Reading Round-Up, 15 July
Yesterday I decided to extend my birthday celebration and enjoy my transformed kitchen, thanks to all the pink crepe paper my daughter strung on the kitchen cabinets and light! So here’s the round-up. You might want to get your calendar, this edition is front-loaded with lots of events. They should be in (roughly) date order.
Book Giveaway Over at the Power of Books ~ Literacy for Everyone blog, leave a comment for your chance to win a collection of children’s books published by Barefoot books. Hurry! The contest closes
Book it On
Save the date:
Gimme a slice If you are 16 or under and live in the
Math and Science – Awesome Sylvan Dell Publishing produces picture books with lessons in math, science, and nature. All of their books come with educational ideas in the back and a teacher’s guide on the website. The company has just announced a resource grant for a one-year site license for schools and school districts (2008-2009 School Year). We read Brian Scott’s summary of the press release at Literacy and Reading News. You can go to Sylvan Dell site for the application.
DC is Bookish September is a busy month in the Nation’s Capital when it comes to children’s literacy and reading.
+ On
+ The US National Book Festival, sponsored by the Library of Congress, will be held
Reading is Fundamental
Picture This In the old school, what we now call graphic novels were comic books. In the new school, they are viewed as a tool that just might keep kids reading. Over at Web Comic List, you can read about the Create a Comic Project. Thanks to a Small Neighborhood Grant they will sponsor Make a Comic Tournament
Let me in! The May 2008 edition of Canadian Psychology has an article “Unlocking the Door: Is parents’ reading to children the key to early literacy development?” by Linda M. Phillips, Stephen P. Norris and Jim Anderson. You can pay $11.95 to read the complete article, or you can read the abstract on PsycNET, the American Psychological Association website.
BOOKMARKS
In Need of Books Have you visited Kids Need to Read? PJ Haarsma and Nathan Fillion created the Kids Need to Read Foundation as a way not only to promote reading, but also to draw attention to and garner funds for school and public libraries. What I found particularly cool was the open call for teachers and librarians to state their book needs.
Knock Knock Through the Magic Door is an online resource and bookseller. Like us, they want to help parents create a pathway toward a lifelong love of reading. “Our primary objective is to make it easy and fast for parents (grandparents, aunts and uncles, godparents, etc. as well as teachers and librarians) to locate books that their children are most likely to enjoy.” Search tools on the site give visitors the chance to search by author, title, subject, or keyword. There are a number of discussion forums and links to other resources. Thanks to Charles for introducing us to this great site via a Kidlit reading list thread.
Down on the Corner Go to the Step-by-Step Reading Corner to find children’s books in more than 30 languages. They are single-language titles, not bilingual books. Here is the scoop (from the Reading Corner homepage): “[This site] creates an international community of authors, illustrators and readers through its publishing network. We are excited to be partners in the process of developing and supporting new children’s literature which originates from the 26 countries where the Step by Step Program is active, thereby making it possible to offer children, teachers and their parents a great variety of stories across many cultures and languages.” Bravissimo! Thanks to Anil at Big Universe for sending this lead!
More Books for Free We found Page by Page Books, a self-described resource for reading classics online for free. You will also find original source material, like the inaugural addresses of Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, and others. My Daily Domestic Diigolet.
Bienvenido, GutenTag, as-salaam-o-aleykum Check out the International Children’s Digital Library. Click on the globe and you’ll get a collection of books on that part of the world. When you click on a book, you can select the language you want to read it in (some have just one, others many). You can also hook the site up to a standard computer projector and share the book in a classroom. What a great way to promote reading and help kids become members of the international community. We found this at My Daily Domestic Diigolet.
It is in the Mail To make it simple: Paperspine is to books what Netflix is to movies. You create a list of the books you want to read. They send you the books, you read them (take as long as you want), then return them. If you sign up as a frequent, avid, or family reader, shipping is free. Thanks to Dewey at the Hidden Side of a Leaf for this lead.
TOMGIRLZ R
Write On! Dallas Woodburn is a senior at
Murder: TV lifeline Unplugged In a post called Kill Your TV, the Babysitter lays out the effects of TV on our kids’ intellect and health (not to mention the exposure to violence). Some of the facts we’re all familiar with, but she puts some benchmarks in place by adding the dates various laws went into effect. We found this at the Babysitter Writes blog.
Tell Me a Story Over at the Adventure Author blog Cathrin Howells has a post Learning about 21st Century Storytelling. Even though this is for an academic audience, you can substitute the word “parent” for “teacher” in this quote. “As teachers, we are going to have to bone up on changing views of literacy if we are to keep pace with our children; we are going to have to find out as much as we can about the interplay between word and image as children increasingly create narratives using both, with both modes carrying valid and often sophisticated meaning.”
More Stories to Tell Also check out MLocke’s post about her search to find information about storytelling and its impact on readers on the Storytelling in School Libraries blog. Over on the right side you will also find links to podcasts about the art of storytelling. For a different search, click over to the TWU Library Science Blog for the results of a search on “reluctant reader” in Books in Print.
A Minute of your time Your child’s future is worth that, right? Over at YubaNet, you’ll find this article by the National Center for Family Literacy. The article offers lots of ideas about the things you can do in just 60 seconds to help your child expand their vocabulary and expand reading skills. It probably won’t take you more than two minutes to read the article, either! If you have 15 minutes, then read 15 minutes keeps the brain drain away in the Forest Park Review (IL). We saw this lead in Louise Ash’s post, Reading Today Daily.
Keep
Game On! A 10-week project at
New Report The National Center for Learning Disabilities has just released this new report, Challenging Change: How Schools and Districts are Improving Performance of Special Education Students. The study looks at two schools and three school districts in
Let’s hope I did better with the typos this week!

The Reading Round-Up, 15 July by Scrub-a-Dub-Tub, a Reading Tub Blog, unless otherwise expressly stated, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
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digital story telling
To see really exciting new multimedia literacy try out Inanimate Alice. http://www.inanimatealice.com And its a free online resource!
More an interactive piece of fiction than a traditional game, Inanimate Alice: Episode 4 continues the story of the young game animator as she leaves her home in Russia and travels abroad. Inanimate Alice serves as both entertainment and a peek into the future of literature as a fusion of multimedia technologies. The haunting images and accompanying music and text weave a remarkably gripping tale that must be experienced to be believed.
And better still for schools there is a piece of software now available that allows learners to create their own stories. Valuable for all forms of literacy and this is being sold as a perpetual site licence for schools at £99 ! http://www.istori.es