My Two Dads Team Colours Day - Childhood Cancer Camp Quality Puppets I Love My Dad

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

My Two Dads Team Colours Day - Childhood Cancer Camp Quality Puppets I Love My Dad Issue 14 Term 3 31/08/2017 6 September Canteen Orders due LLL Banking 7 September Outdoor Classroom Day 8 September Worship 9:00 am My Two Dads Team Colours Day - Childhood Cancer Camp Quality Puppets I love my Dad. As I lay in a swag under the stars, wondered at the splendour of the outback, climbed mountains, played in 11 - 15 September When I was young, my dad was very waves, marvelled at panoramas and traversed Swimming (BLC MS, BLC LM, MLC D & MLC P) busy building the family business; often continents, he smiled at my joy of his gift for me – travelling interstate or overseas. My creation. 11 September brothers and I were sometimes invited When troubles and disappointment came and I made Assembly 2:00 pm to join dad on these trips, getting mistakes; when friends died and grief was the special one to one time with our father, while mountain, he told me he was with me and comforted 13 September travelling to new and amazing places. me while I cried. Canteen Orders due My dad loves the outback and as children we spent My heavenly Dad gave me gifts of beauty, creation and LLL Banking many nights under the stars sleeping in swags and love…because he loves me. Even if I tried with all my 15 September days adventuring in the bush. I got my love for heart, I could not come close to loving God the way vast, beautiful landscapes and my courage to that he loves me. Romans 8 is filled with references to Worship 2:00 pm adventure from my dad. the incomprehensible love of God. He made us his heirs P & F Disco & Parents Retreat (verse 17) and in the image of his own son. (verse 29) I appreciate now, how very fortunate I was to have He called, justified and glorified us (verse 30). He has 18 - 22 September had the opportunities that I did. My dad loved us our back (verse 31) and gave the life of his only son for Swimming (BLC JS, JLC K, MLC B & MLC H) and gave us gifts of the things that he loved. Who us. He promises that there is nothing that shall his children have grown into today is very closely separate us from his love. NOTHING! (verse 35-39) 20 September tied to the experiences we had growing up…and I Canteen Orders due thank my dad for those. We love our dads and Father’s day is a special time to honour them for all they do that has helped us to LLL Banking I love my Heavenly Dad as well. become who we are. It is also a great time to honour the incredible love of our Heavenly Father. A love that is When I was very young, my heavenly dad was very bigger, stronger, more hopeful and enduring than Please pray for the following families: busy protecting me. As I adventured and made new anything we can really comprehend. Marshall, Martin, Martin, Maxwell discoveries; he was there beside me and when I tried dangerous things, as children sometimes do, We are his and he will not let us go. McClelland, Menzel, Mickan, Mitchell, he made me bounce instead of break. Mrs Zadow & Mrs Grivell School Crossing Monitors Taking Action Term 3 Week 8 Action is one of the five essential elements of the written curriculum in the PYP. AM: Taylor H, Jack Sh, Hayden Kn Action – is the demonstration of deeper learning in responsible behaviour through responsible action; a manifestation in practice of the other essential elements. (Making the PYP Happen, p 10) PM: Chloe N, Toby B, Charlotte G Term 3 Week 9 ACTION - a change in the way we are more patient or committed. AM: Mitchell Z, Lillie M, Jesse G ACTION - a change in the way that we think. ACTION - a change in something that we say. PM: Thomas B, Samuel K, Jaiden B ACTION - a change in something that we do. ACTION - a change in something that we have more respect or determination. ACTION - a change in something we feel. Term Dates Term 3 24 July - 29 September “… purposeful reflection is always linked to action.” Marcia Behrenbruch (10 week Term) … Reflect – Choose – Act – Reflect – Choose – Act – Reflect – Choose – Act … Term 4 16 October - 13 December (8-1/2 week Term) Evie Stevens PYP Coordinator School Banking ICAS Competition Spelling This year we had 26 children participate in Spelling. We received the following awards: Nari Freckleton Year 2 Merit Dylan Weyland Year 5 Merit School Banking with the LLL is available every Archie King Year 5 Merit Wednesday during school terms. Georgia King Year 6 Merit Hayden Lien Year 3 Credit Bank books need to be placed in the letterbox Kayla Weyland Year 3 Credit located in the front office ready for collection Archer Baugh Year 3 Credit on Wednesday mornings. Andrew Selby Year 3 Credit Elle Rose Shearer Year 4 Credit Contact the office if you would like to find out Evan Cox Year 4 Credit more about LLL banking. Evie Krieg Year 5 Credit Pareesa Mohtasham Year 2 Distinction Thank You Mrs Collins Congratulations to our award winners! A special mention to Pareesa Mohtasham for receiving a Principal’s Award for high achievement. Woolworths Earn & Learn Now until 19 September earn 1 sticker for every $10 you spend at Woolworths. Send Fears and Worries your stickers into From time to time, children can seem more affected by fears and worries. Parents and carers are school and watch us usually the first people children look to for support and reassurance Providing reassurance such as earn some amazing hugs and encouragement helps to restore children’s sense of safety and confidence. Giving resources for the children a sense of safety includes limiting their exposure to frightening situations, such as students to share. violence – whether real or on TV. Many parents take the wise step of turning off the news in the morning or at night. If your child seems particularly sensitive at the moment, it might be worth considering for a time. Remember that the news isn’t written for children and can be misunderstood by children viewing it. Parents and carers can also play a leading role in helping children learn QUESTION: What kind of skills for managing their fears. Things to take into account bear has no teeth? It takes time and effort for children to learn new coping skills. These can be explicitly taught and ANSWER: A gummy bear! practised. Coping skills aren’t always ‘caught’ or appear when your child needs them. Younger children usually learn best when you work through strategies with them. This may require Are you still craving something sweet? dramatizing scenarios or talking through what and how to think about situations Did your work colleagues snap up those lolly Though older children may be able to use coping skills independently, they still need your support when bags in no time? scared. All children feel more secure and confident when they have regular quality time with parents and Have you run out of half time sweets for carers. weekend sports? Bedtime is often when children’s fears surface. Try to ensure that children have calming time before bed Did your kids eat them all before you could to unwind. A regular bedtime routine or ritual helps children feel a sense of safety and security. I know get any? many parents are aware of the benefits of less screen time in the hour before bed. Why not take advantage of these remaining cold nights and snuggle up and read a book with your child at bedtime. Then you’re in luck….we still have a number of boxes of the Natural Confectionary Company Jayne Zadow lollies to sell. If you can help out by taking a Wellbeing Coordinator second box, please see Lee-Anne at the front desk and she will be glad to hand one over. Boxes are Absentees / Late Arrival charged to your If your child is absent, or will be late for any reason, the school needs to be notified. You can use the following account, but can be means of passing on this information: offset by returning the money collected to the Leave a message on our answering machine - this can be done at any time and does not need to wait front office. until 8:30 am. Send an e-form via the Skoolbag app Send an email to [email protected] Mums, Dads, Grandmas, Grandpas, Aunts, Uncles, Special Friends Swimming Times You are invited to September 11 - 14 BLC / MS 1:00 pm MLC / D 1:00 pm BLC / LM 1:45 pm MLB / P 1:45 pm September 18 - 22 BLC / JS 1:00 pm Every Friday 8.15am – 8.45am in the Library MLC / H 1:00 pm JLC / K 1:45 pm Storytime is a time to enjoy reading with your child/ren. It’s a simple as that! MLC / B 1:45 pm Don’t have an adult who can make it? September 25 - 29 No problem! We have Senior Reading Buddies ready and willing to fill this very special position. JLC / E 1:45 pm No one is left out. JLC / ML 1:45 pm Come along on a Friday morning. Join us for Chapel and then have a cuppa at Café 3:16. Why not make a morning of it? School Gymkhana Congratulations to the St Michaels Questions? Feel free to contact [email protected] or pop into the SLC classrooms for a chat.
Recommended publications
  • The Musical Number and the Sitcom
    ECHO: a music-centered journal www.echo.ucla.edu Volume 5 Issue 1 (Spring 2003) It May Look Like a Living Room…: The Musical Number and the Sitcom By Robin Stilwell Georgetown University 1. They are images firmly established in the common television consciousness of most Americans: Lucy and Ethel stuffing chocolates in their mouths and clothing as they fall hopelessly behind at a confectionary conveyor belt, a sunburned Lucy trying to model a tweed suit, Lucy getting soused on Vitameatavegemin on live television—classic slapstick moments. But what was I Love Lucy about? It was about Lucy trying to “get in the show,” meaning her husband’s nightclub act in the first instance, and, in a pinch, anything else even remotely resembling show business. In The Dick Van Dyke Show, Rob Petrie is also in show business, and though his wife, Laura, shows no real desire to “get in the show,” Mary Tyler Moore is given ample opportunity to display her not-insignificant talent for singing and dancing—as are the other cast members—usually in the Petries’ living room. The idealized family home is transformed into, or rather revealed to be, a space of display and performance. 2. These shows, two of the most enduring situation comedies (“sitcoms”) in American television history, feature musical numbers in many episodes. The musical number in television situation comedy is a perhaps surprisingly prevalent phenomenon. In her introduction to genre studies, Jane Feuer uses the example of Indians in Westerns as the sort of surface element that might belong to a genre, even though not every example of the genre might exhibit that element: not every Western has Indians, but Indians are still paradigmatic of the genre (Feuer, “Genre Study” 139).
    [Show full text]
  • By Jennifer M. Fogel a Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy
    A MODERN FAMILY: THE PERFORMANCE OF “FAMILY” AND FAMILIALISM IN CONTEMPORARY TELEVISION SERIES by Jennifer M. Fogel A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Communication) in The University of Michigan 2012 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Amanda D. Lotz, Chair Professor Susan J. Douglas Professor Regina Morantz-Sanchez Associate Professor Bambi L. Haggins, Arizona State University © Jennifer M. Fogel 2012 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I owe my deepest gratitude to the members of my dissertation committee – Dr. Susan J. Douglas, Dr. Bambi L. Haggins, and Dr. Regina Morantz-Sanchez, who each contributed their time, expertise, encouragement, and comments throughout this entire process. These women who have mentored and guided me for a number of years have my utmost respect for the work they continue to contribute to our field. I owe my deepest gratitude to my advisor Dr. Amanda D. Lotz, who patiently refused to accept anything but my best work, motivated me to be a better teacher and academic, praised my successes, and will forever remain a friend and mentor. Without her constructive criticism, brainstorming sessions, and matching appreciation for good television, I would have been lost to the wolves of academia. One does not make a journey like this alone, and it would be remiss of me not to express my humble thanks to my parents and sister, without whom seven long and lonely years would not have passed by so quickly. They were both my inspiration and staunchest supporters. Without their tireless encouragement, laughter, and nurturing this dissertation would not have been possible.
    [Show full text]
  • Save Me HV PK
    SAVE ME Directed by Robert Cary Story by Craig Chester and Alan Hines Screenplay by Robert Desiderio Starring Chad Allen, Robert Gant, Judith Light 96 minutes, color, 2007 First Run Features 630 Ninth Avenue, Suite 1213 New York, NY 10036 (212) 243-0600/Fax (212) 989-7649 www.firstrunfeatures.com 1 of 18 SYNOPSIS 1 Save Me is a love story about Mark, a sex and drug addicted young man who after an accidental overdose finds he’s been checked into a Christian retreat for ‘Ex-Gays’. Gayle, the director of the ministry run together with her husband Ted, believes she can help cure young men of their ‘gay affliction’ through spiritual guidance. At first, Mark resists, but soon takes the message to heart. As Mark’s fellowship with his fellow Ex-Gays grow stronger, however, he finds himself powerfully drawn to Scott, another young man battling family demons of his own. As their friendship begins to develop into romance, Mark and Scott are forced to confront the new attitudes they’ve begun to accept, and Gayle finds the values she holds as an absolute truth to be threatened. A complex and deeply sympathetic look into both sides of one of the most polarizing religious and sexual debates in America. SYNOPSIS 2 Though there is no sound scientific evidence that sexual orientation can be changed, the ex-gay movement has been at the polarizing center of religious and sexual debates in the U.S. since the 1970s. In Save Me , an exceptionally layered, intelligent and sensitive drama brought to life by director Robert Cary, Mark (Chad Allen) a self-destructive addict hooked to anonymous sex and narcotics finally hits bottom.
    [Show full text]
  • Rich Dad Poor
    Rich Dad Poor Dad will… • Explode the myth that you need to earn a high income to become rich • Challenge the belief that your house is an asset • Show parents why they can’t rely on the school system to teach their kids about money • Define once and for all an asset and a liability • Teach you what to teach your kids about money for their future financial success Robert Kiyosaki has challenged and changed the way tens of millions of people around the world think about money. With perspectives that often contradict conventional wisdom, Robert has earned a reputation for straight talk, irreverence and courage. He is regarded worldwide as a passionate advocate for financial education. R o b What The Rich Teach Their Kids About Money – “The main reason people struggle financially is because they e That The Poor And Middle Class Do Not! have spent years in school but learned nothing about money. r The result is that people learn to work for money… but never t learn to have money work for them.” T . – Robert Kiyosaki K i y Rich Dad Poor Dad – The #1 Personal Finance Book of All Time! o “Rich Dad Poor Dad is a starting point for anyone looking to gain control of their s financial future.” – USA TODAY a k i www.richdad.com ™ $16.95 US | $19.95 CAN Robert T. Kiyosaki “Rich Dad Poor Dad is a starting point for anyone looking to gain control of their financial future.” – USA TODAY RICH DAD POOR DAD What The Rich Teach Their Kids About Money— That The Poor And Middle Class Do Not! By Robert T.
    [Show full text]
  • This Is a Test
    ‘AFTER THE FALL’ CAST BIOS ANDREA BOWEN (Jenna Danville) – An industry veteran at the age of 19, Andrea Bowen has not stopped working since she appeared on Broadway at the age of 6 as Young Cosette in Les Miserables, becoming the youngest Cosette in the show's 16-year run. She went on to originate the role of Marta Von Trapp in the 1998 Broadway revival of The Sound of Music and the role of Adele in the 2000 Broadway musical production of Jane Eyre. She also appeared as Young Dorothy in the Lincoln Center Workshop production WAS, directed by Tina Landau, and as Leisl at the Hollywood Bowl in The Sound of Music with John Schneider and Melissa Errico. In the summer of 2008 she starred in the hit play Dog Sees God at the Hudson Backstage and in the LA Theatre Works production of Speech and Debate with former SNL cast member Nora Dunn. Best known for her portrayal of Julie Mayer on the hit TV series “Desperate Housewives,” for which she won two Screen Actors Guild Awards for Best Performance by an Ensemble, Bowen’s numerous television credits include a series regular role on ABC's “That Was Then,” recurring and guest appearances on “Boston Public,” “Without A Trace,” “Law & Order,” “Third Watch,” “Arliss,” “One Tree Hill,” “Nip/Tuck,” “Strong Medicine,” “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” and “King of the Hill.” In 2007, Bowen starred opposite Jennie Garth in the multi-award winning film, “Girl, Posi+ive,” in which she played a high school student infected with the AIDS virus.
    [Show full text]
  • 11 Pm Spring 1990 Edmonton Prime Time TV Schedules 7 Pm
    Spring 2000 Edmonton Prime Time TV Schedules 7 p.m. - 11 p.m. February 25 - March 17, 2000 Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 7 Royal Air Farce Olympians On The Road Mr. Bean Thin Blue Line Wind At My Back It's a Living Pit Pony Country Canada Red Green Show Dooley Gardens 8 22 Minutes Marketplace Royal Air Farce the fifth estate Witness Drop the Beat Venture Red Green Show Hockey Night In Movie/Special 9 Bette Show Canada The Nature of Things Life & Times Da Vinci's Inquest Le Dortoir 22 Minutes 10 The National Sunday Report CBXT Magazine Undercurrents 7 Wheel Of Fortune Twice In A Lifetime Felicity Jeopardy! 8 Roswell W5 Law & Order ER Power Play Little Men Charmed 9 Who Wants To Be A Who Wants To Be A Whose Line Is It Third Watch The City Cold Squad Once and Again Millionaire? Millionaire? Anyway? 10 Drew Carey Who Wants To Be A Law & Order: Special America's Most Who Wants To Be A Ally McBeal The West Wing CFRN Norm Millionaire? Victims Unit Wanted Millionaire? 7 That '70s Show Party Of Five Beverly Hills 90210 Dawson's Creek Greed: The Series Traders Touched By An Angel That '70s Show 8 3rd Rock Fire and Ice: The Second City Family Law Stargate SG-1 Amazon 60 Minutes God, Devil & Bob Richard Riot 9 Dharma & Greg Friends Simpsons NYPD Blue City of Angels Providence Pretender Becker Jesse Malcolm in the Middle 10 Raymond Will & Grace Frasier Saturday Night Live La Femme Nikita Profiler X-Files CITV Grapevine Frasier Stark Raving Mad 7 Friends Star Trek: Voyager Frasier Movie 8 Relic Hunter Movie 9 Dead Man's Gun Movie 10 News News Highlander CKEM Alfred Hitchcock Canadian Local Foreign Spring 1990 Edmonton Prime Time TV Schedules 7 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Women's Leadership in Primetime Television an Introductory Study
    Women’s Leadership in Primetime Television An Introductory Study Natalie Greene Spring 2009 General University Honors Capstone Advisor: Karen O’Connor Greene 1 Women’s Leadership in Prime-time Television: An Introductory Study Introduction When television executives report their core audience, women always come out ahead. A 2007 Nielsen Media Research report showed that, with only two exceptions, every broadcast network channel had more female viewers than men. ABC’s female audience almost doubled its male audience during the 2007-08 season (Atkinson, 2008). 1 Women onscreen, however, seem to reflect a different reality, making up only 43% of characters in the prime-time 2007-08 season (Lauzen, 2008). 2 As studies going back as far as the 1970s show, women on screen not only fail to represent the proportional makeup of women in society, they also overwhelmingly show a stereotypically gendered version of women (McNeil, 1975; Signorielli and Bacue, 1999; United States Commission on Civil Rights, 1977). This paper aims to address the evolution of women’s leadership in prime-time network scripted television from 1950 to 2008. Because of the way that women have been traditionally marginalized in television, it is important to study the shows that have featured women as lead characters. Characters such as Lucy Ricardo ( I Love Lucy, 1951-1960) influenced later female leads such as Ann Marie ( That Girl, 1966-1971), Mary Richards ( The Mary Tyler Moore Show, 1970-1977) and Murphy Brown ( Murphy Brown, 1988-1998). Thus, along with an introduction to socialization theory and feminist television criticism, this paper covers a selection of some of the most influential female characters and women-centered shows of this period.
    [Show full text]
  • Conversations with Bill Kristol Guest: Paul Cantor, Professor, University of Virginia
    Conversations with Bill Kristol Guest: Paul Cantor, professor, University of Virginia Table of Contents I: High and Low Art on TV 00:15 – 20:30 II: The Invisible Hand in Popular Culture 20:30 – 36:30 III: Are Gangsters Tragic Heroes? 36:30 – 45:47 IV: The Cowboy Western 45:47 – 56:26 V: The Simpsons and Seinfeld 56:26 – 1:10:31 VI: Conservatives and Popular Culture 1:10:31 – 1:27:51 I: High and Low Art on TV (00:15 – 20:30) KRISTOL: Hi, welcome back to CONVERSATIONS. I’m Bill Kristol. And welcome back to Paul Cantor. We’ve had one conversation on Shakespeare, and now we’re going to go from the high to the low, from Shakespeare to popular culture. CANTOR: Ooh. KRISTOL: You’re going to correct me. CANTOR: I resemble that remark. KRISTOL: I’m wrong to even associate popular culture with the low, right? I am wrong, right? So explain. CANTOR: Okay. The problem is that people identify certain media with popular culture as if television is simply popular culture and is low. My thesis is that in every medium, we have both the high and the low, whether it’s drama, whether it’s the novel, whether it’s movies, whether it’s television. And I would never question that there’s a lot of low stuff on television. But I’d just say there are a lot of low things among Shakespeare’s fellow dramatists and the same with the 19th-century novel and many of these other areas of culture.
    [Show full text]
  • This Is a Test
    ‘SHADOW ON THE MESA’ CAST BIOS KEVIN SORBO (Ray Eastman) – For seven years, Kevin Sorbo played the hulking, heroic lead in USA Network’s “Hercules: The Legendary Journeys,” a role that made him a star. But the self-described jock from Minnetonka, Minnesota (the home of Tonka Toys), the fourth of five kids, got the acting bug at age 11 seeing something quite different – the musical Oklahoma and Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice at Minneapolis’s famed Guthrie Theater. Though he made his first commercial - for Target - while attending the University of Minnesota, Sorbo graduated from Moorehead State University in Fargo, North Dakota, with a dual degree in advertising and marketing. In 1982, after college, Sorbo moved to Texas, where he began studying acting in earnest. A model friend there convinced him to travel to Europe, where he stayed for three years, building a tremendous commercial reel, with spots shot in cities from Milan and Munich to Paris and London. Within days of his return to the States in 1985, he shipped off to Australia for new commercial assignments, returning to L.A. six months later. Sorbo remained in demand through the early 90s, for both television and commercial work – he estimates appearing in 57 spots in the three years prior to being cast as Hercules. After appearing in such series as “Murder, She Wrote,” “Cheers” and “The Commish,” and after seven call backs with producer Sam Raimi, Sorbo was given the role of Hercules. The character appeared first in a series of two hour movies as part of USA Network’s “The Action Pack,” alongside William Shatner’s “Tek Wars” and others – Hercules being the sole survivor of the group and landing its own series.
    [Show full text]
  • 11 Pm Spring 1990 Montreal Prime Time TV Schedules 7 Pm
    Spring 2000 Montreal Prime Time TV Schedules 7 p.m. - 11 p.m. February 25 - March 17, 2000 Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 7 Royal Air Farce Olympians On The Road Mr. Bean Thin Blue Line Wind At My Back It's a Living Pit Pony Country Canada Red Green Show Dooley Gardens 8 22 Minutes Marketplace Royal Air Farce the fifth estate Witness Drop the Beat Venture Red Green Show Hockey Night In Movie/Special 9 Bette Show Canada The Nature of Things Life & Times Da Vinci's Inquest Le Dortoir 22 Minutes 10 The National Sunday Report CBMT Magazine Undercurrents 7 Access Hollywood Star Trek: Voyager Felicity Raymond Candid Camera Cosby King Of Queens Darndest Things 8 Just Shoot Me Veronica's Closet Freaks and Geeks Stargate SG-1 Power Play Little Men Touched by an Angel Grapevine Norm 9 Will & Grace Ally McBeal Now and Again Charmed The City Pretender Charmed Becker 10 Third Watch The West Wing Amazon ER Nash Bridges La Femme Nikita Once and Again CFCF 7 New Addams Family Sabrina Ready Or Not Flash Forward 60 Minutes Entertainment Tonight Mysterious Island Global 8 That '70s Show 3rd Rock Friends That '70s Show Simpsons Simpsons Beverly Hills 90210 That '70s Show God, Devil and Bob God, Devil & Bob Bob & Margaret King of the Hill Malcolm in the Middle 9 Dharma & Greg Frasier Dawson's Creek Greed: The Series Greed: The Series The Outer Limits The X-Files Frasier Stark Raving Mad 10 Fire and Ice: The Party of Five NYPD Blue Traders 20 / 20 PSI Factor The Practice CKMI Richard Riot Canadian Local Foreign Spring 1990 Montreal Prime Time TV Schedules 7 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • “The List” -- Prime-Time Television Shows Niceole Has Watched. (Rules
    “The List” -- Prime-time television shows Niceole has watched. (Rules: watched at least one full episode of a drama, comedy, or reality show, including reruns that aired in syndication.) 1. 1st & 10 2. The 100 3. 12 Monkeys 4. 2 Broke Girls 5. 20/20 6. 21 Jump Street 7. 227 8. 24 9. 240-Robert 10. 30 Rock 11. 3rd Rock from the Sun 12. The 4400 13. 48 Hours/48 Hours Mystery 14. 666 Park Avenue 15. 60 Minutes 16. 7th Heaven 17. 8 Simple Rules 18. 9 to 5 19. 90210 (new) 20. A to Z 21. A Gifted Man 22. A Year in the Life 23. A-Team 24. About a Boy 25. Absolutely Fabulous 26. According to Jim 27. Adam-12 28. The Addams Family 29. Adventures of Brisco County Jr. 30. Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet 31. The Affair 32. The After 33. Agent Carter 34. Agent X 35. Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. 36. Airwolf 37. Alcatraz 38. Alf 39. Alfred Hitchcock Presents 40. Alice 41. All American Girl 42. All in the Family 43. Allegiance 44. Ally McBeal 45. Almost Human 46. Almost Perfect 47. The Amazing Race 48. Amazing Stories 49. Amen 50. American Crime 51. American Crime Story: People vs. OJ Simpson 52. American Dad 53. American Horror Story 54. American Inventor 55. American Odyssey 56. The Americans 57. America's Funniest Home Videos 58. America’s Got Talent 59. America's Most Wanted 60. America's Next Top Model 61. The Andy Griffith Show 62. Angie 63.
    [Show full text]
  • Diverse LGBTQ Inclusive Picture Books
    Diverse LGBTQ Inclusive Picture Books Books Featuring All Kinds of Families Inclusive of LGBTQ Families All Are Welcome. Alexandra Penfold. (Pre-K – 1) Follow a diverse group of children from all kinds of families through a day at school, where everyone is welcomed with open arms. It lets young children know that no matter what, they have a place, they have a space, they are welcome in their school. All Families Invited. Kathleen Goodman. (Pre-K - K) Annabel dreams of making her school’s father-daughter dance more inclusive of all family types, she thinks changing the name of the dance will be an easy task. But Annabel quickly realizes that it’s harder than she thought. Blanket of Love. Alyssa Satin Capucilli. (Baby – Toddler) Features diverse families, including ones with two mom and two dads, in a simple exploration of the many kinds of comforting blankets in the world. Families. Shelley Rotner and Sheila M. Kelly. (Pre-K – K) Big or small, similar or different, there are all kinds of families featured in the many photos. This inclusive look can help children see beyond their experiences and begin to understand others The Family Book. Todd Parr. (Pre-K – K) All kinds of families are celebrated in a funny, silly and reassuring way. Includes adoptive families, stepfamilies, single- parent families, two-mom and two-dad families and families with a mom and a dad. Families, Families, Families! Suzanne and Max Lang. (Pre-K – K) A host of silly animals represent all kinds of families. Depicted as portraits, framed and hung, these goofy creatures offer a warm celebration of family love.
    [Show full text]