 months to 3 1/2 years accompanied by an adult lap is offered either Monday, Wednesday or Friday mornings from 10:15 to 11:00 a.m. Preregistration is required and space is limited, so sign-up early. The first twenty minutes is for stories, songs, and fingerplays. Then the parent helps their child make a craft. Lastly, the children play and the adults can chat. 1000 books before Kindergarten 1000 Books Before Kindergarten— This free program encourages parents to read 1000 books with their children before they enter school—a goal to help them learn to read for themselves. Your child will receive a small prize for every 250 books read to them (rubber ducky, book, etc.) and when they finish their name will be written on our rainbow wall. This club doesn’t end until your child’s first day of kindergarten, so don’t feel rushed—just enjoy the experience. Program begins September 17th. Many people think that book banning is something that only happened in the past, but last year over 450 attempts to ban books were made. Books are usually banned “with the best intentions—to protect others, frequently children, from difficult ideas and information.” However, the First Amendment guarantees our right to free speech which includes the right to read and write books that might be considered offensive to others. Banned Book Week (30th anniversary) will be held from September 30th to October 6th and our library will have banned books displays around the building. You might be surprised at which books have been banned! PUMPKIN CONTEST—October 22 to 29 Decorate and bring your pumpkin to the Gary Byker Library between Monday, October 22nd and Monday, October 29th to make our library festive. They will be judged and first prize will be a $25 gift certificate to Meijer. Other prizes will be awarded. This is a family event! Urban HayDay Hudsonville Urban HayDay will take place on October 27th, 2012 between 12 pm and 5 pm, and will be kicked off by a costume walk and contest hosted by Grand Valley Health Plan. There will be downtown hayrides, a market place held at the corner of Prospect and School Avenue and bus tours to hosted events. HayDay was created by the Hudsonville Chamber of Commerce. Have fun and join in! FUTURE PROGRAMS Pencil Basket Program –On Saturday, Nov. 10th children 8-12 can learn to make a pencil/flower basket. These would make wonderful Christmas gifts. Room is limited so sign-up starting Monday, October 29th. Dance to the Music will return with Miss CHILDREN’S MUSEUM The Gary Byker Memorial Library has partnered with the Grand Rapids Children’s Museum. Once a year, Gary Byker library card holders can “check -out” a day pass to the museum, good for up to six people. Regular admission to the museum is $7. The museum is located at 22 Sheldon Ave. N.E., Grand Rapids, MI 49503. (www.grcm.org) Ellie starting Wednesday, November 14th from 10:15 to 10:45. This is a walk-in program for kids 3 to 6. Christmas Programs for Story Time kids. These programs will include: songs, stories, crafts, and snacks. They are free but registration is necessary. Times and dates will be released as the programs approach. MITTEN AWARDS I was lucky to be on the Mitten Award Committee this year. The Mitten Award is designed “to recognize and promote quality literature for youth, ages 0-12, and the ability to communicate to that audience through literature.” The award was established in 1999. Our committee read over 300 children’s books and the following are the ones we felt showed children’s literature at its best. Mitten Winner Breaking Stalin’s Nose by Eugene Yelchin Breaking Stalin’s Nose is the story of 10 year old Sasha Zaichek, living with his father in the USSR under Stalin’s communist rule. He has spent his whole life waiting for the day when he will become a Soviet Young Pioneer, but then his father is arrested and everything Sasha has known and believed in begins to unravel. This book is an excellent springboard for informing children of all ages about world history and Communist governments in a format and style that directly appeals to them. Through humor and straightforward prose the reader can begin to understand what life as a child may have been like. Honor Books Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick Ben and Rose secretly wish their lives were different. Ben longs for the father he has never known. Rose dreams of a mysterious actress whose life she chronicles in a scrapbook. When Ben discovers a puzzling clue in his mother's room and Rose reads an enticing headline in the newspaper, both children set out alone on desperate quests to find what they are missing.. Set fifty years apart, these two independent stories--Ben's told in words, Rose's in pictures--weave back and forth with mesmerizing symmetry. The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate Ivan is an easygoing gorilla. Living at the Exit 8 Big Top Mall and Video Arcade, he has grown accustomed to humans watching him through the glass walls of his domain. He rarely misses his life in the jungle. In fact, he hardly ever thinks about it at all. Instead, Ivan thinks about TV shows he’s seen and about his friends Stella, an elderly elephant, and Bob, a stray dog. But mostly Ivan thinks about art and how to capture the taste of a mango or the sound of leaves with color and a well-placed line. Then he meets Ruby, a baby elephant taken from her family, and she makes Ivan see their home—and his own art— through new eyes. Balloons Over Broadway by Melissa Sweet In BALLOONS OVER BROADWAY: The True Story of the Puppeteer of Macy's Parade, Sweet uses mixed-media illustrations and a clear but charming text to explain the various versions of puppets and balloons Sarg made for the parade, each better than the last, until finally creating the helium-filled balloons we see today. With a gorgeous palette, sidebars of diagrams, archival photographs, and newspaper clippings, Sweet explores the legacy of a creative, fun-loving man who imbued his work with his own playful sensibility . Wonder by R.J. Palacio I won't describe what I look like. Whatever you're thinking, it's probably worse. August Pullman was born with a facial deformity that, up until now, has prevented him from going to a mainstream school. Starting 5th grade at Beecher Prep, he wants nothing more than to be treated as an ordinary kid—but his new classmates can’t get past Auggie’s extraordinary face. WONDER begins from Auggie’s point of view, but soon switches to include his classmates, his sister, her boyfriend, and others. These perspectives converge in a portrait of one community’s struggle with empathy, compassion, and acceptance. In a world where bullying among young people is an epidemic, this is a refreshing new narrative full of heart and hope. Best Book Apps for Kids - free or low cost. Nighty Night HD - Lovely app lets toddlers turn off the lights for bedtime. Age 2. ( iPad) Peek-A-zoo by Duck Duck Moose - Tots learn to recognize emotions and behaviors. Age 2. ( iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch) The Cat in the Hat—Perfect adaptation of classic Dr. Seuss mischief-maker. Age 4. (Android, iPad, iPhone, IPod Touch, Kindle Fire) Speech with Milo: Interactive Storybook - Creativity makes this engaging learning app a favorite. Age 4 (iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch) Don’t Let the Pigeon Run This App! - More than a storybook, app lets kids help craft the tales. Age 5. (iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch) The Magic School Bus: Oceans - Interactive storybook loaded with educational content. Age 6. (iPad) Bobo Explores Light - Thorough, and thoroughly entertaining, interactive science. Age 7 (iPad) Weird But True - Silly sounds and great graphics jazz up 300 fun facts. Age 7. (iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch) Shadow Ranch HD—Interactive Nancy Drew novel plus mini-games. Age 9. (iPad) Ultimate Dinopedia: The Most Complete Dinosaur Reference Ever - Realistic, scary art in dino lover’s dream database. Age 10 (iPad) 3D Bookshelf: Classic Literature Collection - Choice of books in ebook app are best for older readers. Age 12. (iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch) Parents need to know that this app has no objectionable contest, but most of the books require a reading level of at least the fifth grade. The kid-friendlist books in the collection are Little Women, Grimm’s Fairy Tales, and Tom Sawyer. The rest are on the level of A Tale of Two Cities. Yalsa Teen Book Finder - A free app to help teens, parents, librarians and educators who love Young Adult literature to access to the past three years of Yalsa (Young Adult Service Association) awards and lists. Age Teens and Adults. (iPhone, iPad, iTouch) FUN WEB SITES Shape Collage (www.shapecollage.com) This is a free software program that you can download to make picture collages in a variety of shapes with just a few mouse clicks. ROOM 108 (www.netrover.com/~kingskid/108) This site features a host of recorded stories, education games, and puzzles. DLTK-KIDS (www.dltk-kids.com) DTLK Kids offers terrific craft ideas for ages 2 and up. Some of the crafts need parental supervision, and many need a printer. The instructions are framed by a banner ad. JrChefsofAmerica (www.jrchefsofamerica) This site is home to an online cooking show for kids. The site's goal is to promote kids getting into the kitchen and cooking, as well as making healthier eating choices; there's also a focus on kitchen safety. The site doesn't have any advertising or outside links, and the content is age appropriate for tweens and up. The Toymaker (www.thetoymaker.com) Cheerful paper toys to print and assemble. This site features terrific, colorful content and no commercial messages, plus, it's free! Exploratorium (www.exploratorium.edu) This is a science website from the San Francisco museum of the same name. Kids don't need to register to use the site; the videos, interactive exercises and other features are free. Users are encouraged to follow the museum on Twitter, Facebook, and other social media sites to post comments and interact with other fans -- but can't comment on each and every section of the site. Summer Reading Club We had 528 children and teens join the summer reading club with almost 300 finishers. We had 84 kids and teens win raffle prizes. For best decorated star: Chloe Prins won first prize for cross stitching her star, next were Abby Foster, Hannah Gaffner, Seven Lewis, and Anna Mettler. J.B Miedema won the tickets to the Holland Aquatic Center, and Tyler Arntz won the Corn Hole game. Congratulations! We want to thank our sponsors: Pizza Hut, McDonalds, the White Caps, the Griffins, Dutch Village, Meijer, Horizon Sports Complex, the Holland Aquatic Center, Texas Roadhouse, the Friends of the Library and Hudsonville Lanes. We also want to thank Maranda from Fox 17 who got many of the sponsors for us and filmed a Summer Reading Club commercial here. Thanks to Ali Bendert who did a great music program for the little ones. Also a special shout out to the Girls on the Run from South Elementary who did the “stain glass” murals on our picture windows. They were more than awesome!!!!!! Chalk Art Winners Bat Program Mural Program FALL ACTIVITIES DOES A PUMPKIN SINK OR FLOAT? Fill a large clear storage container or aquarium with water. (If the weather is warm, you can do it outside). Have children make predictions of what will happen and graph the predictions. Do the experiments to determine if they were right or not. Make it interesting and get a few pumpkin sizes. You may hear predictions that the smaller pumpkins will float and the large will sink. (Pumpkins float) Talk about why they float... If older kids know the answers... have them run the activity. The pumpkin will float because its mass is less than the mass of water it displaces. This is due primarily because the inside of the pumpkin is hollow. PRESERVING LEAVES THE OLD FASHIONED WAY: Place your autumn colored leaves between two layers of wax paper. Cover with a cloth rag. Using a warm (not too hot) iron, press down on the wax covered leaves, sealing the wax paper together with the leaf in between. Cut your leaves out, leaving a narrow margin of wax paper around the leaf edge. __________ MICRO-WAVE METHOD You can preserve fall leaves in your microwave oven. Choose fresh leaves with the bright colors. Avoid fallen leaves that have already begun to dry. Place separate leaves in the Microwave oven on top of two pieces of paper towel. Cover them with one sheet of paper toweling. Run the oven for 30 to 180 seconds. Microwaves vary so watch carefully. The drier the leaves, the less time they will need. Be careful, if the leaves "cook" too long you could actually start a fire. If the leaves are curled on the edges they need more time. Let the leaves dry for a day or two and then finish the leaves with a sealant, such as an acrylic craft spray.