Picture Books to Help Children Learn About EMOTIONS
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Nagroda Im. H. Ch. Andersena Nagroda
Nagroda im. H. Ch. Andersena Nagroda za wybitne zasługi dla literatury dla dzieci i młodzieży Co dwa lata IBBY przyznaje autorom i ilustratorom książek dziecięcych swoje najwyższe wyróżnienie – Nagrodę im. Hansa Christiana Andersena. Otrzymują ją osoby żyjące, których twórczość jest bardzo ważna dla literatury dziecięcej. Nagroda ta, często nazywana „Małym Noblem”, to najważniejsze międzynarodowe odznaczenie, przyznawane za twórczość dla dzieci. Patronem nagrody jest Jej Wysokość, Małgorzata II, Królowa Danii. Nominacje do tej prestiżowej nagrody zgłaszane są przez narodowe sekcje, a wyboru laureatów dokonuje międzynarodowe jury, w którego skład wchodzą badacze i znawcy literatury dziecięcej. Nagrodę im. H. Ch. Andersena zaczęto przyznawać w 1956 roku, w kategorii Autor, a pierwszy ilustrator otrzymał ją dziesięć lat później. Na nagrodę składają się: złoty medal i dyplom, wręczane na uroczystej ceremonii, podczas Kongresu IBBY. Z okazji przyznania nagrody ukazuje się zawsze specjalny numer czasopisma „Bookbird”, w którym zamieszczane są nazwiska nominowanych, a także sprawozdanie z obrad Jury. Do tej pory żaden polski pisarz nie otrzymał tego odznaczenia, jednak polskie nazwisko widnieje na liście nagrodzonych. W 1982 roku bowiem Małego Nobla otrzymał wybitny polski grafik i ilustrator Zbigniew Rychlicki. Nagroda im. H. Ch. Andersena w 2022 r. Kolejnych zwycięzców nagrody im. Hansa Christiana Andersena poznamy wiosną 2022 podczas targów w Bolonii. Na długiej liście nominowanych, na której jest aż 66 nazwisk z 33 krajów – 33 pisarzy i 33 ilustratorów znaleźli się Marcin Szczygielski oraz Iwona Chmielewska. MARCIN SZCZYGIELSKI Marcin Szczygielski jest znanym polskim pisarzem, dziennikarzem i grafikiem. Jego prace były publikowane m.in. w Nowej Fantastyce czy Newsweeku, a jako dziennikarz swoją karierę związał również z tygodnikiem Wprost oraz miesięcznikiem Moje mieszkanie, którego był redaktorem naczelnym. -
S L Ite Ra Tu Re
51.4 (2013) Feature Articles: Death and the Empathic Embrace in Four Contemporary Picture Books • Picturing Difference: Three Recent Picture Books Portray the Black Nova Scotian Community • Images of Ethnic- ity, Nationality, and Class Struggle in Communist Albanian Children’s Literature and Media • Exploring the Text/Image Wilderness • Teacher Authored Supplementary Reading Materials in South Africa • Immi- grants and Immigration in Portuguese Children’s Literature • Children & Their Books • Letters • Reviews The Journal of IBBY, the International Board on Books for Young People Copyright © 2013 by Bookbird, Inc. Reproduction of articles in Bookbird requires permission in writing from the editor. Editor: Roxanne Harde, University of Alberta—Augustana Faculty (Canada) Address for submissions and other editorial correspondence: [email protected] Bookbird’s editorial office is supported by the Augustana Faculty at the University of Alberta, Camrose, Alberta, Canada. Editorial Review Board: Peter E. Cumming, York University (Canada); Debra Dudek, University of Wollongong (Australia); Libby Gruner, University of Richmond (USA); Helene Høyrup, Royal School of Library & Information Science (Denmark); Judith Inggs, University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa); Ingrid Johnston, University of Albert, Faculty of Education (Canada); Shelley King, Queen’s University (Canada); Helen Luu, Royal Military College (Canada); Michelle Martin, University of South Carolina (USA); Beatriz Alcubierre Moya, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos (Mexico); -
Fiction to Support PATHS Updated by Alice Ndiaye March 2017
Fiction to support PATHS Updated by Alice Ndiaye March 2017 Books that deal with emotions featured as feelings faces. * have no lessons Angry Angry Arthur Hiawyn Otam Angry Bad tempered ladybird (The) Eric Carle Angry Everybody feels Angry Jane Bingham Angry The Nowhere Box Sam Zuppardi Ashamed Penguins Can’t Fly Richard Byrne Ashamed Willy the Champ Anthony Browne Bored I Love You Little Monkey Alan Durant & Katharine McEwan Brave Frog is a hero Max Velthuijs Brave New Kid in Town Claire Freedman & Kristina Stephenson Brave Ringo The Flamingo Neil Griffiths Brave Ruby’s School Walk Kathryn White & Miriam Latimer Brave The Lion and the Unicorn Shirley Hughes Brave The Little Penguin Giles Andreae Brave The Red Tree Shaun Tan Calm Hershel and the Hannukah Goblins Eric Kimmel Calm Trumpet the Little Elephant Jane Clarke & Charles Fuge Comfortable / uncomfortable Goldilocks and the three bears Jan Brett Comfortable / uncomfortable Kipper Mick Inkpen Confused The lion and the unicorn S. Hugnes Delighted The Feel Good Book Todd Parr Disappointed Alexander, who used to be rich last Sunday Judith Viorst Fiction to support PATHS Updated by Alice Ndiaye March 2017 Disappointed Monster Angela Mc Allister & Charlotte Middleton Disgusted The Story of the Little Mole Werner Holzwarth Dislike John Brown, Rose and the Midnight Cat Jenny Wagner Embarrassed Elmer David McKee Embarrassed The Emperor’s New Clothes Mike Gordon Excited The Sports Day Nick Butterworth & Mick Inkpen Fine Little Bear and the Wish Fish Debi Glori Frustrated Airmail to the Moon -
Hans Christian Andersen Awards Are the Highest International Distinction in Children’S Literature
HANS CH RISTIAN A NDERSEN A WARDS Christine E. King, Iowa State University The Hans Christian Andersen Awards are the highest international distinction in children’s literature. They are given every other year to a living author and illustrator whose outstanding body of work is judged to have made a lasting contribution to literature for children and young people. The first three awards were made to authors for single works. The author’s award has been given since 1956 and the illustrator’s since 1966. They are presented by the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). They have become the “Little Nobel Prize,” and their prestige has grown over the years. Selecting the award win- ners is considered by many to be IBBY’s most important activity. The nominations are made by the National Sections of IBBY, and the recipients are selected by a distinguished international jury of children’s literature specialists. The IBBY emphasizes that the Hans Christian Andersen Awards are not intended to be a national award, but an outstanding international award for chil- dren’s literature. A great effort is made to encourage the submission of candidates from all over the world, and a jury of ten experts is also selected from around the world in order to encourage a diversity of outlook and opinion. The award consists of a gold medal bearing the portrait of Hans Christian Andersen and a diploma and is presented at the opening ceremony of the IBBY Congress. The IBBY’s refereed journal Bookbird has a special Andersen Awards issue which presents all the nominees and documents the selection process. -
Outside of a Dog a Book Is Man's Best
Newsletter of the Children’s Collection at the Sibthorp Library, Bishop Grosseteste College Volume 1, Issue 3, October 2005. Compiled by Janice Morris and Emma Sansby ([email protected]). The leaves are turning... County Book Award winners announced ...and the nights are drawing in. What better time At a Gala Evening held in Sleaford on 20th July attended by over 200 young to catch up on some reading? people, the winners of the 2005 Lincolnshire Young People’s Book Award were announced. They were, for the age category 9-11 Measle and the This issue of Hullabaloo! includes articles about Wrathmonk by Ian Ogilvy (OUP, £5.99), and for the age category 11-13 exciting new visitor attractions (page 2), sources of Spilled Water by Sally Grindley (Bloomsbury, £5.99). online information in children’s literature (pages 3 The Award was shadowed by 65 schools and reading groups across the & 4) and how stories can help children to learn county, with over 1000 young people voting for their favourite book. aspects of science, maths, and design, as well as language & social skills. This last article was sent Now in its third year, the award is organised by the Lincolnshire County to us by Jane Johnston and was abridged for the Council Library Service and enthuses teachers, parents and young people alike. Typical responses from young people are, “we got hard-copy edition. However, you’re reading the to experience new types of books that gave us new online edition so you get to read the whole article thrills” and “it made me try different types of stories and in full on pages 5 & 6. -
Librarians' Favourite Books from Their Country
the world through picture books Librarians’ favourite books from their country A programme of Section Libraries for Children and Young Adults, IFLA – International Federation and Library Associations in collaboration with IFLA section Literacy and Reading and IBBY – International Board on Books for Young People. Programme coordination Annie Everall [email protected] in collaboration with Viviana Quiñones [email protected] The World through Picture Books, 2012 Edited by Annie Everall and Viviana Quiñones • Design by Ursula Held the throughworld picture books Foreword By Viviana Quiñones We are very happy to publish the first results of this participative, international, ongoing Chair, IFLA Section Libraries programme, “The World through Picture Books”. It deals with something we children’s for Children and Young Adults librarians must never lose sight of, even if we are so busy with new technologies, budget [email protected] restrictions, everyday work…: read children’s books and choose the best ones for our readers. Of course, we could spend hours discussing what “best” means, but one thing it surely means is very good books from the readers’ own country and from as many other countries as possible…This is why, inspired by Kazuko Yoda’s request to our Committee for advice on the “top ten” picture books in Committee members’ countries, we launched “The World through Picture Books” programme, in 2011. Librarians from thirty countries have already made their choice which we publish here, and, thanks to publishers’ generosity, their selected titles will be exhibited in Finland, before circulating in Japan; another set of books is available for any library in any country wanting to exhibit them. -
Books That Deal with PATHS Feelings Alice Ndiaye (Last Updated Jan ’15)
Books that deal with PATHS feelings Alice Ndiaye (last updated Jan ’15) Books that deal with emotions featured as feelings faces. * have no lessons Angry Angry Arthur Hiawyn Otam Angry Bad tempered ladybird (The) Eric Carle Angry Little Rabbit Foo Foo Michael Rosen Angry The Nowhere Box Sam Zuppardi Ashamed Penguins Can’t Fly Richard Byrne Ashamed Willy the Champ Anthony Browne Bored I Love You Little Monkey Alan Durant & Katharine McEwan Brave New Kid in Town Claire Freedman & Kristina Stephenson Brave Ringo The Flamingo Neil Griffiths Brave Ruby’s School Walk Kathryn White & Miriam Latimer Brave The Lion and the Unicorn Shirley Hughes Brave The Little Penguin Giles Andreae Brave The Red Tree Shaun Tan Calm Trumpet the Little Elephant Jane Clarke & Charles Fuge Calm Hershel and the Hannukah Goblins Eric Kimmel Comfortable / uncomfortable Goldilocks and the three bears Jan Brett Comfortable / uncomfortable Kipper Mick Inkpen Confused The lion and the unicorn S. Hugnes Delighted The Feel Good Book Todd Parr Disappointed Alexander, who used to be rich last Sunday Judith Viorst Disappointed Monster Angela Mc Allister & Charlotte Middleton Disgusted The Story of the Little Mole Werner Holzwarth 1 Books that deal with PATHS feelings Alice Ndiaye (last updated Jan ’15) Dislike John Brown, Rose and the Midnight Cat Jenny Wagner Embarrassed Elmer David McKee Embarrassed The Emperor’s New Clothes Mike Gordon Excited The Sports Day Nick Butterworth & Mick Inkpen Fine Little Bear and the Wish Fish Debi Glori Frustrated Airmail to the Moon Tom Birdseye -
Exp Los Mejores Libros Taller Espantapajaros Pp
LOS MEJORES LIBROS PARA QUE LOS NIÑOS SIEMPRE QUIERAN VOLVER A LA BIBLIOTECA. ESPANTAPÁJAROS TALLER LUCÍA LIÉVANO SÁNCHEZ EL CLUB DE LECTURA espantavideo2.mov A LA HORA DE ESCOGER BUENA LITERATURA 1. Leer a los niños. 2. Leer el libro, panorámicamente. ¿Quién lo firma? ¿Quién es el ilustrador? ¿Es versión original o adaptación? ¿Cuál es la edad sugerida? ¿Qué editorial respalda ese libro? 3. Involucre a los niños en la búsqueda. 4. Busque asesoría 5. No confunda una obra literaria con un libro didáctico. LOS GÉNEROS LITERARIOS Poesía – tradición oral – juegos corporales Libros álbum - Libros de imágenes Cuentos Novela Informativos LIBROS PARA LOS BEBÉS LOS LIBROS SIN PÁGINAS Y LOS JUEGOS CORPORALES POESÍA Y TRADICIÓN ORAL Para acompañarlos a crecer A bañarse Taro Gomi Kalandraka LOS LIBROS ÁLBUM Cuentan historias mediante un diálogo entre texto e ilustración. Estas historias nos hablan de… …la vida y la familia. De sueños, monstruos y pesadillas. De sentimientos y de pasiones. Algunas historias nos permiten… …reír y hablar de lo prohibido, ver y sentir el arte hablar de la guerra y de la soledad, de los celos, los hermanos y los amigos, de la diferencia y… de la muerte EL CUENTO En un libro de cuentos el énfasis está en el relato . El relato se narra con palabras y puede ser perfectamente entendido sin las ilustraciones, las ilustraciones lo adornan y lo enriquecen. LOS CLÁSICOS A LAS PUERTAS DE LA NOVELA IAN FALCONER TONY ROSS TARO GOMI SATOSHI KITAMURA URI ORLEV MAURICE SENDAK TRIUNFO IVAR DA COLL YOLANDA REYES CLAUDIA RUEDA -
Living Library Making History with Books and Reading
LIVING LIBRARY MAKING HISTORY WITH BOOKS AND READING partnership: Livros Grátis http://www.livrosgratis.com.br Milhares de livros grátis para download. LIVING LIBRARY MAKING HISTORY WITH BOOKS AND READING 1 2 LIVING LIBRARY MAKING HISTORY WITH BOOKS AND READING partnership: 3 EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT Executive operational manager: Ely Harasawa Executive relationship manager: Luis Vieira Rocha Administrative-financial: Victor Alcântara da Graça Communication: Ricardo Prado Information: Walter Meyer Karl Mobilization and Public Policies: Itamar Batista Gonçalves Fundraising: Lygia Fontanella-Deadman EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Planning and Evaluation: José Cláudio Barros Chief Executive Officer: Rubens Naves Advisor to Presidency: Ana Maria Wilheim Executive Vice-president: Isa Maria Guará Executive Treasury Officer: Synésio Batista da Costa BIBLIOTECA VIVA - LIVING LIBRARY: MAKING HISTORY WITH BOOKS AND READING BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chairman: Carlos Antonio Tilkian The concept for this publication was created by the Biblioteca Viva Program Secretary: Ismar Lissner team in partnership between Abrinq Foundation and Citigroup. Members: Aloísio Wolff, Audir Queixa Giovani, Carlos Rocha Ribeiro da Silva, Daniel Trevisan, Emerson Kapaz, Guilherme Coordination: Ely Harasawa Peirão Leal, Hans Becker, José Berenguer, José Eduardo P. Technical partnership: A Cor da Letra Pañella, Lourival Kiçula, Maria Ignês Bierrenbach, Oded Grajew, A Cor da Letra team: Cíntia Carvalho, Márcia Wada, Patrícia Bohrer Ricardo Sayon, Sérgio E. Mindlin e Therezinha Fram Pereira Leite, Amanda Leal de Oliveira, Alcione Ribeiro Alternate members: Antônio Carlos Ronca, João Nagano Júnior, Márcio Ponzini, Natânia do Carmo Sequeira e Ricardo Vacaro From its beginnings, Lively Library has relied on voluntary collaboration from many professionals who helped start the project, AUDIT COMMITTEE and provided new ideas and lessons. -
Bookbird 05.1 Cover.2
2005 VOL 43, NO. 3 into the forest with anthony browne australian titles in french translation tribute to max velthuijs major new encyclopaedia of children’s literature picturebook versions of african folktales a literary award in friesland book ‘postcards’ from around the world professional books reviewed The Journal of IBBY,the International Board on Books for Young People Editors: Valerie Coghlan and Siobhán Parkinson Address for submissions and other editorial correspondence: [email protected] and [email protected] Bookbird’s editorial office is supported by the Church of Ireland College of Education, Dublin, Ireland. Editorial Review Board: Sandra Beckett (Canada), Penni Cotton (UK), Hans-Heino Ewers (Germany), Jeffrey Garrett (USA),Ariko Kawabata (Japan), Kerry Mallan (Australia), Maria Nikolajeva (Sweden), Jean Perrot (France), Kimberley Reynolds (UK), Mary Shine Thompson (Ireland),Victor Watson (UK), Jochen Weber (Germany) Board of Bookbird, Inc.: Joan Glazer (USA), President; Ellis Vance (USA),Treasurer;Alida Cutts (USA), Secretary;Ann Lazim (UK); Elda Nogueira (Brazil) Cover: The cover illustration is from Max Velthuijs’s Frog and the Birdsong Copyright © Max Velthuijs 1991. Published by kind permission of Random House, UK. Production: Design and layout by Oldtown Design, Dublin ([email protected]) Proofread by Antoinette Walker Printed in Canada by Transcontinental Bookbird:A Journal of International Children’s Literature (ISSN 0006-7377) is a refereed journal published quarterly by IBBY,the International Board on Books for Young People, Nonnenweg 12 Postfach, CH-4003 Basel, Switzerland tel. +4161 272 29 17 fax: +4161 272 27 57 email: [email protected] <www.ibby.org>. Copyright © 2005 by Bookbird, Inc., an Indiana not-for-profit corporation. -
Anthony Browne and Binette Schroeder Taiwanese And
2007 VOL 45, NO. 3 Anthony Browne and Binette Schroeder TaiwaneseTaiwanese and AustralianAustralian picturebooks DutcDutchh children’s literature since WWII GrGraphicaphic versions of Homer Ena Noel award,Australia International Library of Children’s Literature,Tokyo The Journal of IBBY,the International Board on Books for Young People Editors: Valerie Coghlan and Siobhán Parkinson Address for submissions and other editorial correspondence: [email protected] and [email protected] Bookbird’s editorial office is supported by the Church of Ireland College of Education, Dublin, Ireland. Editorial Review Board: Sandra Beckett (Canada), Nina Christensen (Denmark), Penni Cotton (UK), Hans-Heino Ewers (Germany), Jeffrey Garrett (USA), Elwyn Jenkins (South Africa),Ariko Kawabata (Japan), Kerry Mallan (Australia), Maria Nikolajeva (Sweden), Jean Perrot (France), Kimberley Reynolds (UK), Mary Shine Thompson (Ireland), Victor Watson (UK), Jochen Weber (Germany) Guest reviewer for this issue: Claudia Söffner Board of Bookbird, Inc.: Joan Glazer (USA), President; Ellis Vance (USA),Treasurer;Alida Cutts (USA), Secretary;Ann Lazim (UK); Elda Nogueira (Brazil) Cover image: The cover illustration is from Chih-Yuan Chen’s Guji Guji, reproduced by kind permission of the publishers, Hsin Yi Publishing (Taipei) Production: Design and layout by Oldtown Design, Dublin ([email protected]) Copyedited and proofread by Antoinette Walker Printed in Canada by Transcontinental Bookbird:A Journal of International Children’s Literature (ISSN 0006-7377) is a refereed journal published quarterly by IBBY,the International Board on Books for Young People, Nonnenweg 12 Postfach, CH-4003 Basel, Switzerland, tel. +4161 272 29 17 fax: +4161 272 27 57 email: [email protected] <www.ibby.org>. Copyright © 2007 by Bookbird, Inc., an Indiana not-for-profit corporation. -
Bird 42,#1-Focus IBBY
Focus IBBY Column Co-editors: Kimete Basha and Liz Page What do Narrative Changes, Africa and IBBY have in common? The articles in this edition of Bookbird explore the theme of “narrative changes.” It is an important discussion that comple- ments and extends the thought-provoking presentations that took place at the symposium organized in Bratislava as part of BIB 2003 last September. Here, as there, a variety of authors, illustrators, literary critics, and students of children’s literature examine changes that are occurring in traditional approaches to narrative, and consider the subsequent change in the relationship between reader/viewer, text, author and illustrator that is derived from them. It strikes me that, in its simplest form, this is a discussion about new ways of seeing or representing the world of children, and it implies the possibility of endless innovation. It is an invi- tation to consider new ways of thinking about the way children experience the story and is an encouragement to artists to create new forms. I cannot help but draw connections between this discussion and the one that we are having in IBBY today. We too, are think- ing about new ways of pursuing our mission. We too, will need to be innovative and apply new thinking to the important work we have committed our energies to. IBBY’s network of dedicated groups and individuals come from very different cultural, political, and social contexts but share the conviction that stories can nourish and educate the child and, in so doing, prepare a safer, more peaceful world in which they can grow.