Read about the very special program that gives books to Maine kindergartners each year and learn when and how to read with the toddlers in your life.
More Great Books for Maine Kids – August 2011 Newsletter
August 31, 2011More Great Books for Maine Kids – June 2011 Newsletter
June 23, 2011
http://myemail.constantcontact.com/More-Great-Books-for-Maine-Kids.html?soid=1102968080994&aid=CYi5Nh81QYg.
Learn about the developmental milestones of early literacy in this edition of our newsletter. And don’t miss the opportunity to suggest a book we might use in the program. We’re looking for our 165th different title.
No More Monkeys Jumping on the Bed!
January 14, 2011Raising Readers is often asked, “How do you choose your books?” Each year we look at over 1000 board books and picture books looking for just the right one. What makes us turn a book away? One disqualifier is characters in books jumping on their beds.
Jumping on beds?? Yes, we have all done it. And, yes, we tell our kids not to do it (when we catch them).
With several excellent pediatricians and other healthcare providers on the Raising Readers selection committee who have all seen children with hematomas and lacerations from bed jumping, no books with monkeys, bears, or good old humans will make the cut (no pun intended).
In a New York Times article entitled “Household Injuries, and How Kids Get Them,“Dr. Alan Nager, director of the division of emergency and transport medicine at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles says the three words he uses most in the ER when it comes to children are, “falling, climbing, and jumping.”
So for Raising Readers, there are certainly ‘no more monkeys jumping on the bed.’
And a Very Happy Birthday in Portland
November 16, 2010500 readers and readers-to-be came through the front doors of the Children’s Museum and Theater of Maine in Portland to celebrate Raising Readers 10th Birthday. They were greeted at the door by Raising Readers and MaineHealth staff and given birthday crowns and birthday books.
The birthday books were signed or stamped at each Raising Readers station in the museum. The stations featured the books, authors, and illustrators that make up the Raising Readers’ latest anthology for 5-year-olds in their program, Books from Maine: A Raising Readers Collection.
Here picture book author Amy MacDonald signs a reader’s birthday book…
…and reads for her book, Little Beaver & the Echo.
Here Scott Nash signs a child’s Raising Readers anthology…
…and illustrates a child’s birthday book.
Here dinosaur footprints and red raptors lead the way to Lynn Plourde’s picture book Dino Pets…
…where readers meet author Lynn Plourde herself.
Here children meet Miss Rumphius from Barbara Cooney’s book…
…and toss blueberries into Blueberries for Sal’s bucket.
And finally readers went to visit the Raising Readers’ doctors who talked with families about the importance of reading aloud EVERY day and modeled the Raising Readers program by giving each child a picture book.
A grand celebration and a very Happy Birthday for Raising Readers. Thanks to everyone that helped out and everyone that came to celebrate!
A Very Happy Birthday in Bangor
October 13, 2010
With over 1.3 million books given to Maine children, Raising Readers celebrated their 10th Birthday at the Maine Discovery Museum in Bangor, Maine.
Almost 300 readers and readers-to-be turned out to tumble through the museum looking for the books, authors, and illustrators that make up the Raising Readers’ latest anthology for 5-year-olds in their program, Books from Maine: A Raising Readers Collection.
The Maine Discovery Museum staff were wonderful hosts for the event. As their incredible museum is designed for exploration, we built our birthday celebration around that theme. Each child was given a birthday book encouraging them to go find five stations featuring the five books.
Authors, Amy MacDonald and Lynn Plourde and illustrator, Scott Nash were the swell surprises at three of these stations. The three picture book creators greeted each child, signed their birthday book, and talked with them about books and reading.
In addition to these sweet interactions, there were playful, visual tributes to the books to help children make those crucial connections between their world and the world of books.
Scott Nash was set against a backdrop that looked like the opening page of his book, Camping Day.
Amy MacDonald was surrounded by pine trees, beavers, otters, and turtles to celebrate her book, Little Beaver and the Echo.
Lynn Plourde was surrounded by inflatable dinosaurs and a blow-up of a scene from the book to resemble her picture book, Dino Pets.

The book Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney was featured in the Rumphius themed room in the museum where they were greeted by an actress playing Miss Rumphius.
And finally, Blueberries for Sal by Robert McCloskey was represented by a young bear bearing a bucket of blueberries.
The final destination of the night was the museum’s doctor office display where Dr. Colette Sabbagh handed out Raising Readers books to model the distribution point of 1.3 million books given to Maine kids by Raising Readers.
We look forward to our next celebration in Portland on November 5th!
Raising Readers Book Celebration Bangor!
September 13, 2010Raising Re
aders Book Celebration
Friday, September 24, 2010
5:00 PM – 7:00 PM (ongoing)
Maine Discovery Museum
74 Main St., Bangor, ME
Free Admission
Info: (207) 541-7531
Raising Readers celebrates the collection of books given to Maine children this year through doctor’s offices with readings and activities by children’s book authors and illustrators, Amy MacDonald, Scott Nash, and Lynn Plourde.
Reading With Older Kids
August 20, 2010
Raising Reader Guest Blogger:
Penny Noyce
Guest Blogger, Penny Noyce is the author of the new children’s book, Lost in Lexicon. In the novel for readers ages 8-12, Daphne and Ivan, travel to a world riddled with forgetting and fragmented by their loss of words, numbers, and understanding.
One of the heroines of the novel, Aunt Adelaide, is modeled after Penny Noyce’s mother Betty Noyce who founded the Libra Foundation. Penny Noyce chairs the board of the Libra Foundation which generously funds Raising Readers. How appropriate to have a novelist and lover of words driving a program that has brought more than 1.3 million books to Maine children.
Reading With Older Kids
We’re all convinced of the benefits of reading to young children, but what about reading with older kids?
When my twins were in fifth grade, they received the following English assignment: Choose an adventure book to read together with one of your parents. As you read, write notes to each other about your reactions, thoughts, and questions. Communicate in writing about the book!
My son Owen and I chose to read Into Thin Air, John Krakauer’s harrowing account of the 1996 Everest climbing season, when the latest in adventure tourism went terribly wrong. Two teams of fit, semi-experienced climbers paid $60,000 each for a “guaranteed” chance at scaling Everest. When a storm howled in, three tourists and two tour leaders perished.
I loved the assignment, and Owen enjoyed it, too. We passed the book back and forth, wrote notes on the computer, and (even) talked about the book. I shared my surprise that the Everest climbers were miserable from the start, beset by insomnia, headache, and hacking cough. Owen shared his sense of the beauty of the mountain and the lonely horror of freezing to death.
Recently, a fifth grade teacher in my wealthy suburban community told me they don’t give that assignment anymore: Too many parents complained.
Parents complained?
Maybe they were too busy traveling for work to read. But couldn’t they use a Kindle on the plane and text their remarks to their children? Maybe they worried the books would bore them. But couldn’t they negotiate with their children for a book that would captivate both of them? Or maybe the parents were afraid of getting a bad grade on the assignment.
As a society, we have embraced the idea of reading to kids too young to read for themselves. Often, though, we forget the value of shared reading experiences as our kids grow older.
I was one of four children, and long after we were proficient readers, we still cuddled on the couch to listen to my mother read to us every night. She didn’t “do the voices” like an actress. She just read in her steady, calming tone; and we listened, learning to pay attention and paint pictures in our minds.
Listening to an adult read aloud exposes children to vocabulary in context, complex sentence structure, and a continuous train of thought. These are all good tools for enhancing children’s thinking, but even better is the shared intimacy of these moments. We don’t have to give them up as our children approach middle school. Even when we don’t read aloud, we can still share bedtime reading, lolling together on the couch or bed, each reading our own book, exchanging comments from time to time.
My father and brother both liked science fiction. Sometimes, on vacation, when there weren’t enough unread books to go around, the first reader tore off sections of a paperback book as he finished them and passed them on to the second reader. I’m not advocating book dismemberment, but what a message about shared enthusiasm!
You and your children can always recommend books to one another. My son Damian’s suggestions have grown from his passionate advocacy of Tony Abbott’s Droon series through his romance with Jerry Spinelli’s Stargirl to his current insistence that I read Here, There Be Dragons by James A. Owen. To tell the truth, I can’t keep up with him, but we do enough common reading that we can always discuss why characters do what they do or how it would be to live in another world. (One friend of mine tells me that the Harry Potter books provided dinner conversation for years.) I reciprocate by saving newspaper or magazine articles for Damian, choosing books from the library I know he’ll like, or sending him links to stories on the web.
By reading books together, we keep communication lines open and share our interests, aspirations, and inner worlds in a way that’s oblique, not too confrontational or embarrassing. Nobody gives us a grade.
(This post original appeared on View from the Windowseat)
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