Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Father's Day is This Sunday, June 19

Celebrate with Stories and Activities

Read Together!
If you are looking for heartwarming stories to share with fathers, grandfathers, and the other loving men in your life, be sure to check out the annotated lists of book recommendations compiled by Reading Rockets. Find some books to share this Father's Day weekend on the Fabulous Fathers list and the Reading with Dad list. Both lists include beloved books that celebrate fathers and grandfathers--books that are perfect for sharing with kids through age 12. 
 
Learn Together!
Two times in our nation's history a father and son have both been elected to the presidency. Do you know who they were? Check out the article and lesson titled "Like Father, Like Son: Presidential Families" on EDSITEment 
 
You can dig deeper into the American presidency in the NCBLA's anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out. Learn more about this creative tour de force, in which 108 renowned authors and illustrators have donated their poetry, prose, and art to help advance the cause of young people’s literacy and historical literacy at OurWhiteHouse.org.

Help Your Child Send an E-Card
Download your own Father's Day e-card, which features the delightfully bold artwork of Javaka Steptoe. Steptoe is a young artist, designer, and illustrator. His debut work, In Daddy's Arms I Am Tall: African Americans Celebrating Fathers, earned him the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award.

Read Up on the Value of Reading
Don't forget to check out the literacy resources for parents available on thencbla.org, where you will find such helpful articles as "I Will Read to My Kids--If I Ever Find the Time!" and "Kids See, Kids Do! Become a Literacy Role Model."

Thursday, June 9, 2011

DEADLINE EXTENDED: Ask Your Senators to Sign Library Funding Letter

Twenty One Senators Have Signed the Library Funding Letter
More Signatures Needed

The deadline to sign the letter written by Senators Jack Reed and Olympia Snowe in support of federal funding for the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) and Improving Literacy Through School Libraries has been extended to Friday, June 10. 

Libraries experienced major cuts at all levels in fiscal year 2011. School and public libraries cannot continue to provide essential services without increased funding in fiscal year 2012. 

The following lists the senators who have signed the letter. If your senators are not on this list, please call them at (202) 224-3121. When they agree to sign the letter, please ask them to  contact Elyse Wasch in Senator Reed’s office if they are Democrats or Matthew Hussey in Senator Snowe’s office if they are Republicans. THANK YOU!

Reed – RI
Snowe – ME
Levin – MI
Rockefeller – WV
Leahy – VT
Udall, Tom – NM
Schumer – NY
Boxer – CA
Akaka – HI
Whitehouse – RI
Gillibrand – NY
Johnson, Tim – SD
Shaheen – NH
Sanders – VT
Lautenberg – NJ
Mikulski – MD
Kerry – MA
Cardin – MD
Kohl – WI
Menendez – NJ
Durbin - IL

Simmons College Sponsors Children's Literature Summer Institute

The Body Electric
A Symposium: July 5 - July 28, 2011
An Institute: July 28 - July 31, 2011

"The Body Electric," sponsored by The Center for the Study of Children's Literature at Simmons College in Boston, will be held the last weekend in July, commencing on Thursday evening, July 28th and concluding Sunday noon, July 31st. The preceding symposium will be taught by Associate Professor Kenneth Kidd from the University of Florida where his interests include nineteenth- and twentieth-century American literature, gender studies/queer theory, and children's literature and media; it will run Tuesday and Thursdays beginning July 5th and will culminate with the Institute. 

The speakers who will attend the Institute are M. T. Anderson, Bryan Collier, Victoria Bond, Sharon Draper, Brian Floca, Helen Frost, Jack Gantos, Mordicai Gerstein, Jan Greenberg, Sandra Jordan, Karen LaFleur, Grace Lin, Cathryn M. Mercier, Barbara O'Connor, Sara Pennypacker, T. R. Simon, Tommy Simpson, David Small, Jacqueline Woodson, and Gene Luen Yang.

The symposium earns four semester hours of graduate credit; enrollment in the institute is on a non-credit basis. Click here to learn more.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

FINAL DAY to Sign Onto Library Support Letter!

Help Save Library Funding!
Senators Jack Reed and Olympia Snow Lead Effort to Increase FY2012 Library Funding

If you and your family value public and school libraries, please take a moment to call both of your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121 and ask them to sign onto the letter written by Senator Reed and Senator Snowe by close of business TODAY

Senators Jack Reed and Olympia Snowe are leading an effort to increase support for FY2012 federal funding for the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) and Improving Literacy Through School Libraries.  Tell your senators’ staffers to contact Elyse Wasch in Reed’s office or Matthew Hussey in Snowe’s office.  We need other senators to sign the Reed-Snowe letter as soon as possible.  Please call immediately.

Click here to read the letter.  

You can get more information about your senators and their office hours on the ALA website.  

Monday, June 6, 2011

Growing Season Is Here!

Plant a Garden with Your Kids and Reap the Rewards

Spring gardening continues across the country as early crops are harvested and summer crops and flowers are planted. Why not take some time in the early days of summer vacation to plan and plant a garden with your children? No matter how big--or small--the garden, you and your family can benefit not only from the garden's bounty but also from the experience itself. In the NCBLA article "Growing a Spring Garden: Cultivating Plants and Your Child's Literacy Skills," author and educator Mary Brigid Barrett explains the interdisciplinary opportunities inherent in gardening with your children.

Make Connections!
To get your kids excited about gardening, make connections with the gardening work of other kids, including the work of kids helping in the White House kitchen garden. You can watch a video of elementary school students helping to plant the White House garden early this spring. And you can read about the latest crops planted by Native American schoolchildren in the White House kitchen garden--corn, beans, and squash!--in the Baltimore Sun article "'Three Sisters Make White House Appearance." 

Dig into the Past!
Help young people make connections to the past in the article "White House Colonial Kitchen Gardens" by Stephanie Loer in the NCBLA's literature and art anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out

And be sure to check out the online article "A Taste of the Past: White House Kitchens, Menus, and Recipes" by Mary Brigid Barrett. This article is included in the educational companion website to Our White House and features a glimpse into the days before modern appliances eased the burdens of the White House cook.  Also included in "A Taste of the Past"  is President Dwight Eisenhower's not-to-be-missed recipe for Green Turtle Soup!

Our White House is a project of The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance designed to encourage young people to read more about America’s rich history and culture; to think more about America’s future; to talk more about our nation’s leadership; and to act on their own beliefs and convictions, ensuring this great democratic experiment will survive and thrive. Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David McCullough introduces this creative tour de force, in which 108 renowned authors and illustrators have donated their poetry, prose, and art to help advance the cause of young people’s literacy and historical literacy. The illustrations, essays, short stories, presidential letters, personal reflections, and historical accounts in Our White House inform and entertain, offering a window on more than 200 years of American history.

Our White House is available in both hardcover and paperback. The new paperback edition features a NEW poem by Nikki Grimes about President Obama’s inauguration!

Thursday, June 2, 2011

URGENT Activist Alert!

Federal Funding for Libraries at Risk
Senators Jack Reed and Olympia Snow Lead Effort to Increase FY2012 Library Funding

If you and your family value public and school libraries, please take a moment to call both of your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121 and ask them to sign onto the letter written by Senator Reed and Senator Snowe by close of business Wednesday, June 8.  Also ask library supporters to contact your senators as well.

Senators Jack Reed and Olympia Snowe are leading an effort to increase support for FY2012 federal funding for the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) and Improving Literacy Through School Libraries.  Tell your senators’ staffers to contact Elyse Wasch in Reed’s office or Matthew Hussey in Snowe’s office.  We need other senators to sign the Reed-Snowe letter as soon as possible.  Please call immediately.

Click here to read the letter.  

You can get more information about your senators and their office hours on the ALA website.  

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

NCBLA: In Case You Missed It

Looking For School Miracles 

"Families are children’s most important educators. Our society must invest in parental education, prenatal care and preschool. Of course, schools must improve; every one should have a stable, experienced staff, adequate resources and a balanced curriculum including the arts, foreign languages, history and science.

If every child arrived in school well-nourished, healthy and ready to learn, from a family with a stable home and a steady income, many of our educational problems would be solved. And that would be a miracle" 

Diane Ravitch, a research professor of education at New York University, is the author of “The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education.” From The New York Times Op/Ed page. 


Read entire essay at: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/01/opinion/01ravitch.html?ref=opinion

Support Literacy Through Art!

Scholastic Sponsors Art Auction to Benefit Non-Profit Literacy Organizations

Scholastic is auctioning original artwork created by twelve children's books illustrators to benefit the non-profit literacy organizations Reach Out and Read and Reading Is Fundamental. To  view the gallery of offerings, visit CharityBuzz.com/scholastic.

The artwork on auction includes pieces by Norman Bridwell, Bruce Degen,  Edwin Fotheringham, Mary GrandPre, Barbara McClintock, Jon J Muth, Sean Qualls, Stephen Savage, David Shannon, Jeff Smith, Mark Teague, and Raina Telgemeier. The piece pictured at top right is included in the auction and was created by Edwin Fotheringham.

The auction ends June 5.
Learn more about the auction and other ways you can support these literacy organizations at Scholastic's On Our Minds blog.

Monday, May 30, 2011

The NCBLA is NOW on Facebook!

Like Us on Facebook!

Fans of The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance---be sure to check out our new Facebook page (titled "The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance") so you can keep up with all our projects, news, events, and literacy advocacy alerts.

Headlining our Facebook news will be the very latest information regarding our primary projects: The Exquisite Corpse Adventure and Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out!

Learn more about our national reading outreach project--the wacky 27-episode adventure story game---The Exquisite Corpse Adventure on our companion educational site. And help the young people in your lives dig deeper into America's past and think critically about our future with the NCBLA's art and literature anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out and its companion website OurWhiteHouse.org.  

Francesca Lia Block to Appear at Cambridge Public Library

Event Scheduled for Saturday, June 11 at 2:00 PM
 Cambridge Public Library
Main Library Lecture Hall
449 Broadway

Francesca Lia Block is the award-winning author of more than twenty books including The Frenzy, Roses and Bones, Fairy Tales in Electri-City, and her beloved Weetzie Bat compilation, Dangerous Angels. 

The Harvard Book Store will have books available for purchase and autographing. For more information call 617-349-4027.