Tuesday, June 2, 2026

3rd June World Bicycle Day



World Bicycle Day
 brings attention to the advantages of utilising the bicycle — an uncomplicated, affordable, clean, and environmentally sustainable means of transportation. The bike contributes to cleaner air, reduces congestion, and shortens the distance between education, health care, and other social services and the most vulnerable populations. It is a sustainable transportation method that promotes economic growth and reduces inequalities while supporting the action against climate change.

German Inventor Karl von Drais is credited with developing the first bicycle in 1817. Drais was a prolific inventor, but his most popular and widely recognised invention was a two-wheeled bicycle. It incorporated the two-wheeler principle that is basic to the bicycle and motorcycle  and was the beginning of mechanised personal transport. This was the earliest form of a bicycle, without pedals. 


The Running Machine  by Keith Negley 
A story of pluck and determination inspired by the real events of 1815-17, when a young man named Karl Drais invented the very first bicycle. Before there were trains, or cars, or planes, people rode horses to travel from place to place. Then came the Year without a Summer, when a cloud of volcanic ash blocked the sun and crops withered across half the world. With no oats to eat, horses grew too weak to walk. Everyone despaired—how would they get around?






Pedals were added in 1864 in a Paris workshop. The need for speed spawned the Penny Farthing in 1870, whose wheel size determined the ‘gearing’ of the bike.

In countries around the world, people were realising the usefulness of this vehicle. It was in 1893 in Australia that the bike’s real potential was established. For a time Australia was the long-distance cycling centre of the world, with various distance records established by Australian riders.

Nobody knows exactly how many bikes exist in the world, but it is estimated that there are somewhere around 1 billion. 


I have written about this day before, but I have just shared Banjo Paterson's Mulga Bill's Bicycle with a year 2 class and it never ceases to amaze me how interested they are in this book and its story.




Other books I haven't mentioned before that are worth looking for in the library:


 The Bicycle  by Patricia McCormack and Mevan Babakar.

For generations, Mevan and her family lived in their beloved Kurdistan. But when they are forced to flee by the Iraqi government, Mevan must leave everything behind. Her family travels from country to country in search of safety; and with each stop, Mevan feels more and more alone. Until … a stranger’s gift changes everything. Based on Mevan Babakar’s own childhood, this is a moving reminder of how powerful just one act of kindness can be.

Bicycle Eureka! the Biography of an Idea  by Lori Haskins Houran & Aaron Cushley

Here is a "biography" of bicycles, an essential invention that keeps people rolling! From the first spark of an idea of a new way to get around to the spread of bicycles throughout the world, Bicycle is a fun and informative look at an invention that makes a huge difference in our lives.

Noodles on a Bicycle by Kyo Maclear & Gracey Zhang

A vibrant historical picture book about Tokyo's bicycle food deliverers, or demae, who balanced towering trays of steaming hot noodles on their shoulders while navigating crowded city streets.



Ride Beside Me
 by Lucy Knisley
The community that rides together, thrives together! This book celebrates the joys of biking and the community coming together to build safer streets and a brighter future for all.


Pedal, Balance, Steer by Vivian Kirkfield & Alison Jay

In the 1890s, times were tough, and opportunities for women were few and far between. When mother-of-three Annie Londonderry saw an ad promising $10,000 to a woman who could cycle around the world in a year, something no one thought possible, she decided it was time to learn to ride. She waved goodbye to her family in Boston and set off for Chicago.

Books on Bikes  by F. Isabel Campoy & Brizida Magro
Lía loves books, and she reads all the time—even while walking her trusty bike through town. But sometimes books can be hard to come by. When Lía discovers her neighbours are as eager for books as she is, she takes a page from the heroes she has read about and pedals into action! Inspired by real-life book bike programs this book celebrates how one child’s small act can transform communities. 


Why are American picture books so expensive in Australia? The last four books are too expensive for most school libraries, so you might need to check at your local library.

For more books about bicycles see this Pinterest. A biography about champion cyclist Chris Hoy has recently been published in the Little People Big Dreams series too.

Monday, June 1, 2026

Book Week Planning for Symphony of Stories Part 7: What's left?

Opera

Opera is a dramatic theatrical genre within Western classical music where a story is told entirely through singing and orchestral music. The words of an opera is called the libretto (from the Latin term for “book”; a musical theatre libretto is called the book of the musical.) The music for the opera would be called the score. Operas and musical theatre first and foremost tell a story, so they are very fitting for a theme such as 'symphony of stories'.

Operas such as the stories of Hansel and Gretel and The Magic Flute are easy places to start, but there are picture books for Turandot  and La Traviata as well. The Music Storybook series is beautifully illustrated by recognised children's book artists. This unique series presents famous operas, ballets and suites in a picture book form. Each book also includes six supplementary pages with background information about the composer and the musical piece.











Ballet

A book such as this, introduces children to the music that accompanies many famous ballets -Swan Lake, Giselle, The Nutcracker, Spartacus, and The Firebird.

And this too introduces the stories of seven ballets.


Biographies of musicians not previously mentioned 


Teresa Carreno (1853 - 1917)  a Venezuelan pianist, composer, soprano, and conductor. 




Ethel Smyth
(1858 - 1944) English composer and suffragette. Her compositions include songs, works for piano, chamber music, orchestral works, choral works and operas.



Amy Beach (1867 - 1944) 
American composer and pianist. She was the first successful American female composer of large-scale art music. Her "Gaelic" Symphony, premiered by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1896, was the first symphony composed and published by an American woman. 








Elizabeth Cotten (1893 - 1987) an influential American folk and blues musician.











Marian Anderson (1897 - 1993) an American contralto who performed a wide range of music including opera.


George Gershwin (1898 - 1937) American composer and pianist whose compositions spanned jazz, popular and classical music. Famous for Rhapsody in Blue and folk opera Porgy and Bess.

Viola Smith (1912 - 2020) American drummer. She was one of the first professional female drummers.






Ishtak Perlman (1945 -  )  an Israeli-American violinist.




 


Pete Seeger (1919 -2014)  American folk singer, songwriter, musician and civil-rights activist. His best-known songs include “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?”, “If I Had a Hammer” and “Turn, Turn, Turn.”





Elton John
(1947 -   ) British singer and pianist.





 


Yo Yo Ma (1955 -   ) American celloist





Troy (Trombone Shorty) Andrews
. (1986 -  ) 
Trombone Shorty, is an American musician, most notably a trombone player, from New Orleans.








Recycled Orchestra of Cateura is a famous Paraguayan musical group made up of children from a slum built atop a massive landfill in Asunción. They play classical and popular music on instruments crafted entirely from scavenged trash. 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

1st June World Reef Awareness Day

World Reef Awareness Day is on 1st June.  It is a call to action for everyone  to reflect on the fragile ecosystem of our ocean's coral reefs and  to generate active change by education and engagement.

Coral reefs are living communities of colonial organisms made of individual polyps that excrete a bone-like skeleton. This skeleton forms large rock-like structures that are homes for thousands of organisms. The reef ecosystem is a significant life support system for plankton to algae to the enormous sea creatures. 

Tomorrow I will put together a table display of coral reef books for the students to borrow.


























Book Week Planning for Symphony of Stories Part 6: It doesn't have to be a symphony! Jazz


The Story Of Music
By James Carter & Valerio Vidali


It hums and it thrums
through day and night
the magical, mystical
rhythm of life!





This wonderful book introduces all sorts of music. (See it on Youtube)

Orchestras, choirs all kinds of bands 

journeyed around across the lands.

Jazz to country, samba to swing 

many new styles, new songs to sing. 

So here's some books that look at other kinds of music.

Jazz

 

This Jazz Man by Karen Ehrhardt & R.G. Roth

This swinging make-over of “This Old Man” introduces the roles of nine jazz legends amid gorgeous illustrations and plenty of onomatopoeia.
(See it on Youtube)






And there are so many picture book biographies about famous jazz musicians and singers.




Duke Ellington 1899 - 1974 pianist









Louis Armstrong 1901 - 1971 trumpeter









Josephine Baker 1906 -1975 









Mary Lou Williams 1910 - 1981 pianist










Django Reinhardt 1910 - 1953 guitarist









Billie Halliday 1915 - 1954 jazz singer 









Dizzy Gillespie 1917 - 1993 trumpeter








Ella Fitzgerald 1917 - 1996 jazz singer








Charlie Parker 1920 - 1955 saxophonist








Oscar Peterson 1925 - 2007 pianist








John Coltrane 1926 - 1967 saxaphonist









Miles Davis 1926 - 1991 trumpeter








Melba Liston 1926 - 1999 trombonist








Nina Simone 1933 - 2003 pianist, singer









I am sure I have missed some, but this is a good start. Need another entry for other music and biographies.