Saturday, March 29, 2025

2nd April International Children's Day


 







In 2025, International Children's Book Day (ICBD) is sponsored by IBBY-Netherlands and the poster is made by two Dutch creators of children’s books. The theme of the 2025 International Children's Book Day is The freedom of imagination, and the motto is the last sentence of the poem ‘The Language of Pictures’:

‘Make pictures for my poem, and please feel free: these words belong to you even though they came from me.’

The poem comes from the illustrated poetry collection Alle wensen van de wereld (2021) by Rian Visser and illustrator Janneke Ipenburg. This book was awarded a Zilveren Griffel in the Netherlands and the Gouden Poëziemedaille (Gold Poetry Medal) in Belgium.

I know very little about Dutch Children's Literature and this poem and illustration made me feel guilty that I didn't know more. Of course I know about Dick Bruna and Miffy is still popular in my Early Childhood Library. Miffy books are on display in the library at the moment along with other famous 'rabbits' in children's books eg Max and Ruby (Rosemary Wells), Simon (Stephanie Blake), Davy (Brigitte Weninger), Hopper (Marcus Pfister) and Betty Bunny (Michael Kaplan).

The other author Dutch author illustrator I know and admire is Max Velthuijs. His series of books about Frog will make you smile.

Other than those two, the library has very few other Dutch children's book makers... at least one book by each of these:

Jan Jutte










Wouter van Reek has a series of books about Coppernickel








Annemarie van Haeringen








Sarah van Dongen








Mies van Hout








The Tjong-Khing is an Indonesian-born children’s book illustrator based in the Netherlands who has won Dutch picture book prizes several times. 







Time to do some more research and find some more!

Meanwhile I have written more comprehensively about Children's Book Day here and Momotimetoread has here.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

28th March Weed Appreciation Day

 Who would have thought...there's a day to celebrate weeds!

This day is designed to remind us that some weeds are beneficial to us and our ecosystem. Humans have used weeds for food and as herbs for much of recorded history. Some are edible and nutritious, while other weeds have medicinal value.

A weed is basically any plant that grows where it's not wanted, but remember what fun you had as a child collecting dandelions or clover flowers to make things.  

Dandelions are a food source for insects and some birds. Humans eat young dandelion leaves and enjoy tea and wine made from the leaves and flowers. The Native Americans used dandelions to treat specific ailments. Nutritionally, dandelions contain a source of vitamin A and C, calcium, iron, and fibre.

Not a lot of picture books explore weeds, but these two do.



And this is a good time to read Quentin Blake's The Weed!

An inspiring fable about the power of nature, encouraging children and adults alike to care for the environment and each other. The Meadowsweet family suddenly and expectedly find themselves at the bottom of a giant crack in the earth. With the help of their pet bird, Octavia and a magical seed, the family go on a journey to the surface. A charming, fantastical story about discovery, the potential for growth, the power of an idea and the importance of having faith in the unknown.


It is dandelion Day on the 5th April and there are many more books to celebrate this day. See Pinterest.


Wednesday, March 26, 2025

30th March Pencil Day



National Pencil Day commemorates the day Hymen Lipman received his patent for a pencil with an eraser attached. 
Before that time, pencils and erasers existed separately. Lipman combined the two making two tools much more convenient to use. 

In the United States, most pencils are painted yellow. Did you know that Roald Dahl used only pencils with yellow casings to write his books? He began each day with six sharpened pencils and only when all six became unusable did he resharpen them.

I first wrote about this day in 2011, but so many more books about pencils have been published since then, that there is enough now for a very good display and fun lunchtime activities.



I have students who have read Linus the Little Yellow Pencil  by Scott Magoon and then drawn faces on their own pencils, but there are other books to explore:








Pencil by Ann Ingalls and Dean Griffiths







• Pencils on Strike  by Jennifer Jones 






Little Red Writing by Joan Holub and Melissa Sweet




• When Pencil Met Eraser by Karen Kilpatrick






• Perfect  by Max Amato





Pencil & Eraser  by Jenny Alvarado (book 1 in a new graphic series)





Dreams of a Pencil  by Xiaonan Zhang






Arabella and the Magic Pencil  by Stephanie Ward





• My Pencil and Me  by Sara Varon




Look here for more titles.

And keep an eye out for these two that are coming soon:


The Pencil  by  Susan Avingaq   









The Pencil  by Hye-Yun Kim
a wordless picture book, follows a pencil's life cycle from tree to factory to store shelf and back to tree, drawn on the pages of a book.






And if you can't celebrate Pencil Day, then you can use them for a display on Rubber Eraser Day on 15th April.


Eraser  by Anna Kang

Saturday, March 22, 2025

23rd March World Optometry Day






World Optometry Day is a day that celebrates optometrists and their contributions to vision care and eye health around the world.








It is not a day I will celebrate in the library, but I am surprised by the number of students I teach who do wear spectacles, far more than when I first started teaching, so it strikes me that parents and teachers today are more conscious of eye care. My sister who works in eye health would say that too, but she does despair at the number of parents who want help for their children, but who are reluctant to encourage their children to do the exercises or safeguards that the health professional suggests 'because they don't like it'. Intervention then takes a lot longer than planned.

I have written about World Sight Day before and listed book resources that would support reading on the topic of sight. Here are three to use for this specific day;


The Eyes by Lorna Hendry





 The Flying Optometrist  by Joanne Adderton









Maisy Goes to the Eye Doctor by Lucy Cousins
(although it says doctor in the title they do go to an optometrist)

23rd March World Bear Day








World Bear Day celebrates all types of bears! Moon bears, sun bears, spectacled bears, sloth bears, black and brown bears! There are eight species of bears and six of these are considered vulnerable or threatened according  to the IUCN Red List.

We have just celebrated Polar Bear Day and Panda Day, so now we can focus on the other bears. Start with a book like Meet the Bears  by Kate Peridot, A Book of Bears  by Katie Viggers or Something About a Bear  by Jackie Morris which introduce the eight bears and where to find them.

Then, here are some books that give positive messages about saving bears.























And coming later this year, this book by Catherine Barr.

In the past I have used picture books to look at Bears in Captivity. You can see some of the books I used for this unit on this Pinterest page.

Friday, March 21, 2025

22nd March International Seal Day

Today is International Seal Day, which is focused on celebrating and protecting these majestic marine mammals 🦭 While today is dedicated to seals, fittingly, this week is also Sustainable Seafood Week, which highlights an important action we can take to protect seals and marine life in the wild. Choosing MSC-certified seafood prevents the overfishing of our oceans and protects wild seals 🐟

This is from Instagram posted today from Taronga Zoo here in Sydney. They also had an article in the newspaper today about a sea lion pup that has been born at the zoo. I plan to use it with my Year 2 literacy group next week as we are looking at endangered Australian mammals and what can be done to ensure their futures. This is where I learned that it is International Seal Day.

Seals, whose scientific name is Pinnipedia, are found on every continent on Earth, principally in cold water environments. There are 33 different species alive today, from gigantic ones, such as the elephant seal, and small ones like the Baikal seal. These semi-aquatic marine mammals are thought to be close relatives to bears and the animal group that includes weasels and otters. 

While they look similar, sea lions are not seals. Belonging to the same suborder known as Pinnipedia, sea lions, seals, fur seals, and walruses share a common classification as 'pinnipeds', derived from the Latin words for fin or flipper-footed. Sea lions have little ears (seals only have ear holes), longer flippers and are generally a lot rowdier than their seal counterparts. International Sea Lion Day is on the 30th May.



The library doesn't have a lot of books about seals, but these have lovely illustrations and will give you information and a story.

See What a Seal Can Do  by Chris Butterworth
Lying about on the sand like a fat sunbather, seals might seem like slow, dozy creatures – but nothing compares with their grace and speed when they're underwater! Seals can dive like rockets and twist like a dancer. They can stay underwater for up to 15 minutes.



Elizabeth, Queen of the Seas  by Lynne Cox
is the incredible story of Elizabeth, a real-life elephant seal who made her home in the Avon River in the city of Christchurch, New Zealand. When Elizabeth decides to stretch out across a two-lane road, the citizens worry she might get hurt or cause traffic accidents, so a group of volunteers tows her out to sea. But Elizabeth swims all the way back to Christchurch. The volunteers catch her again and again—each time towing her farther, even hundreds of miles away—but, still, Elizabeth finds her way back home.

Saving Seal  by Diane Jackson Hill
Seal has made his home in the waters of a coastal village, but he often finds himself trapped and ensnared in the plastic rubbish filling the Bay. Fortunately, he is rescued by Lizzie and Grandpa Dave.





Seal Surfer  by Michael Foreman
A boy and his grandfather watch as a baby seal is born on the rocks near their home and from that day a special friendship is created between them. Despite his disability, the boy is a keen surfer, and he enjoys many afternoons surfing with the seals. One day, however, he gets into trouble in rough seas, and the young seal saves him.



The Seal on the Beach by Mara Bergman
Maggie is on holiday with her aunt and uncle. Meanwhile her mum waits for Maggie’s baby brother to come home from hospital. On a walk across the wild Norfolk shoreline, Maggie finds a seal pup stranded on the beach, all alone. She is the sweetest thing Maggie has ever seen. But without her mum, how will the seal survive? Who will rescue her and will she ever be returned to the sea, and find her family again?







Thursday, March 20, 2025

22nd March World Rights to Water Day




Sustainable Development Goal 6 declares the importance of achieving "clean water and sanitation for all".





World Rights to Water Day advocates for access to water as a human right as without water, decent life isn't possible. we take it for granted that when we turn on a tap clean water will pour out, but we forget that  1 in 3 people don't have access to  clean drinking water. Even the water we have is a precious resource that is under threat due to the growing population, unsustainable agriculture practices, overuse of chemicals and  climate change.

I have written about water at length elsewhere in this blog, just search using the word 'water', but today I just wanted to focus on books that shock my students into thinking about water. They are always amazed to see that children as young as them need to carry water back to their home.

Our World of Water  by Beatrice Hollyer

Wherever we live in the world - whether our country is rich or poor - water is vital to our survival on this planet. This book follows the daily lives of six children from Peru, Mauritania, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Tajikistan and California and explores what water means to them. Where does it come from? How do they use it?


Fatou Fetch the Water
 by Neil Griffiths

Set in Gambia The water bucket is empty! So, follow in the footsteps of forgetful Fatou, as she fetches a fresh supply for a family feast. But will she return from her journey though the village with just water, or with much more than she expected?


Anna Carries Water by Olive Senior 

Set in Jamaica, Anna fetches water from the spring every day, but she can't carry it on her head like her older brothers and sisters. 


Trishna and the Dream of Water by Carole Douglis 

Trishna is a child who seeks solutions to problems linked to desertification, learns how to fight against them, and gets her entire village motivated to take action. Some facts and figures are included at the end of the story, as well as some things kids can do to help combat desertification, keep soil healthy and reduce erosion.

Walking for Water  by Susan Hughes

Victor is very close to his twin sister, Linesi. But now that they have turned eight years old, she no longer goes to school with him. Instead, Linesi, like the other older girls in their community, walks to the river to get water five times a day, to give their mother more time for farming. Victor knows this is the way it has always been. But he has begun learning about equality at school.

 The Water Princess  by Susan Verde

With its wide sky and warm earth, Princess Gie Gie's kingdom is a beautiful land. But clean drinking water is scarce in her small African village. And try as she might, Gie Gie cannot bring the water closer; she cannot make it run clearer. Every morning, she rises before the sun to make the long journey to the well. Instead of a crown, she wears a heavy pot on her head to collect the water.  She dreams of a day when her village will have cool, crystal-clear water of its own.

We Are the Water Protectors by Carole Lindstrom

Told from the perspective of a Native American child, this is a powerful call to action to defend Earth's natural resources-inspired by the Dakota Access Pipeline protests and similar movements led by Indigenous tribes all across North America.



White Water
 by Michael S. Bandy

After a long bus ride into town with his grandmother on a scorching hot day, Michael runs to the water fountain to quench his thirst. But instead of refreshing him, the water tastes gritty and dirty. Dismayed, Michael begins to imagine that the water from the nearby “white” fountain is exactly the kind of water he would like to taste. . . . Set in 1962 in the segregation-era South at the dawn of the civil rights movement, this moving and inspirational story, based on a real-life childhood experience of author.

Enough Water?  by Steve Conrad

An infographic introduction to Earth's most important resource. Children are aware that they should not waste water -- "turn off the tap when you brush your teeth", "take a quick shower". But do they understand why? And that they could do more? In 'Enough Water?' children will discover the reasons that water warrants concern. In simple text, the book explains the actual "cost" of the water that sustains their lifestyle, their "water footprint".