Showing posts with label Nina Laden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nina Laden. Show all posts

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Read Grow Inspire Book Week Slogan 2023 (Part 6) IMAGERY and SYMBOLISM continued

 


Now for more of the ways the word 'seed' is used figuratively...


What do we mean when we say 'he sowed a seed of doubt' ? The Seed of Doubt  by Irene Brugnill and Richard Jones illustrates this adage very well. A little boy dreams of a world beyond the farm where he lives – a world full of mountain ranges, oceans and cities, where he could do anything. But one day he plants a seed from which doubts start to grow. Instead of thinking of all that he could do, he thinks more of what he could not. Can he overcome his fears and chase his dreams?




What are 'seeds of compassion'? In the book by His Holiness the Dalai Lama,  The Seed of Compassion he shares stories of his own childhood which highlight this concept. Once an ordinary child named Lhamo Thondup he grew up in a small village in Tibet where his mother taught him about compassion.


What are 'seeds of change'? We hear the saying 'Be the seed. Be the Change' and two books that demonstrate this are  Seeds of Change by Jen Cullerton Johnson and Sonia Lynn Sadler which tells the story of Nigerian Nobel Prize winner Wangari Maathai and next year Nina Laden's new book set in Madagascar, also called Seeds of Change  will look at this metaphor less figuratively as it is not about planting trees, but rather about having the courage and resilience to plant "seeds" that will improve ourselves and our community. It is very poetic


Sow seeds of strength

Ride out the storm.

Sow seeds of compassion 

Make hearts warm.

What about 'seeds of promise'? Teachers hear themselves saying this about a student or situation. In Little Seeds of Promise 
by Dana Raft and Reina Metallinou, Maya feels very lonely and lost when she moves to new country. Her grandmother has given her some seeds to plant when she gets there, but she wonders about whether to plant them and whether she will ever fit in. Can she risk planting them? 

The Seeds of Friendship  by Michael Foreman explores a similar situation through the eyes of a boy called Adam, yet the title likens seeds to friendship rather than promise.








Can a seed be personified? Read A Seed is Sleepy  by Dianna Hutts Aston and Sylvia Long; The Bad Seed by Jory John and Pete Oswald or Seed School  by Joan Holub  and Sakshi Mangal and your students will know that it can be.






You can teach figurative language without having to use the books suggested in the English K-2 units online! Their lists are only suggestions.

Thursday, June 29, 2023

Read Grow Inspire Book Week Slogan 2023 (Part 5) INSPIRE

 INSPIRE     WHO?



Inspire the World: A Kid's Journey to Making a Difference by Sammie Vance and Talitha Shipman

Obviously not every child is going to be a Sammie Vance. Sammie felt inspired to talk to her school principal about her plan for a friendship bench at her school, but what started as 8-year-old Sammie Vance's mission to get a buddy bench for her school to fight loneliness grew to be so much more. Now Sammie is making a difference beyond her hometown. In her first-ever book, Sammie shares how she's inspiring others through recycling, community, giving, determination, bravery, helping, being herself, and celebrating. She wants to inspire the world one kid at a time. Her website will tell you more. But, the good thing about introducing your students to Sammie Vance is that it shows them that a child can make a difference.

There are plenty of books you could use to inspire children or where they can see what has inspired people to do things. Our school has made a concerted effort to encourage Voice and Agency in our students. This too can be initiated by reading. Schools read about worm farms and get one, read about native bees and get a hive for their playground, read about the perils of plastic and change their lunch eating habits!

Below are some books which I think make good starting points for inspiration:

Grow  by Cynthia Platt and Olivia Holden Looking at a drab abandoned city lot, a girl has an idea. As she begins pulling weeds, neighbours young and old, black, brown, and white come to help. The community joins together, creating a colorful garden for all to enjoy. It is possible for one child to make a difference? Or

The Secret Sky Garden by Linda Sarah and Fiona Lumbers where Funni loves the old, disused car park, and spends a lot of time there flying her kite and playing her recorder, but something is missing. Definitely. So Funni decides to create a garden in the neglected space and after weeks of careful nurture, her garden in the sky takes shape.

The Wild Garden  by Cynthia Cliff

This book takes a look at the community garden as well as the environment beyond the community garden. Its message is about not expanding the planned community garden because it will take away the needed wild plants that the wildlife needs. We need to stop taking away from nature and learn to live with nature.  When the town wants to expand the garden Jilly and her grandfather show the people what the expansion will do and inspire them to wonder more broadly about the nature around them. Imagine if everyone learned to live with the nature as it is and help the wildlife instead of taking their space and needed ecosystems?


You Are a Beautiful Beginning by Nina Laden and Kelsey Garrity-Riley

Three children come together to build a magnificent and cozy treehouse for all their forest friends. Along the way, they discover the truth behind the adage that 'it is not the destination, but the journey.' his meditative and magical picture book encourages readers old and young to discover their own endless potential. This meditative and magical picture book encourages readers to discover their own endless potential. 



Wild Ideas  by Elin Kelsey and Soyeon Kim

Wild Ideas looks deep into the forests, skies and oceans to explore how animals solve problems. Whether it's weaving a safe place to rest and reflect, blowing a fine net of bubbles to trap fish, or leaping boldly into a new situation, the animals featured teach us a lot about creative problem solving tools and strategies. It  invites readers to indulge their sense of wonder and curiosity by observing the natural world, engaging with big ideas and asking questions.



We Move the World  by Kari Lavelle and Nadi H. Ali. Meet some of the world’s most beloved movers, shakers, scientists, activists, dreamers, and doers from the past and present who model what every childhood first can lead to! Neil Armstrong, Misty Copeland, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and more were once kids they grew up to lead us to the moon, dance in the ballet, and break barriers. From first steps to solving puzzles and learning the alphabet, all the small things are only the beginning: they can lead to future activism and innovation that just might change the world!  Or

Children Who Changed the World  by Marcia Williams which tells the incredible true stories of child activists such as Baruani Ndume, the teenager who gave a voice to fellow refugee children in Tanzania.

In Our Hands by Lucy Farfort

When the world is plagued with isolation and cursed to live without colour, it is up to a group of determined children to grow a seed of hope that will inspire everyone to come together and build a better future. 



I Am One: A Book of Action by Susan Verde and Peter H. Reynolds

On the first page, the main character asks a beautiful bird, "How do I make a difference?" They doubt their ability to make a difference because they are "so small." However, when the bird gives them a seed, they realize that "beautiful things start with just One." They can plant a seed and start a garden They can also start a journey, paint a masterpiece, compose a melody, and break down walls. All these actions start with "one" thing: a first step, a first stroke of paint, a first musical note, and a first brick. 


Now, I hear you saying it's for Book Week and none of these books are Australian, so here's a favourite of mine (I have a framed print of the cover illustration courtesy of my friend at Momotimetoread who knows how besotted I am about plants and trees).

Florette by Anna Walker 

Mae’s family moves to a new home in the city.  Mae wishes she could bring the garden with her. She’ll miss the apple trees, the daffodils and the butterflies in the long, wavy grass, but there’s no room for a garden in the middle of the city ...Or is there? What she finds there sparks something special and beautiful that will make her feel much more at home.





If you are lucky enough to have a copy of Bob Graham's new book The Concrete Garden by the time Book Week comes around you could read it as it promises to be a timely, inspiring and uplifting story about hope and the power of creative expression.

When the children leave their homes,  Amanda is the last one out of the tower block. She brings some chalk with her. On every inch of the concrete outside, the children draw pictures of everything they could think of, from flowers and snails, to spaceships and queens. Before long, a beautiful and exotic garden is spread out across the concrete. You could compare this to The Chalk Garden by Sally Anne Garland where Emma uses her imagination to draw a beautiful flower garden with sidewalk chalk.  A tiny ecosystem develops outside her door, with real-life flowers that bud and bloom!


And lastly, I have just purchased Mother Earth: Poems to Celebrate the Wonder of Nature by Libby Hathorn and Christina Booth. The poems are good and you will enjoy reading them but the front endpapers are the piece de resistance. Here Christina Booth has painted a sublime illustration of nodes and tendrils pushing up through the dirt towards the sky surrounding a haiku, called Earth. There are teaching notes for this book here.






Friday, November 19, 2021

20th November Matisse: Life & Spirit, Masterpieces from the Centre Pompidou

The Art Gallery of NSW is holding an exhibition of art by Henri Matisse from 20th November until March and it will be something truly special! In preparation I have taken all the books about this French artist off the library shelves in order to start next year with a display celebrating his life and work. Many of the teachers at school focus on his work in art lessons during the year, but given that some students will visit the gallery in their school holidays and some others might be inspired to go in Term 1 after reading about him, a display in the library is warranted. We have over thirty books  about his work so it will look good. We can cater for the preschooler, the artist and the readers! Here is some of what will be in the display:


Blue and Other Colours with Henri Matisse





A Magical Day with Matisse by Julie Merberg & Suzanne Bober




   Oooh! Matisse by Jean-Yves Verdu & Mil Niepold    


         
Matisse's Magical Trail by Tim Hopgood & Sam Broughton





How the Snail Found its Colours by Haneul Ddang & Mi-Ran Yang





Henri's Scissors by Jeannette Winter





Matisse King of Colour by Laurence Anholt






Henri Matisse: Cutting with Scissors by Jane O'Connor & Jessie Hartland






Cut-Out Fun with Matisse by Nina Hollein & Max Hollein






Colourful Dreamer: The Story of Artist Henri Matisse by Marjorie Blain Parker & Holly Berry




Matisse's Garden by Samantha Friedman & Cristina Amodeo






The Mermaid and the Parakeet by Veronique Massenot & Vanessa Hie






Two picture books to read:

A Bird or Two by Bijou Le Tord

When Pigasso Met Mootisse by Nina Laden

and the piece de resistance



The Iridescence of Birds by Patricia MacLachlan & Hadley Hooper





For lunchtime cut and paste sessions a la Matisse which I will do with the students who choose to be in the library at lunchtime, inspiration will come from


The Swimmers by Ana Bianchi

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Champions Read 3 - Art Champions







As there was for science and the environment, there is a large number of picture book biographies about artists. There are also books, that while strictly speaking they are not biographies, they are very close because they tell about an artist's life or a famous painting. Laurence Anholt's Artists series does this. Brenda Northeast also does this and Nina Laden likes to illuminate artists' lives in picture book format.


* Building on Nature: The Life of Antoni Gaudi by Rachel Rodriguez & Julie Paschkis
* Claude Monet: The Painter Who Stopped the Trains by P.I. Maltbie & Jos. A. Smith
* Just Behave, Pablo Picasso by Jonah Winter & Kevin Hawkes
* Sandy's Circus: A Story About Alexander Calder by Tanya Lee Stone & Boris Kulikov
* Action Jackson by Jan Greenberg, Sandra Jordan & Robert Andrew Parker (Jackson Pollock)
* My Name is Georgia by Jeanette Winter (Georgia O'Keefe)
* Through Georgia's Eyes by Rachel Rodriguez & Julie Paschkis (Georgia O'Keefe)
* Me, Frida by Amy Novesky & David Diaz (Frida Kahlo)
* Frida by Jonah Winter & Anna Juan (Frida Kahlo)
* Dali and the Path of Dreams by Anna Obiols & Subi (Salvador Dali)

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

12th January Charles Perrault (1628 - 1703) Clement Hurd (1908 - 1988) Nina Laden (1962)






Charles Perrault was a French lawyer who late in his life published a book of eight stories, derived from pre-existing folk tales of the oral tradition which he modified and embellished to create the beginnings of the fairy tale genre. They were very popular and he went on to write three more. Cinderella is one of the most recognised stories in the world and its themes appear in the folk lore of many cultures, but the one most recognisable to children today is the one credited to Perrault. His version has a fairy godmother, a pumpkin that becomes a carriage, animal servants and glass slippers. It has a much happier and less gruesome ending too than many other versions as the mean stepsisters are not punished for their treatment of Cinderella. He romanticised it and it is little wonder that it is the version that Disney adopted. The Czech artist, Kveta Pacovska has just published a new edition of Cinderella which is based on the Perrault version of the story. As Perrault did in his originals, she has included a comment on morals at the end.

Clement Hurd was an American illustrator who is best known for his collaboration with Margaret Wise Brown. He illustrated her books The Runaway Bunny and Goodnight Moon which many would now classify as classics. He and his wife Edith Thacher also did books together and together are the parents of author/illustrator Thacher Hurd.

Nina Laden is an American author/illustrator who is able to make readers laugh. I love the irony of architect, Roberto the termite in Roberto, The Insect Architect. In her book Romeow and Drooliet, a spoof on Romeo and Juliet using a dog and cat as characters she has matched the story, the tone and the style of art perfectly. See also When Pigasso Met Mootisse and The Night I Followed the Dog. I love the irony of architect, Roberto the termite in Roberto, The Insect Architect and Nina also has a large number of simpler books ideal for preschoolers.