Thursday, December 11, 2008

Our White House in USA TODAY!


USA Today on Our White House,Looking In,Looking Out "If books were measured like elections, this would win in a landslide."

The NCBLA publication Our White House Looking In, Looking Out has been named one of the best books of 2008 by The Horn Book Magazine, Publisher's Weekly, School Library Journal,and Amazon! Look for it in your local library or bookstore! All royalties from Our White House support the education and advocacy projects of the National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance!


To read more about the USA Today booklist go to:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/reviews/2008-12-10-roundup-kids-politics_N.htm

To read about all the riveting "Best Books" chosen this year by The Horn Book Magazine go to:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/books/fanfare/fanfare09.asp

And while you are there make sure you check out the parent and teacher sections of The Horn Book site for great ideas and suggestions to help kids become avid life long readers!

For PARENT resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/parents/default.asp

For EDUCATOR resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/educators/default.asp

Discover all the great books chosen as "Best Books of 2008"
For the School Library Journal's list:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6617203.html

For the Publisher's Weekly list:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6610357.html

For the Editors' Choice List at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=amb_link_7803252_5?ie=UTF8&plgroup=1&docId=1000297221&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=left-1&pf_rd_r=1J8MQ2QEPJBM01N60YAV&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=457473601&pf_rd_i=1239030011

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

More Holiday Reading Suggestions

Steven Kellogg recommends a story by Truman Capote...read on:
A Christmas Memory by Truman Capote is a poetic short story about the deep bond between a young boy and his elderly and eccentric spinster cousin who live with their emotionally remote extended family in a country house in the rural South. The two of them observe Christmas in a manner that celebrates their tender friendship. The generous spirit that blossoms between them as the holiday approaches galvanizes them into a shared project that reaches beyond the narrow horizons that confine them. Their story moves every member of our family every year when we read it aloud, and we recommend the joy of reading it aloud to everyone!
Author and illustrator of Pinkerton, Behave!, Johnny Appleseed, and over a hundred more, Stephen Kellogg is Vice President of the NCBLA. For more information, click here or visit his website!

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Give Books This Holiday Season!

Michael Dirda, Washington Post Book Critic Offers
"Ten Commandments of Book Giving"


"Last week, I began to think seriously about presents. 'Tis the season, after all. When little, I used to lie on the faded blue davenport in my family's living room and daydream about what I'd like to unwrap on Christmas morning. A gleaming silver six-gun in a tooled black leather holster. A gigantic Erector Set, with battery-operated motors. The plastic model kit for a three-masted frigate or a double-fuselaged P-38 Lightning. Cool stuff, in other words. I could never quite fathom why Santa even bothered with socks and underwear and heavy winter clothes, usually in wool.

Of course, now that I'm -- sigh -- older, I still think a lot about presents. These days, though, I speculate on what to give rather than receive. Happily, I know from years of experience that books really do make the best holiday gifts -- plus, they're easy to wrap. Just follow these 10 holiday commandments: . . . "

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/04/AR2008120402676.html

Friday, December 5, 2008

Our White House named one of the "Best Books" of 2008 by The Horn Book Magazine!



The NCBLA's Book Created to Promote Literacy and Historical Literacy,Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out is chosen as one of The Horn Book Magazine's 2008 Fanfare Best Books for Young People!




The NCBLA is honored that The Horn Book Magazine, one of our nation's leading children's book reviewing agents, has chosen Our White House;Looking In, Looking Out as one of the best books for young people published this year!

We would also like to congratulate all the other book creators who have been chosen; any of the selected titles would make wonderful holiday gifts for young people! And we send special congratulations to our fellow NCBLA board members M.T. Anderson (The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing , Traitor to the Nation, Volume II: The Kingdom on the Waves)
and David Macaulay (The Way We Work) for their selection to The Horn Book's 2008 Fanfare List! David Macaulay created the wry, witty cover for Our White House as well as the cover for his own book. Is this the first time that an illustrator has created the cover for two books on The Horn Book Fanfare List? It would be interesting to know if it has happened previously, and who was the illustrator, and what were the books? It would also be interesting to know if any one author has ever had more than one book on The Horn Book Fanfare Best Books of the Year list!

The NCBLA is thrilled that Our White House has also been chosen as a "Best Book of the Year" by School Library Journal, Publisher's Weekly, and also by the Editors' at Amazon.com. If parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and friends are looking for suggestions for wonderful books to give to young people this holiday season, these lists are a great place to start!

To read about all the riveting "Best Books" chosen this year by The Horn Book Magazine go to:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/books/fanfare/fanfare09.asp

And while you are there make sure you check out the parent and teacher sections of The Horn Book site for great ideas and suggestions to help kids become avid life long readers!

For PARENT resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/parents/default.asp

For EDUCATOR resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/educators/default.asp

Discover all the great books chosen as "Best Books of 2008"
For the School Library Journal's list:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6617203.html

For the Publisher's Weekly list:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6610357.html

For the Editors' Choice List at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=amb_link_7803252_5?ie=UTF8&plgroup=1&docId=1000297221&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=left-1&pf_rd_r=1J8MQ2QEPJBM01N60YAV&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=457473601&pf_rd_i=1239030011

Great Holiday Reading Choices from the NCBLA Board!

NCBLA Board Members Susan Cooper and Carol Greenwald Share Favorite Holiday Book Memories!

NCBLA president Mary Brigid Barrett here. Recently I posed a question to all the members of our esteemed NCBLA Board—What is one of your favorite holiday reads? For your holiday pleasure, my blogging assistant Colleen and I will be posting their responses!

From Susan Cooper, author of The Dark Is Rising, Green Boy, The Selkie Girl, Matthew’s Dragon, and many more delightful books for young people:

For me it’s John Masefield’s THE BOX OF DELIGHTS, and at first I didn’t even read it as a book, it was a BBC radio serial. The high point of our day when I was a kid – and there weren’t too many high points, this being England during the bombings of World War Two – was a program called The Children’s Hour at 5pm. They dramatized THE BOX OF DELIGHTS, which is a wonderful Christmas fantasy, and it bewitched me. I even remembered the incidental music, and 30 years later put it into my book THE DARK IS RISING as the magical music heard at key moments by its hero Will. (You can hear it too, if you can find it – it’s the Second Intermezzo from Wolf-Ferrari’s opera THE JEWELS OF THE MADONNA. And do read THE BOX OF DELIGHTS! )

Carol Greenwald, the Director of Development for Children’s Programming at WGBH/PBS in Boston and the executive producer of PBS programs Arthur, Postcards from Buster, Curious George, and the new PBS children’s program Martha Speaks--all based on children's books-- shares this suggestions for a great holiday read:

I’m kind of partial to “Little Tree”, the ee cummings poem. There are several nicely illustrated versions of it. I can’t find the one we used to read to our kids but there’s at least one on Amazon right now.

To find out more about Susan Cooper and her books, go to:

http://www.thelostland.com/

To find out more about PBS’s great educational children’s programs that promote reading and books! – got to:

http://pbskids.org/

And check out a blog listing below for holiday reading recommendations from NCBLA Vice- President Katherine Paterson!


School Library Journal Chooses Our White House as one of the Best Children's Books of 2008!


The NCBLA's creative tour de force, Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out has been Chosen by School Library Journal as one of the "Best Books" Published for Young People in 2008!

Librarians are our heroes, so this wonderful distinction given to Our White House means a great deal! We are thrilled and grateful! Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out was created by the NCBLA to ignite young people's interest in the history of our nation and inspire them to read more. We also hope that it can be used by librarians, teachers, and parents to engage young people in critical thinking, urging them to seek information from multiple, reliable sources! And all of the royalties from Our White House will help the NCBLA continue its educational outreach as well as advocacy work fighting for young people's educational opportunities and for America's libraries!

Thank you School Library Journal!

To read about all of the incredible books on School Library Journal's Best Books for 2008, go to:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6617203.html

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Holiday Reading Suggestions


Katherine Paterson shares her recommendations for Christmas stories.


NCBLA board member Katherine Paterson, author of Bridge to Terabithia, Jacob Have I Loved, and The Great Gilly Hopkins, writes:
Two magical books from my own childhood Christmases which may, or may not still be in print, are: A Tree for Peter, written and illustrated by Kate Seredy and Maud and Miska Petersham's glowing illustration of the Christmas story, The Christ Child. Two more recent books I love are: The Nativity, which is the Gospel accounts illustrated by Julie Vivas (with a really pregnant Mary being hoisted onto the donkey by Joseph and a bare-naked baby Jesus) and N. Scott Momaday's Native American Christmas Story, Circle of Wonder.
To learn more about Katherine Paterson, visit her website!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Find Great Gift Books for Your Kids This Holiday Season!

Holiday Gift Books: How to Find Just the Right Books for the Young People in Your Life!

When you give a book to a child or teen at Hanukah, Christmas, or Kwanza it helps create emotional bonds that link love, family, and tradition to reading. It also sends a message that books and story can be as enjoyable as toys! Especially if you take the time to read that gift book together!

We asked Natacha Pouech, librarian and book buyer, for some pertinent suggestions about choosing and buying books for holiday gift giving. Natacha has many years of experience connecting kids to books. She was the Children’s Services Librarian at the Hinesburg Public Library in Hinesburg, Vermont and was responsible for buying all the children’s, middle grade, and young adult materials servicing children from toddlers through to high school students. Natacha has also worked as the children’s book buyer for a number of independent book stores.

Finding a special book for the child you love can be an overwhelming task given the huge selection available at your neighborhood bookstore. Natacha offers the following advice:

Find out what the child or teen has already read. Ask what authors he or she likes to read. Discover the subjects and topics that interest him or her. Does he or she prefer fiction or nonfiction, fantasy or reality?

Don’t be afraid to ask your neighborhood children’s librarian or children’s bookseller for suggestions or advice.

Read your local newspaper’s book section. Many newspapers and magazines feature books suggestions this time of year.

Be consumer savvy. The books with the biggest marketing budgets are not necessarily the best books for your child or teen. And conversely, a book you’ve never heard of may contain the story that changes your child’s or teen’s life. Natacha says, “We all fall victim at one time or another to ‘judging a book by its cover.’ Just because a book jacket may look promising does not mean the story is going to live up to the cover. However, an interesting looking book jacket is always reason enough for me to open it up! And remember to take into consideration the book’s content—is it pertinent to the age level of the child? I think great care needs to be taken when choosing a book, especially if a young reader is at a higher reading level. Just because a child reads at an older level does not necessarily mean that he or she is ready for ‘mature’ subject matter or content.”

Consider all the possibilities: great literature and fun, entertaining books. Natacha says, “Think of books in terms of chocolate mousse and a Hershey Kiss. There are moments for both!”

Monday, December 1, 2008

Holiday Reading!

Great Seasonal Reading to Share With the Young People in Your Life!

For a great list of new holiday books, check out The Horn Book Magazine's timely suggestions for seasonal reading with your kids! Make a pot of hot chocolate and cuddle up together for family reading fun!

Find The Horn Book Magazine's recommendations for great holiday reading-- and be sure and review The Horn Book's fascinating website, at:

http://www.hbook.com/magazine/reviews/group/holiday08.asp

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Great Family Field Trips!

The Season Abounds With
Great Children's Book Illustration Exhibits!


Take a break from mall madness: grab your kids and escape into a world of of children's book illustration art! You will discover great art and great books to share with the young people in your life, making your holiday season all the more memorable!


At the Art Institute of Chicago Museum in Chicago, Illinois:


The Bill Peet Storybook Menagerie

August 23, 2008–May 24, 2009
Galleries 15–16

Overview: After a 27-year career working as Walt Disney’s principle animator and main “storyman,” Bill Peet devoted himself full-time to writing and illustrating children’s books. Along with sketches and storyboards from his Disney days, this exhibition features original works of art from 14 of Peet’s 34 published books, including Buford the Little Bighorn, The Caboose Who Got Loose, Capyboppy, Chester the Worldly Pig, Cowardly Clyde, Ella, How Droofus the Dragon Lost His Head, Kermit the Hermit, Pamela Camel, The Wump World, and the Caldecott Honor Book Bill Peet: An Autobiography.

For more information go to: http://www.artic.edu/aic/


At the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City:

Drawing Babar: Early Drafts and Watercolors
September 19, 2008, through January 4, 2009

A dignified elephant, dressed in a green suit and wearing a yellow crown, walks upright across the page. This image—both absurd and endearing—has become instantly recognizable to several generations of readers throughout the world. The exhibition Drawing Babar returns visitors to the two essential moments of Babar's creation: when Jean de Brunhoff and, years later, his son Laurent, set down their initial thoughts on paper. Their earliest drafts, shown in juxtaposition with their finished watercolors, allow viewers to track the changes, both subtle and substantive, that both men made as they refined their work, bringing together word and image with elegance and exuberance.

In 2004 the Morgan acquired the working drafts and printer-ready watercolors for Histoire de Babar, le petit éléphant (1931), the first book by Jean de Brunhoff (1899–1937), and Babar et ce coquin d'Arthur (1946), the first book by Laurent de Brunhoff (b. 1925). Together these two collections—shown virtually in their entirety for the first time—provide an extraordinary record of the working methods of the two men, both painters turned storytellers. From the naming of Babar himself (first called simply "Baby Elephant") to the introduction of the beloved character Queen Celeste—not present in Jean de Brunhoff's first draft—these early sketches and watercolors provide an intimate look at the creation of an enduring fictional world.

Supplementing the Morgan's important collection of manuscripts and drawings are splendid copies of first editions of the earliest Babar books, notable for their large format and stunning graphic appeal.

For more information go to: http://www.themorgan.org/exhibitions/exhibition.asp?id=4


At the Eric Carle Museum in Western Massachusetts:

Over Rainbows and Down Rabbit Holes: The Art of Children's Books
November 11, 2008 - March 8, 2009

This exhibition features over 80 works of art created specifically for children’s books, drawn exclusively from the outstanding collection assembled by Les and Zora Charles. These original works of art will inspire the imagination and celebrate the creativity of making picture books for readers of all ages. Selections include examples from Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Peter Rabbit and Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, but the majority of the exhibition focuses on the genius of this genre working in the post-World War II period. Artists on view include: Chris Van Allsburg (Jumanji); Kinuko Y. Craft (Cinderella); Maurice Sendak (The Bee-Man of Orn); Leo and Diane Dillon (Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears); Trina Schart Hyman (Little Red Riding Hood); Gerald McDermott (Arrow to the Sun); Barry Moser (Jump On Over); and Jerry Pinkney (John Henry).

For more information go to: http://www.picturebookart.org/Home


At The Rhode Island School of Design Museum in Providence, Rhode Island:

Building Books: The Art of David Macaulay is the first in-depth museum exhibition devoted to this prolific author and artist. Macaulay [RISD '69, Architecture] has demystified the workings and origins of everything from simple gadgets to elaborate architectural structures. A favorite with readers of all ages, the Caldecott Medal-winning artist and MacArthur Fellow is the subject of an exhibition that takes a look at his artistic process and extensive body of work, including The New Way Things Work, Castle, Cathedral, City, Mill, Ship, and Mosque. Building Books presents a diverse range of exhibition materials, including original works of art, studies, sketchbooks, book dummies, manuscripts and correspondence, artifacts (including hand-built ship models), stuffed specimens, reference materials, travel mementos, and a video documentary about the artist, produced for the exhibition. Macaulay's books bring together the worlds of art, history, science and fantasy.

For more information go to: http://www.risdmuseum.org/


At the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington DC:

Picturing Words: The Power of Book Illustration

Nov. 21, 2008-Jan. 4, 2010
This exhibition showcases the richness of illustrated books through history. Pictures influence, inform and inspire in many ways. They add beauty, color and life to the printed page, offering a feast for the eye as well as food for the mind. Visitors may explore the power of pictures through 40 featured rare books from the Smithsonian Libraries' collections in science, history and art, as well as objects from the Museum’s Graphic Arts Division.

For more information go to: http://americanhistory.si.edu/index.cfm



Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Our White House Named One of the "BEST BOOKS" of 2008!



OUR WHITE HOUSE: LOOKING IN,
LOOKING OUT
is named one of the best books for young people in 2008!


Both Publisher's Weekly and Amazon have named Our White House Looking In, Looking Out one of the best books for young people in 2008! Hurrah! Thank you PW and Amazon!!!

Read more about all of the terrific books named by Publisher's Weekly and Amazon as great books for young people; go to:

For the Publisher's Weekly list:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6610357.html


For the Editor's Choice List at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=amb_link_7803252_5?ie=UTF8&plgroup=1&docId=1000297221&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=left-1&pf_rd_r=1J8MQ2QEPJBM01N60YAV&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=457473601&pf_rd_i=1239030011

Saturday, November 15, 2008

NCBLA NEWS ITEM

Dominican University's Graduate School
of Library and Information Science asks the
National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance
to serve in an advisory capacity for their new
Butler Children's Literature Center!


Susan Roman, the Dean of Dominican University's Graduate School of Library and Information Science, has asked the National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance to serve on the advisory board for their recently established Butler Children's Literature Center. The NCBLA is thrilled and honored to serve and will be represented at Advisory Board Meetings by NCBLA president and executive director Mary Brigid Barrett.

Established in 2007 with a gift from the Butler Family Foundation, GSLIS’s forthcoming Butler Literature Center seeks to become one of the nation’s premier centers for the study of children’s and young adult literature. The Butler Literature Center will serve as an examination center for children’s and young adult books published annually in the United States, and as an historical collection of the best children’s and young adult literature published nationally and internationally. The Center will also serve as an evidence-based, best practices professional collection in support of the application and integration of children’s and young adult literature in classrooms, libraries, childcare centers, and homes. Open to educators, scholars, researchers, librarians, teachers, parents, and other care providers for children, the Center plans to offer a robust selection of programs, conferences, continuing education courses, web resources, and research opportunities. University partners include the School of Education and the Rebecca Crown Library.

For more information visit
Dominican University's Graduate School
of Library and Information Science website at:
http://www.dom.edu/academics/gslis/home/




Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Great Event In New England!

Celebrating James Marshall and
Humor in Children's Books!!!


Tuesday, November 18, 2008, 7:00 P.M. Free admission
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street (corner of Main Street)
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Please join this lively celebration! In honor of the new collection, George and Martha: The Complete Stories of Two Best Friends (Houghton Mifflin), we will share an evening of appreciation for its author, James Marshall, and an exploration of humor in children’s books. A panel discussion will include several authors who contributed essays to the book. What was the creator of George and Martha like? What is the influence of James Marshalls work? How do children respond to his books? What makes a book funny?


Roger Sutton, editor in chief of The Horn Book Magazine, will moderate this discussion. He will be joined by authors and illustrators Susan Meddaugh and David Wiesner, children’s literature expert Anita Silvey and Cambridge school librarian Susan Moynihan, who introduces first graders to George and Martha each year.


This event is free and open to the public. No tickets are required. Books will be available for purchase and autographing. Co-sponsored by Houghton Mifflin Company, the Cambridge Public Library, The Foundation for Children’s Books, The Horn Book, Inc. and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
For more information, please call 617-349-4409 or check

http://www.cambridgepubliclibrary.org




Saturday, November 8, 2008

David Macaulay Creates Cover Illustration for Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out!



Award Winning Author/Illustrator
David Macaulay
Shares Sketches of
Our White House:
Looking In, Looking Out
Book Jacket Cover at www.ourwhitehouse.org!


See the way David Macaulay thinks! Take a look at the visual evolution of Macaulay's wry and witty cover for the NCBLA publication Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out! Children of all ages find Macaulay's sketches fascinating. You can find Macaulay's preliminary sketches at the NCBLA's Our White House companion educational website www.ourwhitehouse.org

And after you check out David Macaulay's sketches, be sure to wander through the rest of the www.ourwhitehouse.org where you will find stories, poetry, historical resources, and much more!

The sketches you see here are copyrighted by David Macaulayand the NCBLA. To see many more of David Macaulay's preliminary Our White House sketches go to:
http://www.ourwhitehouse.org/dmsketches.html

To explore the Our White House website, go to:
http://www.ourwhitehouse.org





Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Get the Scoop on Presidential Puppies in Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out!


President Elect Obama is Looking for a Puppy for Sasha and Malia!

The First Presidential Pups Belonged to George Washington!



George Washington's hounds-- Sweet Lips, Tipsy, Tipler, Loe, Searcher, Taster, and Drunkard never got to live in the White House. The illustration you see of George and his hounds was done for Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out by Steven Kellogg. When your read Our White House, you will find out why neither Washington or his animals had the opportunity to reside in the presidential mansion. And readers six to sixty will enjoy reading Steven Kellogg's presidential pet piece! Take a long look at Kellogg's delightfully detailed drawing of all the presidents and the animals that roamed the White House grounds. Pick your favorite for "Best in Show" and see if you can find Jimmy Carter's "killer rabbit."


All royalties from the sale of Our White House benefit the National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance who created Our White House to promote literacy and historical literacy. All the contributors to Our White House, gifted their work to this creative tour de force that offers a dynamic view of more than 200 years of American history. Please note that the provocative, witty book cover art for Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out was done by nationally renowned illustrator David Macaulay.

And be sure and check out the companion educational website for Our White House at:
www.ourwhitehouse.org

Find out more about the presidential pets in
Our White House:
Looking In, Looking Out
available at your local library or bookstore!


★ “Powerful. . . .Fascinating. . . . Challenging.”
— School Library Journal
(starred review)


★ “A blue-ribbon choice for family sharing during an election
year.” — Publishers Weekly
(starred review)


★ “Unique bits and pieces . . .create a browser’s dream as readers explore the nooks and crannies of American history.”
— The Horn Book (starred review)

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out Encourages You to Involve Young People in this Year's Historic Presidential Election!













Get Your Cool Blue and Red Hot Presidential Candidates Stickers and Finish the OurWhite House: Looking In, Looking Out Presidential Timeline!!!


Barack Obama and John McCain! Who Will Be Our Next President?


The NCBLA asked talented illustrator Bob Kolar to design presidential candidate stickers of Barack Obama and John McCain to encourage young people, their parents, grandparents, guardians, teachers, and classmates to follow this historic presidential election together, talk about the result, and then download the candidate stickers from the Our White House website--- www.ourwhitehouse.org-- and finish the book by adhering the winning presidential candidate sticker to the last spot, NUMBER 44, on Bob Kolar amazing presidential timeline on pages 224 and 225 of Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out.

And have a great time guessing who all the other presidents are on the timeline, as well as the significance of the object they are holding! Because Bob Kolar's engaging timeline is a trivia game, too!

Bob Kolar has generously donated both his original Our White House illustration and the his candidate illustration to the NCBLA's Our White House book project that links literacy, historical literacy, promoting civic engagement----as have all of the 108 esteemed writers and illustrator contributors to Our White House! All royalties from the sale of Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out help the NCBLA continue its education and advocacy goals. Be sure and check out www.ourwhitehouse.org to find out about all kinds of presidential election information from the evolution of campaign buttons to how the electoral college works!

For Barack Obama and John McCain presidential candidate stickers go to:
http://www.ourwhitehouse.org/OWHStickerSheet.pdf

To get more presidential election information, as well as election activities for young people, go to: http://www.ourwhitehouse.org/intro.html



Friday, October 31, 2008

Our White House:Looking In, Looking Out --Kennedy Center Broadcast!

The NCBLA's Book
Our White House
Looking In Looking Out Featured in
Kennedy Center for Performing Arts Series!

Telling Stories: Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out T
hursday, November 6, 2008

Grades 5-8

Nationally recognized creators of books for young people, Katherine Paterson, Steven Kellogg and Mary Brigid Barrett, share insights into a recently released book titled Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out. This book is a compilation of history, historical fiction, personal essays, poetry, drama, and original art by 108 renowned authors and illustrators that offers a view of American history as seen through the eyes of the White House. Our White House was created by the National Children’s Book and Literacy Alliance, NCBLA, in an effort to combat illiteracy and to get students excited about reading. This facinating discussion is moderated by Maria Salvadore, nationally recognized young people's literature consultant and expert.

For more information about the Kennedy Center's Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out program go to:
http://www.kennedy-center.org/education/pwtv/

Click here for a comprehensive study guide for Our White House program:
http://www.kennedy-center.org/education/pwtv/studyguides/OurWhiteHouse.pdf


The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, in cooperation with the Prince William Network, offers arts-based educational programming free to teachers and students across the country through the Performing Arts Series. Programs feature artists and companies who perform at the Kennedy Center and explore the areas of music, dance, theater, and literature.
This year's schedule also include programs with jazz musician Dr. Billy Taylor, the Martha Graham Dance Company, and a performance of Twelve Angry Men starring Richard Thomas and Randall Mell.

To read the Kennedy Center for Performing Art's complete educational outreach performing arts schedule and to find out how you can subscribe for FREE, to the series, go to: http://www.kennedy-center.org/education/pwtv/