Tag: #picturebooks
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Academic Play Books
Students often visit the library asking for “easy books.” They haven’t yet fallen in love with reading and hope to complete their obligation quickly. With experience, students gain enthusiasm and the desire to read longer texts, but for now, many are in a hurry. While watching General Conference in 2016, inspiration hit. I could write…
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Middle of the Map Inspiration
Picture books provide windows, mirrors, and sliding glass doors but for some reason we feel that cancer belongs in a picture frame. With sides to carefully enclose it. Reserved for charitable organizations to champion.
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Inclusive Picture Books
As realistic fiction, these books fill a need that talking animals cannot. Children who have never seen themselves in a book, now have a mirror.
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Joyful Animal Books
A beautiful cat climbed fences and dodged screaming kids to enter the library seven times on a cold February day. Three months later she needed a home – and was pregnant. So we are a cat family now, drawn to all things feline. Around that same time, I found Dianna Wilson Sirkovsky’s book, James’ Reading…
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Cancer Awareness
If children’s literature aims to represent all children, picture books about medical challenges need to be available and visible in libraries and bookstores.
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Optimistic Favorites
This week we received happy news at school. Teachers are now allowed to check out books for classroom use. Whoo hoo! Tangible books can be circulated again! That’s one step closer to storytime and reading with students! As I have helped kids of multiple ages with Zoom classes and assignments, the underlining frustration they have…
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Board books
I will be a Grandma soon! It’s time to add to my board book collection! My mom bought me The Sneetches when I was 17 and inscribed it with a message about starting a collection for her future grandchildren. So, when a high school daughter and I were in an art museum gift shop and…
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Welcome to my book blog :-)
On the first day of working at a school, the most important question to answer is… “What do you want the students to call you?” For a classified employee, a common option is to add “Miss” to your first name, combining the expected display of respect with the intimacy of first name usage. During my…
