Invention Convention: Celebrating Creativity

idea

Our Fifth Grade students have just held their Invention Convention, a culminating experience for a library research unit. In addition to learning about famous inventors and the invention process using books and online resources, each student  had the opportunity to design an invention. Working individually or with partners, the students developed original ideas for new products, some of which help to solve everyday problems.

This creative group of students worked enthusiastically, brainstorming for ideas, developing models and prototypes, and creating ads to market their inventions.  Some groups even wrote “commercials” to go along with their inventions.  The students presented their inventions to an appreciative audience at school, and all were impressed with the level of creative enthusiasm.

The video below highlights the students talking about their inventions and features some of their commercials. Enjoy watching and please feel free to leave a comment on this post!


Book Review: Somewhere Inside

Jacket

 Title: Somewhere Inside: One Sister’s Captivity in North Korea and the Other’s Fight to Bring Her Home

Authors:  Laura and Lisa Ling

Recommended For: Adults

Review by:  Dr. Nathaniel Peirce

This is a riveting story about the capture of Laura Ling, an American journalist, by North Korea while she was filming a documentary on the border of China and North Korea. It is a wonderful testimony to the strength of the human spirit, which is common in all of us.

Book Review: The Kennedy Detail


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Title: The Kennedy Detail: JFK’s Secret Service Agents Break Their Silence

Authors: Gerald Blaine and others

Recommended For: Adults

Review by: Dr. Nathaniel Peirce

I read this over the holiday and could not put it down! It is written by a senior secret service agent about the team of agents and their service to President Kennedy and his family. It is a very moving story and helps you realize how carefully the team of agents prepare for every move that the president makes.

Find Your True Colors

Feeling blue, red hot or tickeled pink?  Try this new Multicolr Search Engine that searches through images on Flickr’s photo sharing site with Creative Commons licenses.  This allows you to remix, reuse and share creative works that have been given more flexible copyright. 

So, next time you’re looking for a picture in a particular color scheme, give this site a try.  You can select up to 10 different colors, and then the search engine uses “Piximilar visual search technology” to find the perfect color match  in its database of 10 million images.  They’ve got just the right color picture for you!

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blue images

idee-multicolr-search-lab yellow

It’s a Brand New Year: Resolve to Read!

2011

It’s that time of year of the year when people try to set goals to accomplish during the coming month. One of the best resolutions you can make is to try to read more.  Snowy winters days provide the perfect opportunity to escape from the cold and cuddle up with a good book.  No matter how you connect to books (print, audio or e-books), make this the year that you try to read more.

What are your reading plans?  Is there a book that you’ve always meant to read, but haven’t gotten around to yet?
Please leave a comment on this post.

It’s an Odd Name, But a Great Site

Slime kids logo
S
chool library media Kids was created by a school librarian and reading specialist and has a great selection of educational links and book-related resources.  In addition to approximately twenty fun and educational games, which help kids work on typing skills, grammar and spelling, SlimeKids includes book reviews and book trailers, links to favorite author sites, kid-friendly search engines and reference tools. 

Author Study- Nursery -2nd Grade- Ezra Jack Keats

Ezra Jack Keats

Born in 1916 Ezra Jack Keats worked as an “inker” for a printer and a comic book artist before deciding to become an author and illustrator of children’s books.

Meet Ezra Jack Keats

Meet Ezra Jack Keats

One of Keats’ earliest stories, The Snowy Day, was written about a little boy named Peter.

Ezra Jack Keats
found a picture
of a little boy in
a newspaper, the
clipping hung on
his wall for years
before Ezra
decided to make
“Peter” the star
character in many
of his stories. Keats
thought that minority
children were not
being fairly represented
in children’s literature
and he decided to
spend his life
making these
children
central characters in
his books.


The Snowy Day was later awarded the Caldecott Medal for outstanding illustrations.

By the time Keats died in 1983, he had written and illustrated 24 childrens classics.

Children in Nursery through Second grade will be listening to the stories of Ezra Jack Keats while exploring the characters, setting, and plot of the stories.

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In The Snowy Day the children will sequence the story and graph their favorite things to do on a snowy day.

Another story we will explore this month is A Letter to Amy,  children will choose a partner and draw or write a letter like the one in the story. We will also graph the children’s birthdays after discussing the birthday invitation that Peter sent to Amy.

Peter’s Chair is another of Ezra Jack Keats most popular books. Peter, again the main character in the story, has a hard time sharing his things with his new baby sister. As a class we will focus on the feelings many of us share when a new sibling is introduced into a family.
Ezra Jack Keats is an author from my childhood and I am excited to share these timeless stories with my library classes.

❤Mrs. Stevenson