Counting Book Free

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Counting Book Free FREE COUNTING BOOK PDF Felicity Brooks,Corrine Bittler | 16 pages | 26 Jul 2011 | Usborne Publishing Ltd | 9780746097922 | English | London, United Kingdom Home | We Count Kids! To vote on existing books from the list, beside each book there is a link vote for this book clicking it will Counting Book that book to your Counting Book. To vote on books not in the list or books you couldn't find in the Counting Book, you can click on the tab add books to this list and then choose from your books, or Counting Book search. Discover new books on Goodreads. Sign in with Facebook Sign in options. Join Goodreads. This is a list of picture books for children about numbers and counting. The list is originally based on Counting Book from the monthly picture book club of The Children's Books Group. Eric Carle. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Error rating book. Refresh and Counting Book again. Lloyd Moss. Gabi Snyder Goodreads Author. Tasha Tudor. Maurice Sendak. Anthony Browne. Graeme Base. Phyllis Counting Book. Kathryn Otoshi. Sandra Boynton. Karen Katz. Mitsumasa Anno. Cathryn Falwell. John Langstaff. David M. Schwartz Goodreads Author. Steve Light Goodreads Author. Laura Gehl Goodreads Author. Theo LeSieg. Susie Ghahremani Goodreads Author. Laurie Krebs. Bill Martin Jr. Betsy Franco. Louise Yates. Stephen Savage Goodreads Author. Kim Parker. Eileen Christelow Retelling. Penny Dale. Belle Yang. Karma Wilson Goodreads Author. Mac Barnett. Dan Yaccarino. Alison Murray. Ashley Wolff. David Kirk. Keith Baker. Mark Lee Goodreads Author. Gyo Fujikawa Illustrations. Susanna Gretz. Bobbie Combs. Maria Luisa Arenzana Writer. Audrey Wood Goodreads Author. Anne Bowman. Joyce Dunbar. Donald Crews. Richard Scarry. Sheryl McFarlane. Philip Yates. Katie Cotton. Counting Book Bang. Rita T. Margaret McNamara. Laurent de Brunhoff. Satoshi Kitamura Illustrations. Olive A. Wadsworth Rhyme by. Rowan Barnes-Murphy. Dina Anastasio. Jen Arena Goodreads Author. Linda Hayward. Maggie Smith. Rosemary Counting Book. Eileen Christelow Illustrator. Pegi Deitz Shea. Mick Inkpen. Tony Johnston. Catherine Rayner. William A. Il Sung Na. Janet Schulman. Pat Hutchins. Jennifer Oxley. Marianne Berkes. Lilian Moore. Harriet Ziefert. Mike Boldt Goodreads Author. Laura Vaccaro Seeger. Stan Berenstain. Olivier Dunrea. Jerry Pallotta. Eric Carle Illustrations. Amanda Litz Goodreads Author. Tamera Will Wissinger Goodreads Author. Leslie Kimmelman Goodreads Author. Sybrina Durant Goodreads Author. Fingerprints Goodreads Author. Deborah Niland. Lynne Bertrand. Books You Can Count On: 30 Counting & Number Books for Kids Counting books are the perfect way to introduce early math concepts while engaging children's imaginations and expanding vocabulary skills. Below we've reviewed some of our favorite counting read alouds that capture the attention of young children while helping them to incidentally develop skills in counting forwards and backwards, numeral recognition, ordinal numbers, and simple addition and subtraction. Unlike other traditional counting books that tell you what to count and how many are on Counting Book page, How Many? Each two-page spread has an intriguing photograph - a box containing a pair of shoes, a number of grapefruit, a collection of avocado halves That is the fun. Readers might count one pair of shoes, or two shoes, or four corners of Counting Book shoebox. They might discuss whether two shoes have Counting Book shoelaces, or four. They might notice surprising patterns and relationships, Counting Book they will want to talk about them. This is one of those rare books that offers openings for all ages and abilities. Danielson helps teachers anticipate what students might notice and gives practical suggestions for facilitating rich conversations with students. A wonderful math read aloud that you will return to again and again, this book will get both adults and children seeing and talking about the multitude of How Many? The Counting Book illustrations in this counting book depict an ever growing number of animals visiting a water hole, introducing the numbers from one to ten. Viewed through die-cut elliptical holes of progressively decreasing size, the water hole becomes smaller with Counting Book turn of the Counting Book as the water diminishes until finally the animals disappear from the arid land. But then,thankfully, the rains come, Counting Book life back to the landscape. A glorious final double spread shows all of the animals returned. Each illustration in this book represents a different country, continent, or habitat with the locations revealed at the end of the book. Borders at the top and bottom of each spread feature silhouettes of ten animals indigenous to that particular scene, with renderings of these same creatures also cleverly concealed in the scenery on the page. These elaborately detailed illustrations provide a fascinating hidden-picture challenge which will entice readers of all ages to return to this book again and again. This book doubles as both an Counting Book and a counting book. With different animals organized from A to Z, it also provides lots of opportunities for counting as for each letter of the alphabet one animal is pictured 8 times. The hunt to find the 8 animals is made more challenging by the fact that the animal is not necessarily shown with the same coloring, at the same age, or in the same pose. At the back of the book a four page "Did you know? Did you know that gorillas yawn when they are nervous? This unique book would make a fun addition to a classroom or Counting Book library and is sure Counting Book have readers of Counting Book ages noticing new things each time it is revisited. In this wordless counting book Anno uses simple watercolor pictures to depict the numbersthe seasons, and the months of the year. Unlike many Counting Book books that begin at Counting Book, Anno begins at zero, with the first illustration showing only a Counting Book covered landscape and a Counting Book stream. When the page is turned the numeral 1 is shown on the right side of the book and in the landscape one lone building, one tree, one sun, one snowman. There is also a stack of blocks on the left side of the book, with one block colored in. As the book progresses from 0 to 12 there is more and more activity on each page as the town grows, the seasons change and various structures and animals appear. Young children enthusiastically search for and count groups of objects as the numbers increase, the pictures become more Counting Book, and more blocks in the stack are shaded. The final page, depicting the number 12, shows the town at Christmas time, complete with 12 reindeer in the sky. This counting book offers a thoughtful way of creating a dialogue about numbers Counting Book zero and lots of opportunities for counting sets. Also available in a Big Book version. What can you do with ten black dots? Many things, it turns out. The final pages in this counting book contain a chart showing the numbers one to ten, alongside the corresponding dots, encouraging students to count on by one. Rooster is tired of living on the farm, so, one sunny day, he decides to leave Counting Book home in search of adventure. As the animals first join and then leave rooster on his journey, they are depicted by a small graph in the top right hand corner of the page, effectively demonstrating the total number of animals on Counting Book journey. Each newly introduced numeral - from 1 duck to 10 dragonflies - is large and clearly presented, making this tale by Phyllis Root an engaging introduction Counting Book counting. The brilliant tropical fish - glowing Counting Book greens, purples, oranges and pinks in a variety of shapes and designs - pop from the midnight blue pages, and cut-out circles at the eyes of the fish add further visual and tactile interest Counting Book revealing colors on succeeding pages. Counting Book single bold black fish leads readers through the sparse Counting Book, encouraging students to count Counting Book by one. Counting Book, addition, and shapes are all covered here, making it a flexible and visually striking counting book that supports various math- focused class activities. He pops them into a jar. Students will count forward to ten with suspense as the snake collects the mice in his jar, and Counting Book count backwards with delight as the mice escape, one by one. A young magician, the narrator's sister, Counting Book on a show, eating almost everything she comes across including one hare, two snakes, and three ants. However, when she gets to ten peas everything comes back up, alive and well. The illustrations show the Counting Book girl in various Counting Book as a snake charmer swallowing her subjects; as a pirate making the doomed shrews walk Counting Book plank Be prepared for lots of repeat read-aloud requests! We've used this book in kindergarten, first and second grade. While in kindergarten we focus on the counting aspect of the story, in first Counting Book second grade we often do a follow up addition task after the read aloud. This picture book by Bill Martin Jr. The first caterpillar crawls up Counting Book stem of a wild rose bush. A second caterpillar wriggles up a flower. The third caterpillar climbs a cabbage head. The narrative continues until finally the tenth caterpillar transforms into a chrysalis and emerges Counting Book a tiger swallowtail butterfly. The final pages in the book revisit each caterpillar under the numerals to provide information on their feeding habits and the type of butterfly or moth they transform into. This picture book provides opportunities for children to practice ordinal words first through tenth and numeral recognition while learning lots of new vocabulary for plants, flowers, caterpillars and butterflies e.
Recommended publications
  • Marion Rocco.Pages
    1 The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art: Celebrating the Art of the Picture Book Marion E. Rocco The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA ([email protected]) Abstract: While books and illustrations for children are often regarded as secondary art forms, The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in Amherst, Massachusetts is thoughtfully honoring the art of the picture book. Founded in 2002 by Eric and Barbara Carle, The Carle is a full-scale art museum dedicated to collecting, exhibiting, and celebrating picture book art from around the world. In this paper, I examine how the exhibitions and educational programming of The Carle demonstrate the museum’s authentic commitment to and respect for the art of the picture book. Key words: illustration, art, picture books, Eric Carle, museum. Through its exhibitions and educational programming, the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in Amherst, Massachusetts is celebrating the picture book as a unique and innovative art form. Illustration may still be relegated to minority status in some circles, but at The Carle, picture book art is honored. By hanging the original illustrations in a gallery setting and inviting visitors to engage with the art in a variety of ways, The Carle is fulfilling its mission to cultivate an appreciation for and understanding of the art of the picture book. Introduction and Background The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art opened in 2002 as the first full- scale museum in the United States devoted to collecting and exhibiting the art of the picture book.
    [Show full text]
  • Cover No Spine
    2006 VOL 44, NO. 4 Special Issue: The Hans Christian Andersen Awards 2006 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) 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 Frau Meier, Die Amsel by Wolf Erlbruch, published by Peter Hammer Verlag,Wuppertal 1995 (see page 11) 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 © 2006 by Bookbird, Inc., an Indiana not-for-profit corporation. Reproduction of articles in Bookbird requires permission in writing from the editor. Items from Focus IBBY may be reprinted freely to disseminate the work of IBBY.
    [Show full text]
  • Kumon's Recommended Reading List
    KUMON’S RECOMMENDED READING LIST - Level 7A ~ Level 3A These are read-aloud books to be used by a parent when reading to the student. LEVEL 7A LEVEL 6A LEVEL 5A LEVEL 4A LEVEL 3A Barnyard Banter Hop on Pop Mean Soup Henny Penny A My Name is Alice 1 Denise Fleming 1 Dr. Seuss 1 Betsy Everitt 1 retold by Paul Galdone 1 Jane Bayer Jesse Bear, What Will Each Orange Had Eight Each Peach Pear Plum The Doorbell Rang Alphabears: An ABC Book 2 You Wear? Slices: A Counting Book Janet and Allen Ahlberg 2 2 Pat Hutchins 2 Kathleen Hague 2 Nancy White Carlstrom Paul Giganti Jr. Eating the Alphabet: Fruits What do you do with a Goodnight Moon Bat Jamboree Sea Squares 3 and Vegetables from A to Z kangaroo? Margaret Wise Brown 3 3 3 Kathi Appelt 3 Joy N. Hulme Lois Ehlert Mercer Mayer Here Are My Hands Black? White! Day? Night! The Icky Bug Alphabet Book Curious George Bread and Jam for Frances 4 Bill Martin Jr. and 4 4 4 4 John Archambault Laura Vaccaro Seeger Jerry Pallotta H.A. Rey Russell Hoban I Heard A Little Baa 5 Big Red Barn My Very First Mother Goose Make Way for Ducklings Little Bear Elizabeth MacLeod 5 Margaret Wise Brown 5 edited by Iona Opie 5 Robert McCloskey 5 Else Holmelund Minarik Read Aloud Rhymes for the Noisy Nora A Rainbow of My Own Millions of Cats Lyle, Lyle Crocodile 6 Very Young 6 Rosemary Wells 6 Don Freeman 6 Wanda Gag 6 Bernard Waber collected by Jack Prelutsky Mike Mulligan and His Steam Quick as a Cricket Sheep in a Jeep The Listening Walk Stone Soup 7 Shovel Audrey Wood 7 Nancy Shaw 7 Paul Showers 7 Marcia Brown 7 Virginia Lee Burton Three Little Kittens Silly Sally The Little Red Hen The Three Billy Goats Gruff Ming Lo Moves the Mountain 8 retold by Paul Galdone 8 Audrey Wood 8 retold by Paul Galdone 8 P.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Awards Appendix
    Appendix A: Awards Jane Addams Book Award The Jane Addams Children’s Book Award has been presented annually since 1953 by the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom and the Jane Addams Peace Association to the children’s book of the preceding year that most effectively promotes the cause of peace, social justice and world community 1953 People Are Important by Eva Knox Evans (Capital) 1954 Stick-in-the-Mud by Jean Ketchum (Cadmus Books, E.M. Hale) 1955 Rainbow Round the World by Elizabeth Yates (Bobbs-Merrill) 1956 Story of the Negro by Arna Bontemps (Knopf) 1957 Blue Mystery by Margot Benary-Isbert (Harcourt Brace) 1958 The Perilous Road by William O. Steele (Harcourt Brace) 1959 No Award Given 1960 Champions of Peace by Edith Patterson Meyer (Little, Brown) 1961 What Then, Raman? By Shirley L. Arora (Follett) 1962 The Road to Agra by Aimee Sommerfelt (Criterion) 1963 The Monkey and the Wild, Wild Wind by Ryerson Johnson (Abelard-Schuman) 1964 Profiles in Courage: Young Readers Memorial Edition by John F. Kennedy (Harper & Row) 1965 Meeting with a Stranger by Duane Bradley (Lippincott) 1966 Berries Goodman by Emily Cheney Nevel (Harper & Row) 1967 Queenie Peavy by Robert Burch (Viking) 1968 The Little Fishes by Erick Haugaard (Houghton Mifflin) 1969 The Endless Steppe: Growing Up in Siberia by Esther Hautzig (T.Y. Crowell) 1970 The Cay by Theodore Taylor (Doubleday) 1971 Jane Addams: Pioneer of Social Justice by Cornelia Meigs (Little, Brown) 1972 The Tamarack Tree by Betty Underwood (Houghton Mifflin) 1973 The Riddle of Racism by S.
    [Show full text]
  • Library Lessons: the Mind Is a Wonderful Thing to Use
    Library Lessons: The Mind is a Wonderful Thing to Use By | Pat Miller 75 Wordless Books • 1,2,3 to the Zoo by Eric Carle. Putnam, • Do You Want to be My Friend? by Eric Carle. 1998. Philomel Books, 1988. • Abstract Alphabet by Paul Cox. Chronicle • Flotsam by David Wiesner. Clarion Books, Books, 2001. 2006. • Anno’s Journey by • The Flower Man: A Wordless Picture Book by Mitsumasa Anno. Mark Ludy. Green Pastures Pub., 2005. Philomel, 1978. • Follow Carl! by Alexandra Day. Farrar, Straus • Anno’s Spain by and Giroux, 1998. Mitsumasa Anno. • The Forty-Six Little Men by Jan Mogensen. Philomel Books, HarperCollins, 1991. 2004. • Four Hungry Kittens by Emily Arnold • A Boy, a Dog, a Frog McCully. Dial, 1996. and a Friend by • Free Fall by David Wiesner. Lothrop, Lee & Mercer and Marianna Mayer. Dial, Shepard Books, 1988. 1971. • Freight Train by Donald Crews. William • A Boy, a Dog, and a Frog by Mercer Mayer. Morrow & Co., 1978. Dial, 1967. • Frog Goes to Dinner by Mercer Mayer. Puffin, • The Boy, the Bear, the Baron, the Bard by 1977. Gregory Rogers. Roaring Brook Press, 2004. • Frog on His Own by Mercer Mayer. Dial, • Carl’s Masquerade by Alexandra Day. Farrar, 1973. Straus and Giroux, 1992. • Frog, Where Are You? by Mercer Mayer. Dial, • Changes, Changes by Pat Hutchins. 1969. Macmillan, 1971. • Good Dog, Carl by Alexandra Day. Simon & • Chicken and Cat by Sara Varon. Scholastic, Schuster, 1985. 2006. • Good Night, Garden • Clementina’s Cactus by Ezra Jack Keats. Gnome by Jamichael Viking, 1999. Henterly. Dial, 2001. • Clown by Quentin Blake.
    [Show full text]
  • Adventuring with Books: a Booklist for Pre-K-Grade 6. the NCTE Booklist
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 311 453 CS 212 097 AUTHOR Jett-Simpson, Mary, Ed. TITLE Adventuring with Books: A Booklist for Pre-K-Grade 6. Ninth Edition. The NCTE Booklist Series. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, Ill. REPORT NO ISBN-0-8141-0078-3 PUB DATE 89 NOTE 570p.; Prepared by the Committee on the Elementary School Booklist of the National Council of Teachers of English. For earlier edition, see ED 264 588. AVAILABLE FROMNational Council of Teachers of English, 1111 Kenyon Rd., Urbana, IL 61801 (Stock No. 00783-3020; $12.95 member, $16.50 nonmember). PUB TYPE Books (010) -- Reference Materials - Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF02/PC23 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Annotated Bibliographies; Art; Athletics; Biographies; *Books; *Childress Literature; Elementary Education; Fantasy; Fiction; Nonfiction; Poetry; Preschool Education; *Reading Materials; Recreational Reading; Sciences; Social Studies IDENTIFIERS Historical Fiction; *Trade Books ABSTRACT Intended to provide teachers with a list of recently published books recommended for children, this annotated booklist cites titles of children's trade books selected for their literary and artistic quality. The annotations in the booklist include a critical statement about each book as well as a brief description of the content, and--where appropriate--information about quality and composition of illustrations. Some 1,800 titles are included in this publication; they were selected from approximately 8,000 children's books published in the United States between 1985 and 1989 and are divided into the following categories: (1) books for babies and toddlers, (2) basic concept books, (3) wordless picture books, (4) language and reading, (5) poetry. (6) classics, (7) traditional literature, (8) fantasy,(9) science fiction, (10) contemporary realistic fiction, (11) historical fiction, (12) biography, (13) social studies, (14) science and mathematics, (15) fine arts, (16) crafts and hobbies, (17) sports and games, and (18) holidays.
    [Show full text]
  • Guided Reading Book List
    Title Author Level Anno’s Counting Book Mitsumasa Anno A Count and See Tana Hoban A Dig, Dig Leslie Wood A Do You Want to Be My Friend? Eric Carle A Flowers Karen Hoenecke A Growing Colors Bruce McMillan A In My Garden Moria McLean A Look What I Can Do Jose Aruego A Sea Shapes Suse MacDonald A Taking a Walk Rebecca Emberley A What Do Insects Do? S. Canizares & P. Chanko A What Has Wheels? Karen Hoenecke A Getting There Young B Hats Around the World Liza Charlesworth B Have You Seen My Cat? Eric Carle B Have You Seen My Duckling? Nancy Tafuri B Here’s Skipper Lynn Salem & J. Stewart B How Many Fish? Caron Lee Cohen B I Can Help Stan Wilhelm B I Can Write, Can You? Lynn Salem & J. Stewart B Let’s Go Visiting Sue Williams B Look, Look, Look Tana Hoban B Mommy, Where Are You? Ziefert & Boon B Runaway Monkey Lynn Salem & J. Stewart B So Can I Margery Facklam B Sunburn Ann Prokopchak B Thank You Betsey Chessen B Two Points J. Kennedy & A. Eaton B Under the Bed Bruce Larkin B Water/Who Lives in a Tree?/Who Lives in the Arctic Susan Canizares B Title Author Level All Fall Down Brian Wildsmith C Apples Deborah Williams C Bears Bobbie Kalman C Big Long Animal Song Mike Artwell C Brown Bear, Brown Bear What Do You See? Bill Martin C Cats Deborah Williams C I See Monkeys Deborah Williams C I Want a Pet Barbara Gregorich C I Want To Be a Clown Sharon Johnson C Joshua James Likes Trucks Catherine Petrie C Leaves Karen Hoenecke C Looking for Halloween Karen Evans C Monsters Diane Namm C My Kite Deborah Williams C Octopus Goes to School Carolyn Bordelon C One Hunter Pat Hutchins C Pancakes for Breakfast Tomie dePaola C Rain R.
    [Show full text]
  • Favorite Alphabet Exhibition List
    FAVORITE ALPHABETS Children’s Books selected from the Rare, General and Children’s Literature Center’s Collections in the Library of Congress THE LIST Alphabet Blocks Like Russian stacking dolls, these old-fashioned alphabet blocks are hollow, containing two more sets of blocks inside. ABC PYRAMID. Picture blocks. With 72 wooden blocks with chromolithograph images. No Place, printer or year. (ca. 1900). GV1218.B6 P 87 1900 Rare Book Collection An early Alphabet of Paper Dolls Produced in France, this unusual, early nineteenth century alphabet features a set of 25 paper dolls mounted on wooden block stands. Each doll, displaying a letter of the alphabet, represents a different nationality or character. ALPHABET GROTESQUE. Box with 25 paper dolls in color. Paris: Chez tous les Marchand de Nouveautes [1835?]. PC22153.A58 1835 Rare Book Collection A classic mid-19th century German Picture Book This classic Nürnberg alphabet book – the first and only edition – is a fine example of the artistic German picture book which began to emerge in the mid-nineteenth century. Das originelle ABC. Allerliebst komisch figuerlich dargestellt; mit Bilder-Szenen aus der Vergangenheit und Gegenwart durch sinnige poetische Erlaeuterungen ausgestattet. [ABC, the original ABC. Illustrated charmingly with scenes from the past and present, explained by poetic verses]. With 72 hand-colored engravings on 24 plates. Nürnberg: Renner, G.N., 1835. PZ 32.O75 1835 Rare Book Collection Making a Picture Book An assortment of book components - from drawings to dummy to finished book – illustrate by the making of a picture book. ABC. A Walker Toy Book. Included in this small archive are: the original watercolor used for the cover, a complete dummy with a pencil sketch and 12 unfinished watercolor illustrations, and the finished book.
    [Show full text]
  • Best Children's Picture Books from Abroad:Valuing Other
    —————————————————▲—————————————————— BEST CHILDREN'S PICTURE BOOKS FROM ABROAD:VALUING OTHER CULTURES Maureen White Assistant Professor of Education University of Houston-Clear Lake 2700 Bay Area Blvd., Box 347 Houston, TX 77058-1098 USA E-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT Translated children’s books can play an important role in helping children develop an understanding of other people. Outstanding picture books in this specialized genre affirm the fact that each person is unique, but there are universal themes and feelings that every person possesses, regardless of culture or language. A comparison of the past six years of Caldecott Award Winners and outstanding translated children’s books provides insights into their similarities and differences. While the Caldecott books all seem to be big, bright, and beautiful, the translated picture books selected for study seem to be diverse in style, medium, and bookmanship. INTRODUCTION Children's literature, and especially children's picture books, can be a venue for understanding and valuing our own culture and the culture of others. Valuing another culture is based on the understanding that each person is unique, but that people have universal feelings and needs that bind us together. Literature can allow for this understanding even when language is a barrier. This is accomplished through seamless translations from the original language into the language of another reader. Translated children's books can provide the opportunity for children to read the literature from other languages and experience the common themes that tie us together; themes such as the need for friendships, love, hope, the healing aspect of humor, fear of the unknown, and the need for safety.
    [Show full text]
  • Celebrating Dr. Seuss' 100Th Birthday • International Youth Library
    cvr1.qxd 11/17/2003 11:55 AM Page 1 Children the journal of the Association for Library Service to Children Libraries & Volume 1 Number 3 Winter 2003 ISSN 1542-9806 Celebrating Dr. Seuss’ 100th Birthday • International Youth Library • Caldecott Capers • Batchelder Award NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID BIRMINGHAM, AL PERMIT NO. 3020 wint03-CAL_final.qxd 02/02/2004 10:53 AM Page 1 Table Contentsl ofVolume 1, Number 3 Winter 2003 Notes and Letters 34 North to Canada 2 Editor’s Note ALA Annual Conference in Toronto, Ontario, June 2003 Sharon Korbeck Sharon Korbeck 2 Executive Director’s Note 36 Seeing the Light Malore I. Brown A Tribute to Ethel Macmillan and 3 Librarians Everywhere Letters to the Editor Brian Doyle Features 39 Dogs and Dinosaurs, 4 The Seussabilities Are Endless Hobbies and Horses Dr. Seuss Centennial Celebrations Age-Related Changes in Children’s Sharon Korbeck Information and Reading Preferences Brian W. Sturm 9 The Caldecott Capers Departments Good Books Make a Good Movie Megan Lynn Isaac 3 Call for Referees 52 Book Reviews 12 From Thieves to Hens 54 Index to Advertisers The 2003 Batchelder Award 55 ALSC News and Honor Books 61 Index to Volume 1 Sandra Imdieke and Monique leConge 64 The Last Word 15 Award Acceptance Speeches Batchelder Award Carnegie Medal 20 Imagination and Inspiration Hans Christian Andersen Award Nominees Lois Lowry and Vera B. Williams Ginny Moore Kruse 29 A Castle of Books Visiting the International Youth Library Susan Stan 33 Someday You’ll Go to the Moon page 4 Musings on Children’s Nonfiction Sharon Korbeck wint03-CAL_final.qxd 02/02/2004 10:53 AM Page 2 Editor’s Note What a Wubbulous Job! Sharon Korbeck I really love my job today; Editor It’s time to write and edit, I mean, play! Sharon Korbeck, Waupaca, WI Editorial Advisory Committee It’s the hundredth birthday of Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Spirituality Books for Children
    Young Children’s Spirituality Books for Children A Child’s Garden of Yoga (1980) by Baba Hari Dass A book of Yoga poses with directions illustrated by children. There are especially nice group poses toward the back. A Little Peace (2007) by Barbara Kerley This National Geographic Children’s book shows photographs from around the world accompanied by poetic text showing how each person can work to achieve peace. A Place Where Sunflowers Grow (2006) by Amy Lee-Tai Written in English and Japanese. This is Mari’s story of how she was able to find beauty and hope in a Japanese Internment camp in Utah during the second world war. A Rainbow of Friends (1994) by P.K. Hallinan In simple rhymes, the book celebrates the differences in people that make each of us special. The message of world harmony and universal acceptance is strong. All I see is Part of Me (1994) by Chara M. Curtis The author of this beautifully written book tells the story by speaking of things that children’s see every day: trees, plants, animals, and people. The book conveys innocence and wonder conveying to the child that “Your body is just a little part of the light that shines within your heart.” All in a Day (1999, 1986) Mitsumasa Anno. From Publishers Weekly: “Ten international artists, including Raymond Briggs, Nicolai Ye Popov, Akiko Hayashi, Eric Carle and Leo and Diane Dillon, show children in different parts of the world over the course of the same day.” All of You was Singing (1995) by Richard Lewis.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]