Ten More Sleeps

In just ten days from now, our visiting author, Children’s Poet Laureate Kenn Nesbitt, will be hopping on a plane, and making his way to Shanghai….

Why you ask?

To see US??? YES-YOU! We are going to be in for a treat having Kenn ALL TO OURSELVES in the Elementary School for five glorious days. It is a wonderful opportunity for our students, especially considering all of the poetry the students have been creating over the past weeks. Students are still creating lovely pieces, exciting poems and musing lyrically in their classes as we speak… and many have co-ordinated their poetry units around Kenn’s visit.

I really enjoyed looking through the many blogs our teachers work hard on, and browsing through the  poetry of our students. Thanks to teachers like Ed Hagen for posting photos of your students at the poetry slam, as well as actual copies of his students’ poetry. Meanwhile across the hall, here are some of Emmy David’s parents and students celebrating the success of 2ED.

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Considering the fireworks we’ve all just experienced, I really enjoyed 1EV student Sisi’s poem.

Fireworks

By Sisi

Pop! Like

Some 

Popcorn so

Many

Colors

Bursting in the sky

Like a sparkling star

Disappearing in the dark, black

Sky

Little bees falling 

From the sky

 I must also compliment my daughter Mimi from 1CN for writing about love…

Love by Mimi

Love is special

Love is everywhere

Love is in your heart

and in the air

Love is forever

And the Winners are…

Kid in a candy store…

That was me last night as I surfed the net from site to site getting ready, getting my ‘ducks in a row’ to watch the ALA Youth Media Awards. The big awards are always left ‘til last of course; they were the two I was really interested in, however I learned a lot in the 50 minutes preceding those announcements and was able to boost our orders for next year; adding some wonderful titles from awards such as Belpre, Geisel, Coretta Scott King and the Silbert.

I was feasting on twitter updates as I bought books, texted other ‘book nerds’ updated facebook and e mailed kids getting them to “return the winners tomorrow… please please please” I was in a multi-tasking frenzy!

Even before the announcements, there was a lot of excitement generated in the school, with students reading the books, talking about the books and reviewing the books… here is one delightful review done by Jasmine Carozza, 2EH, written before she even knew that Flora may be a contender.

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So…. Who won?

Caldecott Honors went to three delightful, delicious, incredible books

Journey by Aaron Becker
Flora and the Flamingo by Molly Idle
Mr. Wuffles by David Weisner

 

The Caldecott Medal went to Brian Floca, so well deserved for the amazing, Locomotive. We really went from one extreme to another with three without words, and one with so so many… There were no in-betweens. Go Wild now ‘Mr. Tiger’… Open your eyes in ‘The Dark’ Unplug ‘Doug’ and sleep sweetly ‘Bluebird’…

loco

 

Newbery Honors went to
The Year of Billy Miller by Kevin Henkes
Doll Bones by Holly Black
One Came Home by Amy Timberlake
Paperboy by Vince Vawter

The Newbery Medal went to Kate DiCamillo’s Flora and Ulysses

flora

While no one in our Elementary (including me) called the Newbery AND the Caldecott Medal winner, there were several students who chose one of the other so well done to the 5th graders for choosing Flora and Ulysses

Malin and Anirodh (5KW) Audrey (5MR)

And to Chris (5DW) for choosing Locomotive as the Caldecott Winner (you were the only one in the school to do so)

In the Lower ES, the following students can come and collect a prize for correctly guessing a Caldecott Honor book

KMI Allegra and Sophia

1EV James, Ava, Sisi and Amelia

1BE Natalie and Graziela

1CN Ayden

2CN Emma Z and Augustin

2ED Harrison

3EF Brian

3TS Erin, Sydney and Willow

Congratulations to the many students who ‘threw their hat into the ring’ and attempted a very difficult task. Now remember, as you read new books THIS year, any of them could be the NEXT BIG THING…

For a FULL list of all the winners, to see other favourite books listed that we have read in our library, such as P.S. Be Eleven, Nelson Mandela, Navigating Early, A Splash of Red: The Life and Art of Horace Pippin, Courage Has No Color: The True Story of the Triple Nickles, America’s First Black Paratroopers, Penny and her Marble, Better Nate Than Ever, Creepy Carrots, Matilda, Niño Wrestles the World and Parrots over Puerto Rico… check out the ALA site.

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Tally Ho

It’s kind of annoying that I didn’t do THIS blog post first, instead of this one… so if you care, read the earlier one first!

I’ve just finished tallying the 4th and 5th grade votes for the Newbery and Caldecott… which was a little challenging, and many ballots were incorrect in one way or another. Let’s just say it’s been a learning curve for me, and the students, and I can’t wait to do it all again next year; a little differently!

I started this year by saying the kids would win if they could correctly guess the Newbery AND Caldecott Medal (not honor) and soon realised this was out of the reach of many students so modified the rules for the lower ES. It would have been better to have some sort of grand prize for anyone who could guess both, some bonus prizes for kids who could guess medals and honours, but overall, I should have just blitzed with the Caldecott’s across the board instead of getting kids to guess both; it’s been pretty tough.

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I will be so excited if I actually CAN give away any giant hershey’s kisses, and I have plenty of regular ones too.

So here are the books the 4th and 5th graders thought would win the Newbery.

1 vote for Jinx, The Center of Everything and A Tangle of Knots

2 votes for Penny and her Marble and The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp

3 votes for The Water Castle, Rump, P.S. Be Eleven and Flora and Ulysses

4 votes for Zebra Forest (which I loved) Doll Bones, The Real Boy, The Year of Billy Miller (which I didn’t love) and Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library which Mrs Rekate and Mrs Lau loved and I haven’t read yet.

7 votes for Navigating Early which is brilliant, but I wonder if they will give the award to Clare Vanderpool again after winning so recently with Moon over Manifest in 2011.

9 votes for my favourite so far (and I am running out of time!) Counting by 7’s…

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Check this post to see how the Upper Elementary cast their Caldecott votes…

 

 

Counting the Votes…Barefoot Style

Wow… What a FUN job I have before me!

With over 130 votes coming in from our Elementary Students this week, I have my work cut out for me adding up who voted for what. I actually don’t need to do any of this… I really just need to wait until tomorrow night to see who the ALA chooses for the Newbery and Caldecott Medal books, then see which of our students chose the same, and go from there. BUT, it is so interesting seeing who the kids voted for, remembering the lesson that their teacher or I read them that book, the discussions we had, and realizing that the book resonated with them.

I started a tally on a small piece of paper for the Caldecott’s, and soon realized I needed a bigger piece of paper to write down all of the different titles. It really is a great year for picture books, and I am thrilled that so many of our students have been exposed to the LATEST and GREATEST the industry has to offer.

Caldecott Book Tally as voted by the K,1,2,3rd grade students; the number in brackets AFTER the book title, is how many votes it earned from the 4th and 5th graders.

1 vote went to Bunnies on Ice, If you want to see a whale, the Matchbox Diary, A Splash of Red, I’m the Scariest Thing in the Jungle, and Water in the Park (love this one). Of course, the cool thing is, ANY of these books could be the actual Caldecott Medal or Honor Winner.

2 votes went to On a Beam of Light, The Snatchabook(4), Nelson Mandela, The Tortoise and the Hare, and Odd Duck.

3 votes went to Papa’s Mechanical Fish, The Day the Crayons Quit(6), Steam Train Dream Train and also to Journey(3), so of course I think one of those voters must be onto something, with Aaron Becker’s Journey being such a favorite this year around the blogosphere.

4 votes went to Mr Wuffles (1)

6 votes went to Night Light (1), the children really loved guessing what will be on the next page and Mr Tiger Goes Wild, (4) another popular favorite this year.

9 votes went to Tap the Magic Tree, Building our House, Unicorn Thinks he’s Pretty Great (3), Secret Pizza Party (2), Bluebird (6) and Flora the Flamingo proving that you don’t need words to produce a brilliant story kids love.

Doug Unplugged (3) has been really popular with the second and third graders and scored high with them when it came time to vote with 15 votes.

However, it was the teaming of Lemony Snickett and Jon Klassen with The Dark (12) that scored the highest with the K-3rd graders who gave it 21 votes, proving it to be the most popular of the picture books they’ve been introduced to these past three weeks. I certainly hope it gets an honor at least, the silence and air of suspense as I read it, time and time again, was palpable.

So, points of interest between the Caldecott books the lower ES voted for compared to the upper ES…

*Patricia Polacco’s Bully didn’t get a nod from the younger ones, but 3 upper ES voted for it.
*Locomotive got 1 vote from the older kids
*All of the books listed above that only got one vote from the younger kids, were overlooked by the older ones.
*Dark was the clear favourite overall, with 33 votes…
Right…. now on to the Newbery AND Caldecott Votes from the 4th and 5th graders… It will be interesting to see how they chose their picture books compared to the younger students. To win the ‘grand prize’ kiss from me, they need to get the Newbery AND Caldecott winner correct…. tough call.

Kenn Nesbitt is coming!

You heard it first… We are excited to be hosting our first Visiting Author of 2014 from February 24th to February 28th here in Pudong Elementary.

 

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We are still working on the schedule, however it is certain that Kenn will have time with each grade level as well as a full school assembly on Monday February 24th (details to follow). If you’d like to read more about Kenn, and comment on some of his funny poems, check out his fantastic blog here. We have 100 copies of Kenn’s books here for sale immediately after the Chinese New Year Holiday, and I’m sure they will sell fast. Check out these titles and see if you’d like to buy any of them, they will be signed of course, and would make a great gift.

7 days to go, 7 days ’til we know…

In a way, I can’t wait ’til this time next week, when I can start sharing with the students who won the 2014 Newbery and Caldecott Medals, but another part of me really enjoys the energy and enthusiasm the countdown produces.
Right now, the classes are buzzing, arguing, debating and defending their choices with vigour… once the decision is made, I suppose there will be a new kind of buzz; again, more arguments as to why they think the decision made was right or wrong… But as for now, they OWN their choices, and they are shouting them loud and proud.

As for me, I am reading through those books like crazy… but none have jumped out at me the same way Applegate’s Ivan did this time last year. I am however, loving MANY of the picture books I’m reading (so much faster!) and can’t wait to see who takes that. Some of my favourites are:

The Dark by Lemony Snickett
I’m a sucker for Klassen’s illustrations, and I think the story is really well done, so suspenseful.

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Journey by Aaron Becker
Wordless books are aplenty this year with Flora the Flamingo, Mr. Wuffles (practically wordless) and the heart-wrenching Bluebird by Bob Staake, however it is Journey that gets my vote; what an amazing creation. The early pages took me back to one of last year’s favorites, Hello Hello by Matthew Cordell.

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Doug Unplugged by Dan Yaccarino
Again,I’m reminded of Hello Hello; “Dan Yaccarino’s funny story of robot rebellion is a great reminder that sometimes the best way to learn about the world is to go out and be in it.”

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Now, check out Ms Lau’s students reading the Caldecott’s this morning, and see what they voted for this morning…

Ethan H: Blue Bird
Maddie: Blue Bird
Lizzie: Nelson Mandela
Daniel: Blue Bird
Han Rei: Blue Bird
William: Blue Bird
Jerry: Journey
Charlotte: Blue Bird
Oliver: Night Light
Malu: Blue Bird
Yolanda: Blue Bird

Here is a great list from the Horn Book blog with many of the books listed that we are lucky enough to have been reading this week.

list of caldecott maybe

 

Who will Win Newbery and Caldecott Gold?

Only 11 sleeps to go until the Newbery and Caldecott Medals are awarded on January 27th.
We are running a competition in the ES Library to see if anyone can correctly guess both of them, see the end of this post for details. In the meantime, take a look at just a FEW of the possible winners here…

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Win a KISS from Mrs. Power if you can correctly guess the winners of the 2014 Caldecott AND Newbery Awards…

To enter…
*You must have read part or MOST of both books you pick…

*Fill out the entry form and put it in the box

*BOTH books must be the winner of the Newbery Medal and the Caldecott Medal… not just Honor Awards.

*You can pick any books published in 2013, they don’t have to be books you see in our library.

*Entries open 8 am Mon 20th and close 3 pm Fri Jan 24th *Votes Tallied Mon Jan 27th
*Winners announced Tuesday Jan 28th

mwah
Example of Completed Entry Form

Your name: Kimbra Power
Your class: 1CN or PK4 or KPH or 4KK

Name of picture book you think will win the Caldecott gold medal:
This is not my Hat by Jon Klassen

Name of book you think will win the Newbery gold medal:
The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate

—————————————————————————————–

Answers to your questions

1. Can more than one person win?
Yes, that is possible, if so, I will give kisses to other winners too.

2. Can I enter more than once?
Yes, you can enter up to three times.

3. Are there prizes for the runners up?
Yes, there will be smaller prizes for students who choose correctly either the Newbery OR the Caldecott Winner.

4. Do the books I choose have to be in the ES Library?
No, the books and book posters inside and outside the ES Library are just SOME of the books that might win. The winning books could also be in the MS Library, or not in our school at all yet. Read my blog post http://sites.saschina.org/kpower/2014/01/07/and-the-winner-is/ or more recent posts to see many other lists of books that are also being considered.

5. Do I need to put the author’s name?
No, you don’t NEED to, but it will help us to be clear, so put it if you know it.

6. Will I really kiss you?
What do you think?

Many of you ask me how the Newbery is chosen, here is where you can read about it

Essentially…

1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children published by an American publisher in the United States in English during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the character of the book considered except that it be original work. Honor books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly distinguished.

2. The Award is restricted to authors who are citizens or residents of the United States.

Here is how the Caldecott is chosen, the main difference being that this is for a picture book…

1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children published by an American publisher in the United States in English during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the character of the picture book except that the illustrations be original work. Honor books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly distinguished.

2. The award is restricted to artists who are citizens or residents of the United States. Books published in a U.S. territory or U.S. commonwealth are eligible.

The Hits just Keep on Coming!

I had a GREAT day today, one of those… I love my life…I love my job, I’m so so lucky kind of days! Reflecting on its success…I got to do several of the things I love:

*Share amazing books with students

*Share amazing books with teachers

*Check out amazing books to parents, teachers and students

*Order new and wonderful books to add to our collection

It’s not EVERY day I get to do these things, and so joyfully… some times the ‘behind the scenes’ life of a librarian can get me down, but not today, today, everything rolled along beautifully.

I’d love to share with you some of the amazing books I’m sharing with kids, and some of the clever lists and sites I find them on.

This is one of the great blogs I follow, from School Library Journal, and in this post, Jonathan Hunt shares what is getting the votes and where from…

You can see from this list, how spread out the categories are; you’ve got non-fiction/picture books/chapter books all packed in to one great list, so you need to then sift through and find out which books are for you. We have nearly ALL of these books in the library, aren’t we lucky?

Today I read these books for the first time; and the second and fourth graders LOVED them.

 

The Boy who Loved Math, which was an amazing book to compare and contrast with the wonderful On a Beam of Light which you can read more about here in this great post by the Book Jeannie. I’d learned and taught about Albert Einstein before so it was fun for me to  learn something new about Paul Erdos, (pronounced Air-Dish). I loved sharing with the kids about the author’s style and the similarities and differences between the books, and what made them such great non-fiction picture texts. The students were able to talk about the various elements, such as the detailed information at the back, giving us even more items of interest about the amazing lives of these two important men.

We then went on to read the book I think will be hard to beat in the Caldecott Stakes… The Dark, by Lemony Snicket. As illustrator Jon Klassen won Caldecott Honor AND Medal last year for authoring and illustrating This is not my Hat and illustrating Extra Yarn, it will be interesting to see if he will come up trumps again this year.

Meanwhile… Look which book was the best selling book across all print formats in 2013…. Can you guess?

Nielsen BookScan Top 20

1. Hard Luck (Wimpy Kid #8) by Jeff Kinney (Abrams/Amulet)
2. Inferno by Dan Brown (Doubleday)
3. Killing Jesus by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Holt)
4. Proof of Heaven by Eben Alexander (Simon & Schuster)
5. The House of Hades by Rick Riordan (Disney-Hyperion)
6. Divergent by Veronica Roth (HarperCollins/Tegen)
7. Jesus Calling by Sarah Young (Thomas Nelson)
8. Sycamore Row by John Grisham (Doubleday)
9. The Third Wheel (Wimpy Kid #7) by Jeff Kinney (Abrams/Amulet)
10. Happy, Happy, Happy by Phil Robertson (Howard Books)
11. Allegiant by Veronica Roth (HarperCollins/Tegen)
12. Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg (Knopf)
13. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green (Dutton)
14. Things That Matter by Charles Krauthammer (Crown Forum)
15. Doctor Sleep by Stephen King (Scribner)
16. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Scribner)
17. And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead)
18. Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James (Vintage)
19. Si-Cology 1 by Si Robertson (Howard Books)
20. Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath (Gallup Press)

While I’m obsessing over lists, here is another of the New York Times Ten Best Illustrated books of 2013…. which was posted on the amazing School Library Journal… Always one to follow. This list is GORGEOUS!

EIGHT of these have arrived this week, the others are on their way!!!

My Brothers Book Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

9780062234896 0 Spread Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

My Brother’s Book by Maurice Sendak (Michael de Capua Books/HarperCollins Publishers)

Ballad Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Ballad 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Ballad by Blexbolex (Enchanted Lion Books)

Jemmy Button Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Jemmy Button 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Jemmy Button by Jennifer Uman and Valerio Vidali (Templar Publishing/Candlewick Press)

The Dark Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

The Dark 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

The Dark by Lemony Snicket, illustrated by Jon Klassen (Little, Brown and Company)

Holland Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Holland 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Holland by Charlotte Dematons (Lemniscaat)

Journey Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Journey 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Journey by Aaron Becker (Candlewick Press)

Fog Island Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Fog Island 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Fog Island written and illustrated by Tomi Ungerer (Phaidon Press)

Jane the Fox and Me Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Jane the Fox and Me 11 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Jane, The Fox and Me by Fanny Britt, illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault (Groundwood Books/House of Anansi Press)

Locomotive Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Locomotive 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Locomotive by Brian Floca (Richard Jackson/Atheneum)

Nelson Mandela Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Nelson Mandela 1 Gallery: The New York Times 10 Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2013

Nelson Mandela by Kadir Nelson (Katherine Tegen Books/HarperCollins Publishers)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And the winner is…

My favourite time of the year is coming up in the Library… The ALA library awards will be announced on January 27th 2014.

Many people wonder how books are judged… if you want to learn more about that, the ALA site tells you all about the judging criteria for awards like the Newbery and the Caldecott Medal.

I’m fortunate at SAS to have a wonderful team around me who support our purchasing of the latest and greatest books. This school year, I’ve also acquired many ‘mules’ who are able to bring me back new books for January to accompany the many we have digitally on kindle and ibooks. The books I’ve been buying come from the lists below… so if YOU want to keep your eye on the prize… have a look through the following links to see how many books you have read.

I’ll be spending January’s library time discussing with students the best of the best, and what makes them so.

Check out these great sites today so that you know what’s being discussed, what’s hot, and what may win the 2014 awards. Remember, so far, these sites just share books they think might be included in the Newbery and Caldecott discussions… as for now, nobody knows for sure which books will make it all the way through, but these lists give great indications about books that have created a lot of buzz this year.

I’ll start you off with a nice small list from the School Library Journal which includes a couple of my favourites; If You Want to See a Whale and The Thing about Luck.

How many of the books above have you read? Come and check one out today… 69 new books JUST arrived!

I’m proud to say that ALL of the books on this next long list will be in our library as of January 8th… which is quite an achievement considering we live in China and many of them are newly released (thanks mules!)

If you’re a non-fiction lover, you’ll enjoy this post which ponders that not many non-fiction books have grabbed our attention this year, however, imagine the irony if a book about Randolph Caldecott won a Newbery prize…

Another list I’ve done my very best to purchase all of is this one from the ALA looking at the 2013 Notable Book Nominees. I know that 5th grade teacher Mrs Rekate LOVED Escape from Mr Lemoncello’s Library and will wonder why that isn’t noted (it came out five days later), but quite a few of the other books she’s read recently made it onto the list… so check it out if you haven’t done so yet.

We’ll have all of the actual books listed here by your first school day in 2014, and we already have them on kindle, so check out this short list and make sure you read as many as you can by January 27th… I’m sure at least one of these will make it all the way!

Goodreads has a wonderful selection of books listed here, with full information on each. Sign up for goodreads, and you can start keeping a great ‘real-life’ journal of what you’ve read, what you want to read and what you’re reading.

Wayyyyyy back in January, the amazing Jonathan Hunt from School Library Journal made some predictions about books he thought would stand out this year. Having served on the Newbery Committee in the past, his advice is always to be taken.

Finally, my list wouldn’t be complete if I didn’t check out what Horn Book had to say. I love seeing how many of the blogs I follow list the same books; when the same trusted reviewers point me towards a certain book time after time… I just know I have to read it, and better still, share it with YOU!

Finally, I can close some of the tabs I’ve had open for weeks…. which drives Mr Power crazy!

Happy New Year 2014 and get ready for the Year of the Horse beginning on January 31st.