воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

Mom-inspired film benefits 'Kids Fund' - The Buffalo News (Buffalo, NY)

The day Mike Powell heard his mother had been diagnosed withbreast cancer changed his life forever.

'She [Susan Powell] has taught me to value my life even more,'said Mike Powell, who was in town Wednesday to promote 'A LacrosseMovie,' a documentary that chronicles the life of SyracuseUniversity's career scoring leader.

'You have to live life to its fullest,' he said. 'I've tried todo it every day since then. She told me to never worry about her,that it's a disease and she'd beat it. And she did [about four yearsago]. Lance Armstrong says he thinks cancer helped him. I think mymom having it helped me.'

Now Mike Powell is working with Fastbreak Lacrosse Camp, Brineand Dick's Sporting Goods to help other lacrosse families withsimilar problems. The film will make its Western New York premiereat the Sweet Home High School auditorium at 6:30 p.m. on Feb. 23.Proceeds go to the Western New York Lacrosse for Kids Fund.

'When cancer touches your life in any form, you want to give backand kill this thing,' Powell said. 'We had the opportunity with theLacrosse for Kids Foundation. I jumped at the chance to help thosewho have been stricken.'

Tickets to the premiere can be purchased at www.fastbreakwny.comfor $8 per person, or $20 with a copy of the DVD. At the door,tickets for the movie will cost $10 and the DVD will go for $15. Theauditorium seats about 800 and tickets are sold on a first-comebasis.

Jeremy Murphy, spokesman for WNY Lacrosse for Kids, said the goalis to fill every seat. 'That will really help lacrosse families helpother lacrosse families,' he said.

Powell, a four-time first-team All-American at Syracuse from 2001-04, was a two-time winner of the Tewaaraton Trophy (collegelacrosse's version of the Heisman Trophy) and led the Orange totitles in 2002 and '04, when he was named the NCAA Tournament's MostOutstanding Player. He scored 150 goals with 157 assists at Syracusefor 307 points -- 20 more than his older brothers Casey (1995-98)and Ryan (1997-2000) each tallied for the Orange.

'It chronicles my whole life in 30 minutes,' Mike Powell said. 'Iprovided old footage of my childhood, my high school days [atCarthage, N.Y.], it includes college and touches on the pros [hehelped the Baltimore Bayhawks win the championship of Major LeagueLacrosse last summer].

'An 8-millimeter camera was used to make it edgy and raw. That'smore my style and personality. I wanted it to be authentic to thesport, I didn't want it to be 'MTV Cribs.' It's not all lacrossehighlights, it's much more intimate.'

Powell, 23, is anything but a typical jock. As a senior atSyracuse, his creative juices took over when he ran down the fieldand did a flip before taking a shot on goal.

'I'll get in slumps with the game of lacrosse playing like Inormally play it,' Powell said. 'I'll sit down and write a song or apoem, or I'll paint some. That frees my mind and lets me know that Ihave to do my own thing, be my own player. That's kind of whatinspired me to do the flip.'

Powell sings and plays guitar, and has spent time in a recordingstudio since leaving SU. The music world has been harder for him toconquer than lacrosse.

'It's hard to deny who the great lacrosse players are,' Powellsaid. 'Basically, you pick up a ball and shoot it into the net. Ithink that's why I like music so much. It's a chance for me to bemyself and to carve my own path. Music for me has always been arelease. When lacrosse wears on you and turns into a job, like itdid when I was in college, music is my saving grace.'

Casey, who's 29, 26-year-old Ryan, whose Portland LumberJax meetthe Buffalo Bandits at HSBC Arena on Friday night, and Mike willparticipate in a question and answer session and an autographsigning at the premiere.

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

6 reading clubs for kids in Lake County.(Neighbor) - Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL)

Byline: Kristin Larson

Who said book clubs were only for adults? Young readers can take delight in book clubs, too. From mysteries to adventures, reading good books can open doors to places only the mind can travel. And what better way to pass the winter blues than with a good book and some hot cocoa?

Plus, many of the reading clubs listed below offer parents and kids a chance to join a club together - thereby doing something fun and meaningful at the same time. So grab your library card and head to your local library to sign up for a young people's reading club.

COOK MEMORIAL PUBLIC LIBRARY

This year's winter reading club theme is 'You, Me & the Poet-Tree.' In the club, participants can decorate trees with their favorite or original poem and read a variety of poetry books in the library's collection. Independent and early readers may pick up a reading log at the children's desk through March. The library is located at 413 N. Milwaukee Ave. in downtown Libertyville. Call (847) 362-2330.

WAUCONDA AREA PUBLIC LIBRARY

Wauconda Area Public Library's children department has started its family reading club called 'Share A Good Book With Someone You Love.' Adults and children should register together at the library.

Each family that completes its goal of reading 300 pages and turning in a reading log by Feb. 22 will receive a free paperback book and a gift certificate. Wauconda Area Public Library is located at 801 N. Main St. Call (847) 526-6225, ext. 212.

VERNON AREA PUBLIC LIBRARY

Vernon Area Public Library's youth winter reading club will continue through Feb. 19. Titled 'Follow the Reading Road,' the winter club is open to preschoolers through eighth-graders.

A highlight of being a reading club member is the winter club reading party Feb. 20. At the party, actor and clown Craig Sjogerman will present a storytelling program where youths can meet the tricksters, fools and clowns from coyote of Native American legends to Loki.

Registration to attend the party will begin Tuesday. The library is located at 300 Olde Half Day Road in Lincolnshire. Call (847) 634-3650.

WARREN-NEWPORT PUBLIC LIBRARY

This winter, a 'Pick-a-Patch and Read' reading program will be offered for children in third through eighth grades. Beginning today, kids can sign up at the library or in the bookmobile. Being a program member has its advantages, too. For example, reading books from a variety of categories can earn kids sewable patches for hats, jackets and backpacks. A total of 10 books must be read to earn a patch. Various reading categories include adventure, animals, fantasy, humor, mystery, sports and science fiction.

Names of those who finish will be entered into a drawing for prizes at the end of the program. The program is sponsored by staff in the youth services and outreach departments. Warren-Newport Library is located at 224 N. O'Plaine Road in Gurnee. Call (847) 244-5150.

GRAYSLAKE AREA PUBLIC LIBRARY

Families may register at Grayslake Area Public Library's Winter Reading program until Feb. 12. In the reading club, participants can set their own reading goals in order to earn prizes and become Library Super Sleuths. When all registered family members have met their goals, the family will be entered in a drawing for more prizes.

Grayslake Area Public Library is located at 100 Library Lane. Call (847) 223-5313.

FREMONT PUBLIC LIBRARY

пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

Where it's at with the kids - The Herald

radio review by - Go4It (Radio 4) - The Borscht Belt (Radio 4)-The Jimmy Logan Story (Radio Scotland) - Fred MacAulay (RadioScotland) The cool street-cred kid credentials explode from thetitle: Go4It. Britney and Beckham are cool. Boyzone are just sooolast year. You gotta keep alert when dealing with this pre-teengroup. One pop faux-pas and you're outta here. Radio 4 wanted toknow where it was at with the kids and the kids told 'em. The titleof the station's new magazine programme aimed at the eight- to 10-year-old audience was chosen by a wised-up eight-year-old.

Radio 4 is bravely fighting cynicism and retro-Listen with Motherslurs. There is a tendency in children and parents alike to squirmin the face of such concerted efforts to entertain children via theancient medium of radio. Coxy or the top 40 in the Radio 1 morningis fine - but a Sunday magazine programme?

Go4It doesn't proclaim to be an alternative to Playstation,merely another option. And not bad either, judging by its debutouting. Hosted by the big-brotherly presenter Matt Smith, we get amix of pop, poetry, sport, and movies. Hear'say were taken aback bythe cynical eight-year-old interviewer who asked how long it wouldbe until they broke up. Olympic rower Steve Redgrave similarlysweated it out, while a granny and grandson's review of Spykids wasinspired. Good old-fashioned competitions, jokes, and poems balancedup the e-mail address and website correspondence.

One very big grouch, however, is the preponderance of estuary-English accents. One hopes Radio 4 realises children across Britainneed to hear their own accents.

Oy weh! was the Jewish cry echoing round the Catskills of the1950s. Comedian Tony Hawks took a trip back in time to the popularJewish holiday area dubbed The Borscht Belt on Radio 4. It was herein the hotels and clubs north of New York that comedians cut theirteeth on a very choosy audience. Woody Allen, Sid Caesar, ShelleyWinters, and Mel Brooks all plied their trade on post-war Jewsholidaying in a home from home.

Interviewing many men called Bernie, Hawks was treated to aselection of the old-timers' routines and bad jokes, though MickeyFreeman - who played Private Zimmerman in The Phil Silvers Show -magically re- created the yesteryear atmosphere in which roller-skating teams composed of Jewish refugees were on the same bill asvery bad bands singing about Israel. Sadly, the Catskills havedeclined in popularity and now depend on the conventions and singlesweekends for their trade. Woody Allen could have a field day withthat material.

Radio Scotland's timely tribute to the Godfather of Scottishentertainment in The Jimmy Logan Story on Easter Monday wascomprehensive and moving. A 65-year career that spanned panto todrama and even the inimitable recording Loganberry Pie was renderedbeautifully. Logan reading extracts from his autobiography wasaugmented with a staggering number of interviews with family andprofessional pals. They even pulled off a coup with a rare interviewwith Stanley Baxter praising the 'honourable man'. Surely a rareattribute in such a notorious business. The sound of Logan beltingout a rousing rendition of I Love a Lassie with the audienceclapping along was the best memory of all.

Memories of another kind were stoked when 1970s teen idol DonnyOsmond guested on Fred MacAulay's show. Ladies of a certain age mayrecall misspent doe-eyed hours slavering over the toothy Mormon manymoons ago. Now the Puppy Love pin-up is back, promoting upcomingconcerts. In bright-eyed, anarchic mood, Donny (with a y not an ie,he clarified) impersonated his understanding of a Scottish accent.

четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

NOTHING TO DO BUT READ IDEAS TO KEEP KIDS IN A LITERARY FRAME OF MIND - The Buffalo News (Buffalo, NY)

IN HIS poem 'Summer Song' John Ciardi asks, 'Guess if summerlasts too long?' Many parents would answer yes after hearing theirchildren whine, 'I'm bored, there's nothing to do.'

Finding ways to keep kids happy is not always easy. One of thebest ways is to channel their energy into reading. How nice that itrequires no electrical outlet, can be done at any time, any place,and provides many happy accidents of discovery.

Planning before school ends may give students a chance toborrow books from their school library.

Encourage kids to form a Neighborhood Summer Reading Club wherebooks can be discussed, recommended and exchanged. Research hasshown that reading becomes more meaningful for kids when they cantalk about what they've read, especially to an interested adult. Soif a parent could be involved in some of these meetings, all thebetter.

A pajama party where everyone reads a part of his/her favoritebook would be fun. Sunny-day meetings under a shade tree orrainy-day basement meetings add variety. Choose a child who likesto organize as the president. The vice president could keep trackof meeting times and places. The secretary could keep notes onbooks exchanged and hours when the public library is open. Theseactivities would provide structure to the days and weeks, as wellas something to look forward to.

A colorful folder for each member with pad and pencil enclosedwould be the only supplies needed. To encourage continuity, aparent might consider getting T-shirts printed with the club'sname. A party at summer's end could include skits of favorite booksor characters. Younger brothers and sisters could be invited andinspired. Admission could be a hand-made bookmark to be exchangedat party's end. Imagination would be rewarded and children woulddiscover that reading can be fun!

What to read? The books waiting for children provide an endlessvariety of choices. As a member of the 1992 Newbery MedalCommittee, I was privileged to judge many outstanding books forchildren published during 1991. The Gold Medal winner -- for themost distinguished contribution to American literature for children-- was 'Shiloh' by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor (ages 8 and up). This ismore than a book about an 11-year-old boy and his dog, Appalachia.The theme also skillfully addresses the concepts of honesty andcommitment.

Two honor books also were chosen. The first is 'Nothing But theTruth' (ages 12 and up), a documentary novel by Avi that is apowerful, realistic story dealing with misconceptions, rumor andgossip. The other honor book -- 'The Wright Brothers: How TheyInvented the Airplane' by Russell Freedman (ages 10 and up) -- is avery personal biography with original photos of Wilbur and OrvilleWright.

So many other new books with timely themes of homelessness, thedangers of drugs, prejudice and environmental issues provideinsights into the real world.

Yesterday's world is presented, even for the youngest, asCharles Lindbergh flies off the pages of 'Flight' (ages 5 and up).Titles like 'The Remarkable Voyages of Captain Cook' (11 and up),'Prairie Visions' (10 and up) and 'Now Is Your Time' (12 and up),winner of the Coretta Scott King Award, make history come alive.

Other outstanding historical fiction can be found in the CivilWar story 'Jayhawker' (11 and up) and in Katherine Paterson'smasterful tale of 'Lyddie' (12 and up), about a factory worker inMassachusetts in the 1840s. A child can go along on ChristopherColumbus' journey by sharing in 'Pedro's Journal' (8 and up), thediary of a young cabin boy aboard the Santa Maria.

The entertaining fantasy 'Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher' (8and up) will bring laughter and maybe tears to readers. 'Wanted . .. Mud Blossom' (8 and up) is a hilarious dog story, and for sportsfans ages 8 and older, there is 'Soccer Shock' and 'Finding BuckMcHenry' (baseball).

The delicious sights and sounds of poetry are found in 'Pish,Posh, Said Hieronymus Bosch' by Nancy Willard, with fantasticillustrations by the Dillons (all ages), and 'In for Winter, Outfor Spring' by Arnold Adoff, illustrated by Jerry Pinkney, whichcelebrates family life throughout the cycle of seasons (recommendedfor children 4 to 8).

These books should be gobbled up, chewed and digested toprovide the energy for enjoying a whole summer with no time towhine, 'There's nothing to do!'

Other outstanding new books:

AGES 5 AND UP:

'D Is for Dolphin' by Cami Berg

'Night Tree' by Eve Bunting

'Living With Dinosaurs' by Patricia Lauber

'Rats on the Roof' by James Marshall

'The Discovery of the Americas' by Betsy and Guilio Maestro

Vanishing Culture Series -- 'Himalaya,' 'Sahara' by Jan Reynolds

'Appalachia, the Voices of Sleeping Birds' by Cynthia Rylant

'Larger Than Life: The Adventures of American Legendary Heroes'by Robert San Souci

'The Legend of William Tell' by Terry Small

'Go Fish' by Mary Stolz

'Hark! A Christmas Sampler' by Jane Yolen

POETRY:

'Winter Pennies' by N.M.Bodecker

'The Kite That Braved Old Orchard Beach' by X.J. Kennedy

'I'm Going to Pet a Worm Today' by Constance Levy

AGES 10 AND UP:

'Wings' by Bill Britain

'Oren Bell' by Barbara Hood Burgess

'Strider' by Beverly Cleary

'Chingis Khan' by Demi

'Hunt for the Last Cat' by Justin Denzel

'Animal Architecture' by Jennifer Owings Dewey

'Bully for You, Teddy Roosevelt' by Jean Fritz

'Pueblo Storyteller' by Hoyt-Goldsmith

'Double Trouble Squared' by Kathryn Lasky

'Summer of Fire' by Patricia Lauber

'Amazon' by Peter Lourie

'Journey' by Patricia Mac-Lachlan

'The Great Eggspectations of Lila Fenwick' by Kate McMullen

'Soccer Shock' by Donna J. Napoli

'Wild Voices' by Drew Nelson

'American Tall Tales' by Mary Pope Osborne

'The Cookcamp' by Gary Paulsen

'Tails of the Bronx' by Jill Pinkwater

'Grandpa's Mountain' by Carolyn Reeder

'Children of the Fire' by Harriet Gillem Robinet

'The Gift of the Girl Who Couldn't Hear' by Susan Shreve

'Finding Buck McHenry' by Alfred Slote

'Thrashin' Time' by David Weitzman

'George Washington's Socks' by Elvira Woodruff

'Searching for Dragons' by Patricia C. Wrede

'The Mozart Season' by Virginia Euwer Wolff

'The Star Fisher' by Laurence Yep

'Wizard's Hall' by Jane Yolen

'The Fortuneteller in 5B' by Jane Breskin Zalben

YOUNG ADULT:

'Young Joan' by Barbara Dana

'The Borning Room' by Paul Fleischman

'The Truth About Unicorns' by James Giblin

'The Painter's Eye: Learning to Look at Contemporary AmericanArt' by Sandra Jordan

'I Am Regina' by Sally Keehn

'Goldclimbers' by Nancy Luenn

'The Striped Ships' by Eloise McGraw

'Song of the Gargoyle' by Zilpha Snyder

'Year of the Impossible Goodbyes' by Nyul Choi Sook

'The Island and the Ring' by Laura C. Stevenson

'The Weirdo' by Theodore Taylor

среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

An innovative teacher turns kids into writers; Nancy Barile's flair for teaching has captured her students' attention - and just earned her an award from the College Board.(FEATURES)(CURRENTS) - The Christian Science Monitor

Byline: Stacy A. Teicher Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

REVERE, MASS. -- Most of the hallways in Revere High School are lined with skinny, sherbet-orange lockers. But outside Nancy Barile's classroom, her sophomore lit students have placed a stately row of poster-board gravestones, complete with epitaphs, for the characters who died in 'Hamlet.'

Ms. Barile knows how to hook the CSI generation. But it's her flair for teaching them to write that earned her a recent award from the College Board.

On this particular morning, the teens in her 'Mysteries' elective class focus intensely as they draft their own suspense stories. Barile has already led them through the criteria she'll be looking for, and the priority today is imagery - part of 'Standard 15' measured on statewide tests.

'What's imagery? Language that appeals to your senses,' Barile says as she writes on the whiteboard. 'What does it smell like out in the woods? Is there a smell of decay?' she suggests with a mischievous grin.

'Out of all my classes, this is the most exciting - she captures your attention while she's teaching,' says senior Phillip Longo, who first encountered her in an after-school class for students who had failed English.

Loved as she is for handing out creative assignments, never 'busywork,' her students also give Barile credit for insisting they put their commas in the right place.

'She helps everyone with their writing so much,' says Autumn Zandt, a senior in Barile's advanced-placement course. 'It's been really nice to have someone focusing on [grammar] before we go away to college.'

Teaching in Revere, Mass., for 11 years, Barile has built up a reputation - as a feminist with a voice that more than fills a room; as a stalwart supporter of the school's sports teams, plays, and community-service activities; and as a mentor to students and fellow teachers. It all feeds into her ability to turn kids into writers, which garnered her one of this year's six Bob Costas Grants for the Teaching of Writing from the College Board, a national nonprofit association in New York.

'When students are able to improve upon their writing skills, it builds a kind of confidence that translates into other academic areas,' says Sandra Riley, a College Board spokeswoman. With colleges and employers complaining that high school grads too often require remedial writing lessons, the $2,000 awards are designed to highlight effective practices and support teachers' extracurricular projects.

Barile applied for the grant to restart Revere High's literary magazine, Crossroads. For the past three years, it's been the victim of budget cuts, leaving no outlet for the poems, short stories, and foreign-language pieces that Barile used to publish every year.

Her friend, history teacher Bill O'Brien, says the literary magazine attracts 'kids you wouldn't expect.... A lot of them use writing as an outlet, and she can kind of channel that.'

Revere, just north of Boston, is a gateway for immigrants and a place where many families have long relied on blue-collar jobs. Aiming for college isn't something all of the school's 1,400 students do automatically. But Barile tries to encourage anything that might give them a feeling of success in school. Rather than set the literary magazine up as a competition, 'as long as it's not inappropriate, I publish everything,' she says.

Brittany Deptula, a senior in Barile's Advanced Placement (AP) class, says she's excited about contributing lyrical poetry to the magazine. She also started writing for the local newspaper after Barile suggested it, and now hopes to study journalism. 'She's just one of those teachers that you can have, like, kind of a more personal relationship with,' Brittany says.

Melyssia Mansur, a sophomore, says she's writing her own biography because of Barile's encouragement. And Brian Dudley, a senior in her AP class, says he was astounded to find himself sitting around at lunch with classmates discussing 'The Awakening,' by Kate Chopin, a novel about a young woman that was published in 1899 and repopularized in the 1970s.

'I was like, 'I've never done this before!' But she made us want to talk about the book and seriously think about it.... It made us all feel kind of like, 'Oh wow, we're actually learning something,'' Brian says.

Barile had always wanted to be a teacher, but she became a paralegal instead, partly to please her father, she says. When she went to night school to change careers, her student-teaching brought her to Revere. A year later, after working with high school dropouts, a position opened up and she grabbed it.

'I'm always thinking about, 'How can I make this more interesting for the kids?' ' she says. Then she channels that interest into skills: demanding they include literary evidence, such as direct quotes, to back up their essays, for instance.

Mr. O'Brien says the students respect Barile because they know she holds them to high standards. She fills their papers with comments and has them redo their work if it's not good enough.

'This is a community where some people will have lower expectations,' he says, but Barile tries to connect with everyone, whether it's a pregnant teen or a gang member. 'A lot of kids rise to that when they see, 'Oh, she's not going to let me put my head down in class.... She knows I'm better than this.' '

'I'm still trying to save the world,' Barile says with a tired smile and the acknowledgment that it sometimes wears her down.

That's partly why she calls her recent award 'a career highlight' and 'the gift that keeps on giving.' At the ceremony, she was amazed to see 1,000 people give her a standing ovation. She even gets congratulated in the grocery store.

But for now, it's just another day to cruise around the classroom, keeping her kids writing as she nudges and praises them.

'Excellent. You've got great stuff there,' she says after reading over a boy's shoulder. 'Keep your verb tense the same,' she calls out to the class. And then, pausing over another story in progress, she exclaims with genuine delight: 'Slurped! Slurped is a great onomatopoeia!'

From near-dropout to college-bound

For Merzudin Ibric, grades 1 to 3 were a casualty of war in Bosnia. Grades 11 and 12 would have gone up in smoke, too, if not for the intervention of English teacher Nancy Barile.

An immigrant to the United States at age 12, Merzudin's English was fluent by the time he reached Ms. Barile's class as a sophomore at Revere High School. All too often, he had his head down on his desk, but even then he'd manage to toss out some sophisticated comments that gave his teacher glimmers of hope.

'Finally, I pulled him aside, and I was like, 'Look. What is your deal?' ' Barile says. He confided that he planned to drop out and get a job as soon as he turned 16.

'She told me that she would not let me drop out ... because she thought I was smart, and she wanted me to graduate, and she told me that I was going to go to college,' he says in a phone interview.

Barile knew he was a fast runner, so she paired up with the track coach to persuade Merzudin to pull his grades up in the three classes he was failing so he could compete. He went on to become a state and regional champion.

Currently on scholarship for a postgraduate year at Phillips Academy in nearby Andover, he'll attend Wheaton College in Norton, Mass., next fall. 'I'm glad that I listened,' Merzudin says.

Barile also urged him to write a book about his experiences as a child in Bosnia and his transition here. He listened to that, too. Now his teachers at Andover are helping him try to get it published.

'She's just an amazing person, and I'm ever thankful to her for helping me out,' he says of the woman who befriended his whole family. 'If I need advice on something, she's always there; she does not hesitate at all.'

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

Yearning for learning? To turn kids on to reading and school, parents may have to use creativity - over and over again.(VARIETY) - Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)

Byline: Norman Draper; Staff Writer

RSEC: +

You thought you were a nurturing, caring parent.

You read to your children from the time they were infants. Vacation trips became lessons in the rudiments of history and geography. You did all those things the experts said you should do to foster learning.

But look what happened. Homework assignments aren't getting turned in, and your kids are tuning out in the classroom. Try to strike up a conversation about the American Revolution, and it somehow gets twisted into a monologue about Corey Koskie's fielding or the Backstreet Boys' singing.

Where did you go wrong?

Probably nowhere.

Rearing a good learner is no science, and barely even an art. The family genes can either thwart your best intentions or aid them, and there's nothing you can do about that. And the so-called experts in the field can only take you so far: Read to your children, limit the use of electronics, get involved in their schooling.

Beyond that, your home is the laboratory, and you have to experiment.

'I find myself going through my whole bag of tricks, trying to find out what will work this time,' said Linda Spee, president of the Minnesota PTA and the mother of a 15-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl. 'I think you go through cycles and they don't work, and you try them again and they do, and try them again and they don't work.'

'There's no magic wand,' said Lisa Silmser, who teaches seventh-grade English at Anoka's Sandburg Middle School. 'If there was, you could pick it up at Wal-Mart.'

Some things to try

What all of this means is that there are plenty of ideas that might work in your case, and they certainly are worth a try. For example:

- Nothing beats silence for creating a suitable homework environment, said Marika Ginsburg-Block, an assistant professor of educational psychology at the University of Minnesota. Turn off the TV and stereo and stay off the phone.

- Offer reasonable choices to your child, such as the best time to work, and the most interesting media to explore (the encyclopedia or the Internet, for instance).

- If a particular homework problem is frustrating to your child, urge him to move on to others that are easier. When that vexing problem can no longer be ignored, set a timer for five minutes; there can be no calls to adults for help until the time is up.

- Try to judge whether the material your child is dealing with is too tough or too easy, which can squelch any interest in doing it.

- Try to capitalize on their interests.

Kate Weidenbach, a third-grade teacher at Minneapolis' Tuttle Elementary School, appealed to her son's passion, baseball, when the fifth-grader was assigned to write a poem, ordinarily an odious task to a kid who ate and breathed sports.

'I said, `Stop thinking about poetry; just tell me what you feel like when you are playing,' ' Weidenbach said.

'He told me some of those things, and I said, `Tell me every color you see when you're playing baseball, and when you breathe in, waiting for that first ball, what's that feeling?' When he was done, he produced some of the most beautiful poetry about how he felt when he was playing baseball... . It was gorgeous.'

A world of learning

Kit Wilhite, director of youth and family programs for the Science Museum of Minnesota, likes to point out that the world around us is one huge learning opportunity. There's science in the thunderstorm bearing down on your neighborhood, in the flowers growing in your garden, in the birds that frequent your feeder. Math comes in when measuring is done for cooking and when figuring out what to do with accumulated allowance money. You might know this already, but Wilhite's key point is this: Don't make a chore of these learning events; weave them into the fabric of daily life. That results in less skepticism and gives those teachable moments some staying power.

Getting other kids involved helps, too. If a neighbor child starts rattling off state capitals, your own kids might want to get into the act. And sometimes knowledge is more palatable when it doesn't come from on high.

'Well, of course Dad knows the state capitals; come on,' Ginsburg-Block said. 'But if it's someone closer in age, well, `Look, she knows state capitals!' That can be very helpful in learning.'

You're the parent

Sometimes it's all right to lay down the law.

'One of the things parents might have lost in the shuffle is their right to parent,' said Kathleen Brown, principal of Holy Family Catholic High School in Victoria. 'I don't need to be a friend to my child... . So yeah, `Today what we're doing is sitting here and reading, and I'm the parent,' and yeah, maybe it's because I said so.'

Talking over current events can work, especially if it strikes close to home. Spee has no trouble engaging her children in conversation over the news of the home school district - Rochester - especially with teacher layoffs and big cuts in store this school year.

Some educators dislike the notion of awards or privileges for homework or reading assignments done well. But Marianne Norris, Minneapolis schools executive director of teacher and instructional services, thinks there's a place for making deals, or 'contracts,' with your kids.

'Let's say the child enjoys cars,' she said. 'Maybe the parent will say, `There's an auto show coming up... . Let's make a chart and we'll track how much reading you do,' and if the child reads 30 hours by the time of the auto show, they'll go together.' Norris warns of contracts that are too vague and long-term; they can easily be ignored or forgotten.

At the library

On a day shortly before school started, some real experts gathered at Richfield's Augsburg Park public library. Eight-year-old Alex Putnam was exploring the world of Harry Potter. The books are a challenge, but Alex decided to tackle them because 'other people told me it was fun.' How would he advise parents who want their kids to read more? Parents should get their kids interested in books that have television counterparts.

'Like Rugrats,' he said.

Most of the Zilka family - four girls, two boys and mother Ann - were there availing themselves of everything from science fiction, to history, to Nancy Drew mysteries. The Zilka kids have always been read to by their parents, and they read to each other. Fourteen-year-old Katherine, the oldest, noted that her mom often livens up her readings to the family by using different voices for the characters.

'That really kept our imagination going,' she said. Younger sisters Rose, 8, and Abby, 10, found books on tape to be a good entry point to reading.

Katherine had another tip for holding an audience. 'I'd say start reading a book, then leave it at a climax, then have them finish it.'

Nearby, 8-year-old Katelyn Erickson also offered a bit of advice.

'If it's too hard for them, maybe they should pick out an easier book,' she said.

There's some consolation amid the mix of failures and successes: You have plenty of company.

Spee said she often commiserates with other parents who are disappointed that their learning strategems haven't worked.

'We share our frustrations and ideas and success, and then share our frustrations again,' she said. 'Sometimes, as a parent, it's nice to know that I'm not the only one with the same frustrations, and that maybe I didn't do such a bad job after all.'

- Norman Draper is at ndraper@startribune.com.

For eager readers ...

Kids at the Augsburg Park Library in Richfield had tips for parents:

- Read to your kids

- Use different voices for the characters

- Find books that correspond to TV shows

- Stop reading aloud right before a dramatic ending (to inspire kids to finish the story on their own.)

Inspiring your kids

Here are some resources cited by parents and educators as good jump starts to learning for the reluctant child and the frustrated parent.

Books

- 'How to Talk So Kids Can Learn: At Home and in School' by Adele Faber and Elaine Mazlish; Simon and Schuster.

- 'The School-Savvy Parent: 365 Insider Tips to Help You Help Your Child' by Rosemarie Clark, Donna Hawkins, Beth Vachon and Marjorie Lisovskis; Free Spirit Publishing.

- 'The School Book: Everything Parents Must Know About Their Child's Education From Preschool Through Eighth Grade' by Mary Susan Miller; St. Martin's Press.

TV cable channels

- The Discovery Channel

- Animal Planet

- The History Channel

Online

- The Thinking Fountain, the Science Museum of Minnesota's Web site for kids: http://www.smm.org/sln.

- The Learning Network's Parent Channel: http://www.Familyeducation.com.

- Kid Info: http://www.kidinfo.com.

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

Where kids, authors can 'connect' - The Philadelphia Tribune

McDaniel, Eleanor H.
Philadelphia Tribune, The
01-30-2001
Where kids, authors can `connect'

Children of all ages may meet some of their favorite authors and
illustrators at the ninth annual African-American Children's Book Fair,
Saturday, Feb. 3, at the Winnet Student Life Building at the Community
College of Philadelphia, 17th and Spring Garden streets, from 1-3 p.m.

Many noted creators of African-American children's literature are
volunteering their time to the effort as a way to connect with their young
readers. They feel that it is important for African-American children to
meet them and hear them read from their works. They hope they will become
role models in the same way that entertainers and sports figures are.

The book fair kicks off Black History Month by promoting a sense of
cultural pride through literature. Education experts agree on the
importance of children developing a love of reading.

Armed with this knowledge, Vanesse J. Lloyd- Sgambati, president and
founder of Literary, an agency that specializes in literary ventures,
decided nine years ago to put the publishers, writers, illustrators and
consumers of African-American books together.

'We make sure we have best-selling authors who would normally charge to go
into schools, and we make sure every child walks out of that room with
something book-related,' she said.

WCAU-TV (Channel 10) has donated a book-giveaway to the first 300 children
who attend. There will also be free posters, bookmarks, catalogs and other
book-related items available.

Lloyd-Sgambati is concerned that the market for African-American children's
books is 'an endangered species.' As with any business, the bottom line is
money, and the sales of these publications are way down. Consumers complain
that children's books, especially the hardcover versions, are too costly.
But Lloyd-Sgambati counters, 'How many children's books can you buy for the
price of one video game?'

She has learned of an added benefit of reading for Black children. It has
been discovered that there's a correlation between reading and good health,
she says.

'Studies have shown that African-American children who read are more likely
to make responsible health choices.' The Literary has adopted the slogan,
'Read, It's Good for Your Health.'

All the literary participants in the book fair agree that books written
expressly for African-American children help them develop a sense of
cultural pride through the positive portrayal of African-Americans. And
books with universal themes take on a more relevant meaning when the images
are Black.

'Grandma's Purple Flowers,' written and illustrated by AdJoa J. Burrowes,
tackles a difficult theme: the death of a beloved relative. The book tells
the story of the special relationship between a grandmother and her
granddaughter and the subsequent death of the grandmother. The subject is
handled with great sensitivity.

Burrowes firmly believes in the necessity of reading to children. 'It's
important for kids to be exposed to books as early as possible to instill
in them a love for reading. I don't think that's hard for parents to do,
because there're basic things that they can do like making sure that
there's reading material in the home and that the child can see the adults
reading. Time should be set aside to snuggle up with your child to read on
a consistent basis.'

Another book, 'Shades of Black,' deals with an issue common to the
African-American community: skin color. Husbandand-wife team Sandra and
Myles Pinkney have created a book that beautifully shows and discusses the
rainbow of skin colors found in the Black race through photos of children
by Myles and poems by Sandra. The book has been nominated for an NAACP
Image Award. The winners will be announced in March.

Myles explained their reasons for writing the book: 'We had issues of skin
color when we were young. Me for being teased for being light-skinned. In
middle school, it was the dark-skinned kids who teased me. I thought they'd
be the ones who'd accept me, [not the whites,] and they were the ones who
rejected me.'

His wife, Sandra, also experienced ugly incidents of racism in school. 'I
grew up not liking myself,' she says. 'I thought Black was not the color to
be. But I wanted to teach children self-esteem [with our book]. Black is
beautiful. Yes,' she adds, 'we do come in all skin tones and we're all
special.' Right now, the couple is working with their youngest child, who
is troubled by the inconsistency of skin tones in their family. They
decided that a book was a way to explain the differences in skin tones to
him and to other children. And, equally important, it will teach respect
for each individual's color.

The Pinkneys are currently working on 'Colors,' a book that addresses the
variety of colors of the peoples of the world.

Award-winning illustrator Neneka Bennett will read from 'Visions of
Beauty,' written by Kathryn Lasky, with pictures by Bennett. It's the story
of Madame C. J. Walker.

Bennett discusses her decision to volunteer her time at the book fair. 'I'd
like a chance to talk to people about my book and how I did it. Being an
illustrator, I tend to spend a lot of time in my house working on my
artwork. I don't get a chance to spend time with children, as much as I'd
like to. So this is a chance to touch base with them.'

The recipient of two Coretta Scott King Awards for Illustration, Bryan
Collier, feels 'blessed' to get out and share his talents with others. His
books, 'These Hands,' by Hope Lynn Price, 'Freedom River,' by Doreen
Rappaport and 'Uptown,' written and illustrated by Collier, will be
available at the book fair.

Collier recently entered the world of illustration after 18 years as a fine
artist. He says, 'I love it. Illustration has opened up a whole new avenue
in terms of my approach and expression and how to tell a story.' He feels
that creating art for children is like a ministry for him. 'It's opening
their hearts and minds to the world around us.' Examples of Collier's art
can be seen on www.bryancollier.com.

Other authors and illustrators scheduled to appear at the book fair are
Charles Blockson, A. Roxie Graves, Jabri Asmin, Shakira, Charles Smith,
Deborah Buchanan and E. B. Lewis.

The book fair is free and open to the public. Books will be of special
interest to children of pre-school age through young adulthood, parents,
teachers and school librarians. For information about the event, contact
the Literary at 215-877-2012.

Article copyright Philadelphia Tribune Company, Inc.

Article copyright Philadelphia Tribune Company, Inc.
V.117

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

Kids Help With Magazine for Military Youth - AP Online

WATERTOWN, N.Y. - Lee Allison was a little nervous during his first assignment. But in the military, he knew, you complete your mission.

'I stuttered a few times, but he was nice. He answered all my questions,' said 12-year-old Lee, recalling his interview with Brett Helquist, the illustrator for the children's books, 'A Series of Unfortunate Events.'

The interview was for the first issue of 'Military Brats,' a magazine for military youth written mostly by sons and daughters of soldiers and published by a military mom at the U.S. Army's Fort Drum in upstate New York.

The first 250,000 copies of Military Brats was distributed free through 258 commissaries worldwide and began disappearing almost immediately, said Robert Hansgen, a spokesman for the U.S. Defense Commissary Agency.

'That's a sure sign that it filled a need that people had,' said Janice Witte, director of the U.S. Department of Defense's Office of Children and Youth.

There are more than 692,000 children ages 6 to 18 classified as military youth, Witte said.

'There are lots of publications out there for military personnel over age 18, but there isn't really anything that's really connected to the military for our youth,' she said.

Misty Burris also noticed the void. So while she and her husband, now retired Army Staff Sgt. Sean Burris, drove from California to Fort Drum three years ago, she wrote out a detailed business plan for a military youth magazine.

'We hear all these stories about how military morale is down in these difficult times. I thought the way to fix that is to start with the kids,' said Burris, 33, who formed Littlefoot Publishing, Inc. to produce the magazine.

The only other attempt to produce a military youth magazine was distributed to just a few bases in the 1990s, Burris said.

Keenly aware of military protocol, Burris traveled to the Pentagon for support. The Pentagon provided her with a ready-made distribution network - the commissary system, which serves families in all branches of the military, living on or off U.S. installations.

The magazine's first 100-page issue came out in June. The next is scheduled for September. Publishing an issue costs about $300,000, which the company is raising through advertising and corporate grants.

Each issue will highlight a dozen selected military bases with photos and a travelogue-type article written by the post's public affairs office.

The stories, poems, columns and other regular features are produced by the magazine's staff of 12 writers, ages 11 to 17. Several have fathers due home in the coming weeks from Afghanistan and Iraq.

Others, like Lee Allison, don't have a parent in the military but feel strongly connected because of the Army's large local presence. In the Indian River School District, where Lee is a seventh-grader, 80 percent of the students have a parent at Fort Drum.

Among the magazine's fixtures will be an advice column and Allison's book review column. Another writer reviews electronic games and gadgetry. There's even a style section.

Burris' 14-year-old son, Sean, is a sports columnist. For the first issue, he interviewed Tom Felton - Harry Potter's arch nemesis Draco Malfoy - during the teen actor's stop in northern New York to fish in the St. Lawrence River. For the next issue, he's writing about geocaching, a kind of high-tech treasure hunt.

'I think other kids will want to read our magazine because they know it's going to be about something kids are interested in, and in it's going to be written in a way that they'll find interesting,' said Sean, whose two siblings are also on staff.

His mother said the magazine is not looking to take on controversial subjects.

'It's hard enough being a military brat,' she said. 'We want to tell them positive stories. We want to give them useful information. To let them know that there are others sharing their experiences, that they're not alone.'

---

On the Net:

Run, kids, run.(Daily Break) - The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA)

week 6 challenge

This week see if you can do up to 18 minutes of running in a workout. If you haven't run that far already, try switching off walking three minutes and running two minutes until you have 18 minutes of running. Do this for two of your workouts. For the third, do a 35-minute walk.

Remember, that's just a goal. If you're been running already, you might be able to do more; if not, you might need to do less. Don't worry. You have plenty of time to get in shape - the rest of your life.

If you get out of breath, sloowwwwwwww down. If you can talk and run at the same time, that's probably a good pace - and it's always OK to walk. Have fun.

tips

Can you believe it? We're half-way through the program. If you want to sign up for the first big race after we're done - the Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters Run/Walk for the Kids on June 17 - now's a good time. After May 8 , the registration fees go up. Right now it's $12 for kids and $25 for adults. The event includes a 1-mile run, a 10K and a 5K (3.1 miles) - which is what many of you have been training for.

And, remember, it's not too late to download a children's 'marathon' chart and work toward a marathon medal by running the mile on June 17. Visit runwalkforthekids.org .

expert advice

Crystal Kearney

Age 12

School Salem Middle in Virginia Beach

What's your favorite sport? Basketball, because I like to run and sometimes I like to play against my sister and try and do tricks.

Why do you like to exercise? I just like to be outside. I don't like to sit down. I'm fidgety. It makes me feel more energized.

Advice for kids just starting out exercising Stop freaking out about it because it's really not that big a deal. Don't push yourself if it hurts. You think it's supposed to hurt, but it's not really.

Favorite food Pasta salad

Least favorite food Sweet potatoes. They make my stomach hurt.

Favorite subject English, because I like to write poems and songs.

Hero Lyfe - he writes songs. He's creative, and he writes about life. I like to write about life and the difficulties and stuff.

reach us

Questions? Tips? Would you like a Run, Kids, Run bumper sticker? E-mail runkidsrun@pilotonline.com or call (757) 446-2552.

CAPTION(S):

суббота, 22 сентября 2012 г.

'THEY WERE SUCH HAPPY KIDS' - The Columbian (Vancouver, WA)

One woman spoke for so many others, voice choked with sobs: 'Idon't have words. We love you.'

She spoke at the funeral for 8-year-old Tyson Schram and hissister, 7-year-old Jasmine Warren, who died after being struck by acar Saturday five blocks from home.

More than 300 people turned out for the Thursday service at FirstUnited Methodist Church in Vancouver. The crowd included thechildren's mother, Pam Warren, each child's father, more than 30other family members, friends, neighbors, classmates and strangers.

The Rev. Willie F. Pride refused to call it a funeral service,choosing instead the phrase 'home-going celebration.' Pride overseesEverlasting Missionary Baptist Church in Rosemere, where bothchildren attended vacation Bible school last year.

Two white coffins stood at the front of the sanctuary, drapedwith flowers. A stuffed pink bunny rested on the altar steps. Abouquet of blue balloons rose behind that.

The Rev. James Hobbs, assisting Pride in Thursday's service,described the children this way: 'Two roses that God has calledhome. It is not goodbye, but until we see you on heaven's side.'

Seven-tenths of a mile from First Methodist, east down 33rdStreet and then north on P Street, a roadside memorial marks thespot where Tyson and Jasmine were struck at 4:50 p.m. Saturday by apassing vehicle.

Tyson died at the scene. Jasmine died later at a Portlandhospital. The two had been heading home from a trip to buy treats ata neighborhood market.

At the roadside memorial earlier this week, eight balloons waftedin the breeze, anchored within a menagerie of stuffed animals and asmall forest of flowers gathering dew.

Twenty-seven candles lined the curb, one tucked into a Bumble Beetuna can, others flickering faintly after hours of slow burning.

There were photos, notes and poems. A hand-drawn message in child-sized scrawl read, 'I miss you guys.'

'Watch over Jasmine'

Wednesday evening, Pam Warren spent several hours sitting next toher children's coffins at Evergreen Staples Funeral Chapel inMinnehaha.

'She has some more words to say to them,' said her boyfriend,Troy Thompson.

Later, Warren arrived home to a cramped apartment in Rosemere.Surrounded by a dozen family members, including her two youngestchildren, Destiny and Malachi, Warren looked shell-shocked, empty.

She found a sliver of comfort in the fact that Jasmine will beburied with her favorite Mickey Mouse blanket, a newborn giftsoftened by years of use.

'They were happy kids, just happy kids, such happy kids,' Warrensaid. 'Other kids loved to be around them.'

They played freeze tag and slip-and-slide in the summer, amid agaggle of neighborhood kids who shared Popsicles and laughter.

Tyson, she said, was athletic, artistic, protective of his littlesister. He also was eager to grow up.

'He couldn't wait to get a job and start making money,' Warrensaid, adding that the boy already was a 'little businessman,'selling people grocery coupons.

Jasmine danced and laughed, leaped and spun like a ballerina. Shehad a bright smile, and classmates described her as soft-spoken, agood listener, always a friend.

'They were very affectionate and loving,' she said.

A classmate, second-grader Jordan Harris, this week wrote a noteto the two children, visualizing them playing together in heaven:'Tyson, please watch over Jasmine so that she doesn't fall in theclouds.'

Warren looked away as the words were read aloud Wednesday nightin her living room. Eyes red-rimmed, she didn't speak for almost aminute.

'I forgot to tell you,' she said, voice flat. 'Jasmine was themost beautiful child in the world.'

Uncertain cause

Vancouver police continue to investigate the accident.

Tamara Cashdollar, 30, was driving south in the 3400 block of PStreet, toward her nearby home, when for undetermined reasons hersport-utility vehicle swerved and struck the two children. Two orthree other children on the roadside police aren't yet certain ofthe number were uninjured.

Some witnesses say Jasmine and Tyson were riding together on asingle bike. Others say Jasmine was on the bike, and Tyson waswalking behind.

Police say Cashdollar is in shock after the accident and hasn'tbeen able to provide a detailed account. They plan to interview heragain, perhaps next week.

Cashdollar and her 5-year-old son were treated for minor injuriesafter the accident. Her phone has been disconnected, and no oneappeared to be at home this week at the Cashdollar residence.

'Drive safely'

Half a mile from Evergreen Staples Funeral Chapel, where PamWarren sat vigil Wednesday evening beside her children's coffins,there is another roadside memorial, visible to all who pass.

There, at St. James and Arnold roads, an elaborate tribute forJosh D. Raley stands as a reminder of enduring love and grief.Raley, 14, died after the car in which he was riding struck a treeon July 3, 1999, at that corner.

More than two years later, shiny red hearts, Christmas ornamentsand other decorations mark the passing of holidays.

A headstone bears the words 'Live, love and laugh in memory ofJoshua Devin Raley.'

Other words are carved into another stone: 'If tears could builda stairway and memories a lane, I'd walk right up to heaven andbring you home again.'

Beyond that, a sign stands at the roadside: 'Drive safely inmemory of Josh D. Raley.'

And now in memory of Tyson and Jasmine, too.

Donations needed:

пятница, 21 сентября 2012 г.

KIDS' EXPRESSIONS - Volta Voices

Melissa Mark

Melissa Mark, 8, will be entering the third grade at the Underwood Elementary School in Newton, Mass., this fall. Melissa has a severe to profound hearing loss. Melissa has learned to speak and listen with the help of her digital hearing aids. As she described in her second grade essay, Melissa enjoys many activities and has not let her hearing loss deter her.

My name is Melissa Haley Mark. I was born on April 9, 1997. I was a happy baby. I liked to play games with my mom and dad. I was a good sleeper. I loved my dog Jasper. I like to watch my two brothers, Ian and Zachary, play.

I live with my mom, dad, two brothers and my baby sister, Allison. My pets are my dog, Winston, and my cat Zelda. I like going to school. I am in second grade and I love writing.

My favorite activity is drawing. My favorite sports are soccer, basketball and football. My heroes are lan and Zachary, mom and dad, and Sarah because I love them and they are my family.

Brianne Oricchio

My name is Brianne Oricchio, and I am 10 years old. I wrote a poem called 'Sparkplug' about my brother T.J.

T.J. is my little bro

In hockey he is a skating pro

On the ice, he is never scared

He is special because he is hearing impaired

T.J. is extremely athletic

He says shopping at the mall is quite pathetic

When he is eating we call him 'The Great White,'

Watch out for your fingers, he may bite!

T.J. wears his FM at school,

All the other kids think it is cool,

His sister helps him if he has trouble,

She is always there, on the double.

Mom and Dad have helped him grow,

They've taught him what he ought to know,

T.J. is very bright,

I love my brother with all my might!

Do you have a poem, short story or piece of artwork that you would like to submit to Kids' Expressions?

Please e-mail editor@agbell.org.

четверг, 20 сентября 2012 г.

POET LAUREATE

LAKE FOREST -- He was in the 'dumb' class in eighth grade.Unathletic, unpopular, told by family that he'd never amount to anything, Robert Pinsky was a guy Long Branch, N.J., chalked-up as forgettable.

But Pinsky had a secret: Words.

He loved words.

The way they sounded in his head.

The way they sounded in his throat and through his lips.

As long as he could remember, he said, he thought about the sounds of words and phrases.

He loved language so much, in fact, that language loved him back.

Today, the nation's 39th Poet Laureate does what he loves to do and is paid handsomely -- in notoriety and money -- to do it.

When he's not teaching graduate writing at Boston University, Pinsky is talking up the joy of verse, working at increasing public awareness of poetry, from stuffy $500-a-plate fund-raisers to schools and prisons.

Pinsky, 57, was at Lake Forest College Monday, doing what poet laureates earn $35,000 a year doing.

He read from his works, talked about being a poet and, in general, captivated an auditorium full of both old and young admirers -- a few who were probably told by their creative writing teachers to show up or else.

Though Pinsky looks the part of the dark, brooding poet -- one can envision him scribbling down his angst with a quill by firelight in some lonely room -- he's really a '90s and beyond guy who creates poetry while driving in the car or writes on a computer in the hubbub of his own kitchen.

Pinsky said he loves poetry because, like computers, it's fast.

He has said that computers and poetry have two things in common: Speed and memory.

Pinsky's love for computers started in 1984 when a software company employed him to design a video game.

He's worked to increase the availability of poetry on the Internet and is editor of the Internet poetry magazine, Slate.

Pinsky, who has called poetry 'technology that uses the human body,' said he has a shopkeeper's mentality about writing.

'I write to make something, not to reflect,' he said.

'Like a carpenter banging nails into wood, I'm trying to make something.'

Most recently, Pinsky penned a best-selling translation of Dante's Inferno. He has also published five books of poetry and three books of prose.

Pinsky had some advice for teaching poetry in schools: 'It's very important that teachers teach something they love.' Poetry, said Pinsky, begins with love and attachment.

He said teachers should read aloud with conviction, that pleasure in the sounds of poetry should be stressed.

And he said teachers should encourage students to write personal anthologies, 15 or 20 pages 'written out by their hand, of language that the student lives.'

Pinsky said that even if a kid doesn't like to read, he or she may listen to rap music, or zone in on a certain TV sitcom because he likes the words.

'There's no such thing as someone completely cold to language,' he said. 'Even non-readers are attuned to the sounds of words.'

Poetry appears to be growing in popularity among average folk in this country, which Pinsky said is because Americans crave a more personal form of expression.

While American pop music, feature films, sports, casual clothing and TV are popular around the world, Pinsky said those creations rely on a centralized, elite group of experts who create on a mass scale. That impersonality leaves an appetite or a void that poetry can fill.

Pinsky is planning something personal during his two-year stretch as laureate.

Called the Favorite Poem Project, he's just begun a videotape archive which will eventually include as many as 1,000 Americans, both famous and regular folk, reading poems aloud, followed by comment on why they love the poem they chose.

He's already talked to first lady Hillary Clinton, who has agreed to participate.

He is also planning to stage mass poetry readings in major cities, including New York, Los Angeles, St. Louis and, hopefully, Chicago, he said.

Pinsky's ideas for verse come from everything and everywhere.

'Almost anything, if you look at it hard enough, has an imaginative density,' he said, eyeballing a nearby shoe.

'The world stinks of humanity. Everything's waiting to be written about.' 'There's no such thing as someone completely cold to language.

Even non-readers are attuned to the sounds of words.'

Robert Pinsky, poet laureate

Kids take AIDS victim to hearts - Chicago Sun-Times

Oh, Ryan, we will cheer.

We would like to welcome you

here.

We feel sorry for your fight,

But for every day that you are

here,

We can see a little light.

For with you, our faith grows

strong,

To see a human carry on. - 'Ryan's Poem,' by a Hamilton Heights High School student, Arcadia, Ind.

CICERO, Ind. Classmates buy him cola and chips, bake himchocolate chip cookies, walk him to classes and ask him to ballgamesand dances. Art students draw sketches for him. Others write poems.

They all help him remember to take his medicine.

The center of all this attention is Ryan White, the pluckyteenager who became a nationally known outcast at age 13 because hehad AIDS. Now 15 and living in a new town, Ryan says these are thebest days of his life.

'Everything's going pretty good,' he said. 'I'm feeling prettyhealthy. I've got a nice house and a good family.'

Positive words from a boy who has known he was terminally illsince December, 1984, when doctors told him he had acquired AIDSthrough a blood-clotting agent used to treat his hemophilia.

He lived in Kokomo then. For the next 2 1/2 years, he hadalmost no friends. He felt unwelcome in many places. He was barredfrom swimming in some town pools; when he entered a restaurant,people walked out. Cruelest of all, Western Middle School barred himfrom corridors and classrooms.

His mother, Jeanne White, won a court order to force the schoolto accept Ryan, but she couldn't remove the hostility and bitterness.When Ryan walked down the hall, some kids threw themselves againsttheir lockers in exaggerated escape. 'Watch out! Watch out!' they'dtaunt.

'I just turned the other cheek,' Ryan said. 'They just didn'twant anything to do with me at all.'

He retreated into watching television and playing with militarytoys. He badly wanted out of Kokomo.

His wish was met last May when his mother moved with him and hissister, 13-year-old Andrea, to Cicero, 25 miles to the south. Shecombined a loan with an advance from a company developing a TV movieabout Ryan to put a down payment on a three-bedroom house bordered bywoods and a lake.

Sitting at the kitchen bay window, Ryan can look out into thetrees and watch chipmunks and squirrels. In warm weather, he sits inthe patio swing and watches boats on the lake.

Classmates drive him to his new school, Hamilton Heights, inneighboring Arcadia, where he attends half-days because he tireseasily.

Tony Cook, his principal, said Ryan is doing well in the ninthgrade, taking business data processing, algebra, English and biology.His grades at midterm were mostly Bs, and the lowest was a C.

'Arcadia is so much nicer than Western,' Ryan said. 'I didn'thave any friends at all. Out here, I just have hundreds.'

One is Jill Stewart, a 17-year-old senior who is president ofthe student body and sometimes drives Ryan to school. She said the650 students at Hamilton Heights prepared for Ryan's arrival withspecial classes on acquired immune deficiency syndrome that helpedthem better understand the disease.

'I think we all have the human compassion that we should treat ahuman like a human,' she said. 'When he came, no one was planning ontreating him badly. Everyone was a little afraid deep down inside,but then we really started thinking about it. We just wanted to benormal.'

'A lot of us just feel for him in our hearts because of whathe's been through,' said Wendy Baker, a 16-year-old junior. 'We don'twant him to have to go through that again and we're trying to make iteasier on him.'

The invitations to dances and games are all new to Ryan, whotends to shrug them off. 'I'm not much into going to games andstuff,' he said. 'I'm not much on dances either. I keep to myselfmost of the time. I like watching TV a lot. That's about all I do.'

Mrs. White said Ryan doesn't know how to act in socialgatherings because they've been so rare. 'He's been out of contact ofgrowing up from 13 to now, of being around kids his own age,' shesaid. 'Because of his hemophilia, he's not been active in sports.He's just been out of contact with life.'

Ryan has been sick for much of the last three years with avariety of illnesses, including pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, coldsand respiratory and liver problems. In his last year in Kokomo, hewas tutored at home for all but about three months because of theliver problems.

Ryan, whose frail frame has never carried more than 76 pounds,now weighs 72 pounds and has a chronic cough. Most recently he's hadtrouble staying warm and keeping food down. His mother thinks AZT,an experimental drug, increases his appetite and he eats too much,upsetting his stomach.

Mrs. White continues to work in the inventory division of DelcoElectronics Corp. in Kokomo, earning $12.70 an hour. The Ryan WhiteFoundation in Kokomo helps pay medical expenses not covered byinsurance and for Ryan's living expenses when his mother must takeoff work to care for him.

Despite the setbacks and sadness, Mrs. White and Ryan do notfeel sorry for themselves or talk of what might have been.

As painful as Kokomo's rejection was, Ryan enjoyed his half adozen trips to New York for network television appearances and AIDSbenefits. The walls of his house are lined with photographs ofcelebrities who appeared with him, including Elizabeth Taylor andElton John.

Ryan spent a week in September in Los Angeles as a guest ofAthletes for Kids, a nonprofit foundation for ill children, where hehelped mark establishment of the Ryan White National Fund to providefinancial aid to children with AIDS.

Opinion by Ernesto Portillo Jr.: Urban League's poet hopes kids will seek to walk in his footsteps - AZ Daily Star

The loud rumbling of traffic passing the Urban League Academy onSouth Park Avenue couldn't drown out George Rushing's voice. In acadence part preacher and part football coach, Rushing's poetryspilled out across the school's crowded courtyard.

'Man ... don't ask me for nothing that you ain't willing to give/Cause you see the pain you caused me, made me not want to live/Youleft us here to suffer & through a life full of trials/Me and Mamawalk barefoot through rocks and broken glass ... For what felt likemiles.'

Rushing's poem reflects his fractured feelings about his father,who wasn't around as Rushing grew up in Liberty City, a toughneighborhood in Miami, Fla.

The students listening to Rushing's rhythmic voice could hear thesame, hard steps they're taking today.

Rushing, 33, is the education director for the Tucson UrbanLeague. The educator-poet-role model tells students they too canovercome life's obstacles and there are people willing to help them.

'Our success works if we believe that we're the sum ofeverybody,' said Rushing, who works with many students from stressed-out homes and neighborhoods.

My colleague, transportation reporter Tim Ellis, and I went tothe charter school earlier this week to participate in the academy'sThird Annual African-American Read-In. The poetry of LangstonHughes, Maya Angelou and Tupac Shakur was read. Some students readtheir own poetry - composed on the spot.

Rushing read his unpublished creations, which he uses to teach orcounsel students.

The words are healing and inspiring. They express anger and hope.They express the students' reality, which was once his.

'I've been where they've been,' said Rushing, a big man with asoft, measured voice.

He was a troubled kid. His mother worked two or three jobs whilegoing to school.

In high school, his football coach began to set him straight. Hereceived a football scholarship to the University of Florida, but aninjury forced him to leave big-time college sports.

Rushing returned to Miami and enrolled in a small, black college.There, he met Annie Ruth Brown, a teacher who turned him on toreading, language and poetry.

He wrote his first poem, 'A Mile In My Shoes,' in her class.

Rushing graduated and joined the military to pay for his graduatestudies. He came to Tucson in 2002 and enrolled at the University ofArizona, where he earned a master's degree in education. Currentlyhe is a doctoral candidate.

Before joining the Urban League last year, Rushing worked for theTucson Unified School District in its African-American studiesdepartment.

Rushing's commitment and passion for education is genuine and isnot lost on students, said Kelly Langford, TUSD's Student Servicesdirector.

'He sees those kids have a capacity to be productive,' saidLangford, who worked with Rushing at TUSD.

In addition to teaching, Rushing preaches at a small South Tucsoncongregation, the Way Church International at East 37th Street andSouth Sixth Avenue.

Whether in church or the classroom, Rushing's message remains thesame.

'The kids just want to be loved,' he said.

'So maybe you'd see how/How bad it feels when raining days neverseem to end/How bad it hurts when a broken heart can't seem to mend/What it's like to birthed into a life sin ... and have no earthlydirection/No spiritual covering to provide protection ...'

среда, 19 сентября 2012 г.

MOTHERHOOD GIVES BIRTH TO BUSINESS LOUISVILLE FIRM BLOSSOMS INTO $2 MILLION ENTERPRISE PRODUCING AVA KIDS DUDS.(Business) - Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)

Byline: Michele Conklin Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer

Some parents pen poems or paint pictures after having a baby.

Lauren Goldberg sewed baby clothes.

That spurt of creativity has since grown into a $2 million children's clothing manufacturing and retailing business. Fittingly, the Louisville-based company is named after the child who inspired the venture - Ava Kids.

``With my other children, I learned how to sew for kids but not enough to do designs,'' Goldberg said. ``With Ava, I knew immediately what to do and I started making her clothes. My friends wanted to know where I got them and it snowballed.''

The snowball rolled quickly. This weekend, Ava Kids - which recently decided to sell its clothing only at its own stores - will open its fourth Denver-area store at 2510 S. Colorado Blvd. The company is close to signing a deal to open its fifth local store this fall in the new Park Meadows mall.

Ava's clothing popularity stems largely from its fabrics and styling. All of the clothes are 100% cotton - a feature that was unique when the company started in 1986. The fabrics typically sport prints that are more common to junior clothing.

Prices are moderate (a jumper sells for $16.95) and the pieces mix and match within groupings. Most importantly, the pieces are functional. A baby jumper, for instance, features a zipper down the inside seams to allow for easy diaper changing.

``A priority for me is that the clothing work well,'' said Goldberg, the creator of the clothing, who leaves the business side of the company to her husband and business partner, Hershel.

``It has to fit the baby or the child comfortably because that makes them happier. And it has to be practical. Then I have fun making it cute. I try to have a sense of humor while achieving the other goals.''

Ava Kids stopped selling to other stores after its fall line. Wholesaling was getting too cumbersome and it put too much distance between the company and its customers, the Goldbergs said.

``Wholesale is a very tough game,'' said Hershel Goldberg. ``We realized we knew what the retailers wanted and what the reps wanted, but we didn't know what our customers wanted anymore. Our strength is getting goods into the hands of moms.''

An increasing number of children's clothing manufacturers are opening their own stores, said Jim Girone, editor of Earnshaw's, a trade publication that covers the apparel industry.

Children's clothing ranks third in sales behind women's and men's apparel, so retailers often don't give enough attention to this segment to please manufacturers. As retailers consolidate, manufacturers are finding fewer places to sell their products.

``Venues for wholesellers to sell goods are thinner because of consolidation,'' Girone said. ``As retail consolidates, it's forcing manufacturers to rethink the way they're doing business.''

Children's clothing rings up about $23 billion a year in sales in the United States. Like all apparel, it has slumped in recent years, barely keeping pace with inflation.

National manufacturers and retailers - such as Osh Kosh, GapKids and Gymboree - along with discount retailers, such as Wal-Mart and Target, dominate the industry. But the market is always ready to support a new idea, Girone said.

Ava Kids competes with stores such as GapKids, but the Goldbergs also see their products as complementary. Parents who buy Gap Kids and Gymboree clothing will most likely buy Ava Kids as well, they say.

``We're all different but compete for the same shopper,'' said Hershel Goldberg. ``Gymboree specializes in primary colors. Gap is basics and denim. Our niche is sophisticated fabrics mixed in fun ways.''

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Kids ages 6 and older can learn to play chess.(Neighbor) - Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL)

Events specifically for children or teens as well as those for the whole family, including park and library programs, family-friendly performances, and holiday events. Deadline is two weeks before event date.

Chess and Cookies: 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 12, Antioch Public Library District, 757 N. Main St., Antioch. For ages 6 and older; all levels of experience welcome. To sign up, call (847) 395-0874 or visit apld.info.

Star Party: 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 13, Lake Villa District Library, 1001 E. Grand Ave., Lake Villa. Members from the Lake County Astronomical Society will be on hand with telescopes to view the nighttime sky. For all ages. No registration is necessary. Call (847) 356-7711 or visit lvdl.org.

Tween Yoga: 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 13, Cook Park Library, 413 N. Milwaukee Ave., Libertyville. Kids in grades 4-6 can come and stretch their worries away with relaxing yoga. No registration required. Call (847) 362-2330 or visit cooklib.org.

Jane Yolen storytime: 6 p.m. Thursday, April 14, Round Lake Area Public Library, 906 Hart Road, Round Lake. Storytime and book raffle for ages 4-7. For details, call (847) 546-7060 or visit rlalibrary.org.

Kids' Picks Advisory Committee: 4:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14, Ela Area Public Library, 275 Mohawk Trail, Lake Zurich. Students in grades 3 and 4 are invited to come for snacks and to discuss some of the books the library is considering for next year's Kids' Picks list. Free, but registration is required. Call (847) 438-3840.

Bedtime Story: 6:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14, Grayslake Area Public Library, 100 Library Lane, Grayslake. Children of all ages can wear their pajamas and bring a stuffed animal for a half-hour of bedtime stories, songs and crafts. For details or to register, call (847) 223-5313 or visit grayslake.info.

Teen Action Group: 4-5 p.m. Thursday, April 14, Wauconda Area Public Library, 801 N. Main St., Wauconda. Teens can share their ideas for programs, crafts or books the library should own. Free, but registration is required. Call (847) 526-6225 or visit wauclib.org.

Mystery of the Missing Manuscript: 5 p.m. Friday, April 15, Antioch Public Library District, 757 N. Main St., Antioch. A book of poems has been stolen and the thief wants a ransom for its return. Youth ages 12-19 can try their detection skills in this after-hours program. A pizza party will follow. Registration is required. Call (847) 395-0874 or visit apld.info.

Sketchbook Teen Drawing Club: 4-5:30 p.m. Friday, April 15, Wauconda Area Public Library, 801 N. Main St., Wauconda. Teens of all ability levels can develop their creative flair with an art instructor on hand to answer questions and offer tips. Bring own supplies or use the library's. There is no charge for this program, but registration is required. Call (847) 526-6225 or visit wauclib.org.

Teen/Tween Just Dance 2 Tournament: 2:30 p.m. Saturday, April 16, Antioch Public Library District, 757 N. Main St., Antioch. A teens vs. 'tweens' video game dance off. Registration is required. Call (847) 395-0874 or visit apld.info.

Hoppin' Holiday Hunt: 9-11 a.m. Saturday, April 16, Sullivan Community Center, 635 N. Aspen Drive, Vernon Hills. Children ages 3-8 and their parents will visit with the Bunny, see a magic show, have a continental breakfast and gather prizes at the egg hunt. The fee for Vernon Hills residents is $7 for adult, $5 for children; $9 for adults, $6 for children for nonresidents; free for kids ages 1 and younger. Registration is required. Visit vhparkdistrict.org.

Gaming Club: 1 p.m. Saturday, April 16, Round Lake Area Public Library, 906 Hart Road, Round Lake. Teens can play video games, board games and other console games brought in by members. For details, contact Israel Mateos at (847) 546-7060, ext. 114, or imateos@rlalibrary.org.

Create Your Own Story: 1 p.m. Saturday, April 16, Lake Villa District Library, 1001 E. Grand Ave., Lake Villa. Part of the library's 'The Write Stuff' series of creative writing workshops for kids in grades 3-6. To register, call (847) 356-7711 or visit lvdl.org.

A holiday shopping guide just for kids. (Originated from Orange County Register) - Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service

    Cool toy commercials fill the airwaves and weird Christmas trees play Jingle Bells in stores. It must be that time of year. Then it dawns on you that the piggy bank is kind of empty. And you're blanking out big-time on what to buy. Well, we say chill. If you're between 8 and 14, weve got some tips to make holiday shopping an easy scene. After all, who wants to be like grownups who just lose it this time of year? Relax, read on, and happy shopping.     _First, just because everyone else gets stressed out, you don't have to. ``Have fun with shopping,'' says Kristine Jablonski, a mother of three, and a psychiatric nurse therapist in Placentia. She helps people deal with stress.     ``The whole idea of the holidays is to connect with people we love,'' she says. ``That's what the real spirit is about.''     _Make a list _ that's one way to feel in control. Who are you giving gifts to? Write down their names. Think about what they'd like. What does that person like to do? Does he or she have hobbies? Collect certain things?     _Ask them for suggestions. Your parents probably have loads of ideas about what you can give them.     _Next, look at advertisements or ask your parents how much things will cost. Before you buy, ``it might be a good idea to look first,'' says Janet Bodnar, who just wrote a book called ``Kiplinger's Money-Smart Kids (And Parents, Too!)''     ``Otherwise, you might overspend and all of a sudden realize you don't have enough money,'' says Bodnar, who writes a newspaper column called ``Dr. Tightwad,'' where she answers questions from parents about kids and money. She has three kids.     _Count your money. You can ask your folks for some, but you know what? Money experts say you'll feel better if you spend your own.     Paul Richard is vice president of the National Center for Financial Education in San Diego, which publishes lots of books for parents about money and kids.     He recommends you don't spend all your money, just in case. Also, he says, ``start looking early for bargains.''     If you wait until a few days before Hanukkah or Christmas, you might not find real great prices. Or, lots of stuff might already be sold out.     By now you're ready to hit the stores. Where do you start? If you don't have a lot of money, try discount stores, the dollar-only stores in malls, ``off-price'' stores such as T.J. Maxx, Ross and Mashalls, even grocery stores and drug stores _ where sometimes you can find great little items. For variety, go with your parents or friends to the mall.     ``Compare and contrast. Don't settle for the first thing you see,'' says Robert Lipsett, who works with elementary school kids as a speech pathologist in Southern California.     Carry your money in your wallet, a pocket or other safe place where it won't get lost, says Katie Murphy, who manages a Sesame Street General Store in South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa, Calif. She helps lots of kids make purchases.     ``And make sure to get your change back. Pay close attention,'' she says.     Don't be afraid to ask people who work in stores for help. That's what they get paid for. If you cant find a price or the item you want, or if you want ideas in your price range, ask! And find out if the store has free gift boxes.     What if you're broke?     There you are, turning your pockets inside-out, sad look on your face. Broke city. No bucks. Bummer.     So who says you have to buy gifts? You probably don't believe it, but parents really do like things you make. They'll keep them for years.     Think about some school project youre working on. Could that be a gift? Or hunt through your closet or desk. Betcha have some stuff there you could turn into cool gifts. What about writing a poem, letter or story? Or look for library books on crafts. ``Highlights for Children'' magazine always has a section called ``You Can Make It!''     ``People appreciate a gift made by hand, because they know you put your time and effort into it,'' the December issue of Highlights says.     You might get together with your friends and make stuff _ sometimes, you get more creative when you're with other people.     You also can give a gift of service, especially to someone such as a grandparent.     If youre really set on buying something, offer to do chores to make some extra money. No doubt your folks can find something for you to do.     WHAT TO GET WHOM     MOMS: Jewelry, such as pins or earrings; makeup, such as nail polish; candy; books, such as the little ones full of sayings usually found by the cash register; flowers or plants; fragrances; coffee or tea.     DADS: Books, socks, cologne, stuff for their cars, tapes and compact discs, golf balls or items for a sport they play.     BROTHERS and SISTERS: Toys, games, books, tapes, hair accessories, their favorite candy.     GRANDMAS and GRANDPAS: Stationery, books, a school picture of you in a frame, plants or flowers, candles, a game you could play with them.     FRIENDS: Things that fit their interests, or things you like that youre sure they'd like.     TEACHERS: Items that mention teachers,such as magnets, mugs, pins. Or find out a teachers hobby and give something that could be used for that.     COOL TIPS FOR THE HOLIDAYS     1. IT'S LIST TIME! Get organized! Take a couple of moments to write things down. Your job will be easier.     2. GET A MOVE ON IT! Don't wait. Stores get more crowded, and they run out of items the closer it gets to Christmas.     3. SNOOP, SNOOP, SNOOP. Be a detective. Ask people what they want. Figure out their likes and dislikes.     4. ASK FOR HELP. Have Mom help you with Dad's gift, or vice-versa. See if your brother or sister will split the cost of a gift .     5. WRAP, WRAP, WRAP IT UP. If you dont have money for wrap ... use comics from the newspaper, or tie a bow around a paper bag.     6. NO PEEKING! See if you can stash your presents at a friends house so a nosy brother or sister doesnt find them.     7. LIKE, AT THE MALL. If you go with your parents, ask if you can meet them somewhere in half an hour, so you can shop.     8. 'TIS THE SEASON. Don't worry about whos giving you what. Just give _ a gift, a card, a smile, or just some of your time.

St. Paul's first Kids' Link hot off press - Post-Tribune (IN)

THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM PRINTED VERSION

Students at St. Paul Catholic School in Valparaiso have published their first 2005 color issue of Kids' Link, a mini-magazine, under the guidance of school parents Dee Gruszka and Alice Meyer.Fourth-grader Jack Sommer interviewed Valparaiso Police Chief Michael Brickner at his office. Brickner said he loves his job because he 'works with good people.'

Seventh-graders published fiction pieces. Joe Kaminski's 'Ruby Madness,' Peter Nicksic's 'The Barbie Attack' and Katie Sommer's 'Zap!' provide fun reading.

Second-grader Marisa Negrelli-German is the designated joke collector for the kids' magazine. At any time of day, Marisa can be seen stopping students and asking them to tell her a joke, as she researches new material.

Kids' Link is also peppered with a variety of jokes from other writers.

Second-grader Marie Wirsing, the travel reporter for the publication, wrote about her recent family trip to Paris.

Cartoonist and fourth-grader Laura Gruszka created a witty Valentine dilemma, and Stephanie Krol, also a fourth-grader, listed the Top 10 Web sites for kids.

Fourth-grader Natalie Wirsing wrote about pandas.

Avid reader and book reviewer Hannah Scupham, grade 8, established a five-star rating system for books and named her recommendations in her 'Great Teen Reads.'

Ana Nicksic, grade 5, wrote about Mission Week at SPCS and asked her classmates, Sara and Carrie Clark, what they learned about Peru during the school project.

Second-graders Mary Cobble, Jennifer Gough, Erin Thomas and Emma Mazurek also contributed to the piece. Cobble wrote 'School Families;' Gough created a word search. Thomas wrote about her favorite pet, and Mazurek wrote about her love of tae kwon do.

Sports also are a big part of the Kids' Link. Mary Bobos, grade 4, wrote 'Competitive Gymnastics,' informing readers about the successes of SPCS students in the Horizon Gymnastics program.

Fifth-grader Sara Clark wrote about the fifth-grade boys' CYO victory, and third-grader Mikaela Meyer authored 'Steelhead Basketball.'

Seventh-grader Joey Funk and third-graders Theresa Kay and Daniel Azar reviewed movies. Seventh-graders T.J. Horn and Joe Kaminski and Paul Sanoyavich, a mysterious pen name for an anonymous student, critiqued video games.

Madeline Buynak, grade 3, and Kaitie Bragg, grade 5, created crossword puzzles.

Livy Crim, grade 2, submitted her poem called 'Flowers,' and Elisabeth Parroquin and Brittany Sabol, grade 4, published their artwork entitled 'A Study in Contrasts: Country Life versus City Life.'

Sierra Cole, Carrie Clark, Gabby Healy, Ryan Thomas, Alex Rastovski and Nina Diana Hartman interviewed teachers.

James Kaminski shared his insights about fun things to do in the winter in his piece, 'Snow Much Fun.'

With spring around the corner, the SPCS community looks forward to the next amazing issue of Kids' Link.

KIDS + AILEY + CAL PERFORMANCES = MAGIC. - States News Service

BERKELEY, Calif. -- The following information was released by the University of California - Berkeley:

By Amy Cranch

In a vast changing room for Zellerbach Hall, all is empty and still, except for a handful of volunteers whispering in pairs. Children's costumes are strewn chaotically across the floor, and occasional cheers waft in from the auditorium. A young girl runs in, distress in her eyes and sweat cutting paths through the rosy blush on her cheeks. She has just stumbled during a West African dance number, but has gotten right back up and stepped up her technique and stage presence as the piece progressed. Her teacher catches her shoulders, looks proudly into her eyes, and says, 'You're a dancer now.'

The girl is a member of the 2012 Berkeley/Oakland AileyCamp at Cal Performances - an arts education program for underserved youth that was conceived by legendary 20th century dancer and choreographer Alvin Ailey and is produced and managed by Cal Performances. The date is Aug. 2, and the occasion is the culminating performance for nearly 1,700 family members, friends and fans of the camp's 51 participants. And that moment epitomizes what I think the camp is all about - not to train professional dancers, but to empower kids to discover who they are, even when they fall.

As a dance and theater artist, usher at Cal Performances and UC Berkeley staff editor, I had wanted to volunteer with AileyCamp for years. What a privilege it was, then, to finally help out however I could - gluing shells onto costumes, doing hair and makeup before the finale, picking up pizza. While I was part of the 'Ailey family' for only three days, I can say with certainty that the camp is nothing short of transformational.

In its 11th season at Berkeley - the only West Coast site among 10 nationwide - the free six-week camp brings 11- to 14-year-olds from Richmond, Berkeley, and Oakland to the UC Berkeley campus daily. Cal Performances manages the program, which provides the children with transportation, dance clothing, food and field trips, in addition to rigorous dance training and opportunities for personal development. Many of the campers have never taken a dance class because they lack either the means or the opportunity. But they are not chosen for their technical abilities; they are selected for their interest and enthusiasm.

While the campers may not go on to pursue an artistic career, the skills

they learn apply far beyond the dance floor. Coordination could improve a girl's performance on the soccer field. Learning how to listen and focus could help a boy get better grades. Working together with respect and kindness instills the value of teamwork. Being encouraged to express anger in a healthy way, to write a poem about what they believe in or to take responsibility for misbehavior teaches them that their feelings, thoughts and actions matter. Such life skills are critical at an age when questions such as 'Who am I?' and 'Where do I fit in?' loom large, especially for kids who face tough challenges in their homes, neighborhoods and schools.

At the final dress rehearsal in Cal Performances' primary performing arts venue, I witnessed the results of an affirmation that the campers repeated daily: 'I will not use the word 'can't' to define my possibilities.' The children performed excerpts inspired by the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater's actual repertoire, including Night Creature, a tribute to jazz music, and Revelations, the company's most famous piece, set to the black spirituals of Ailey's Texas upbringing. The kids aced these technically precise pieces, bringing me to tears as I realized how powerful it was that they were carrying on Ailey's vision and legacy.

They also performed original works that celebrated aspects of the African American experience - hip-hop culture, the infectious exuberance of West African dance and music, heroes such as Barack Obama or Nina Simone - or brought into raw focus some of the community's gravest concerns - racism, violence, murder. In one piece, the young dancers wore gray hoodies in honor of Trayvon Martin, a teen killed last February in Florida by a self-appointed neighborhood watchman. Some movements mimicked the action of being shot and falling to the ground; others evoked prison bars, as the kids scooted on their backs with footstools turned upside down on their chests. Inquiring how the teachers decided on such intense material, I learned that the youngsters help choose their subjects. They are active participants in the creative process, responding to what is most authentic and meaningful to them.

As demanding as camp is, the kids do know how to have fun. I escorted about 10 girls to the campus's Recreational Sports Facility to shower before the show. As a comparatively privileged, 40-something stranger, I felt awkward watching over them in such a self-conscious state. But as they played favorite songs on their phones in the dressing room, I started humming along and bobbing to the beat. When I told them I was a dancer, they begged me to show them some moves, but I asked them to teach me something instead. Not only did I sufficiently fake my way through the Gas Pedal, a popular hip-hop dance, my noble efforts had them laughing hysterically, proving to them that even outsiders care enough to try to connect.

Fifteen minutes before curtain time, the teachers rallied the campers for one final check-in. Smile, they said. Breathe. Take your time. Be your best. Be proud. Derrick Minter, the modern dance teacher, said he remembered Ailey's fascination with the elegance of dancers, the way they carried themselves both on and off stage. There's no doubt that what the campers lack in terms of life experience or the refined grace of a professional, they make up for with their courage, determination, ability to grow and sense of what is possible. Elegant creatures indeed.

Kids' magazine promotes a kinder Islam - Winnipeg Free Press

Winnipeg mom created the glossy publication

While Canadians ponder the arrest of so-called homegrown terror suspects, a mom in Linden Woods is publishing a kids' magazine promoting a kinder, gentler version of Islam.

'It's a labour of love,' says Rawia Azzahrawi, who has a master's degree in Arabic language and literature and three children aged 14, seven and five. 'We needed it... I scanned the Internet to subscribe to a magazine for my kids.'

Traditionally, print materials for kids about Islamic history and Arabic language instruction have been dry and 'boring,' she says. There was nothing appealing, or presented in a 'fun and attractive' format, so she decided to create something that was.

Her glossy, 16-page magazine, Sindibad, has puzzles and games, interviews with kids, features on Islamic history, nature and science and explores different cultures around the world. It costs $4 and is written in English. In the first edition, there is a primer on Welsh words and Arabic phrases, and a poem called Peace Begins with You. Her goal was to allow the new Muslim generation to be 'a positive part of this world and serve their community and other communities in a positive way by building the bridges between each other.'

Sindibad is the only English print magazine of its kind being distributed across North America, she said. Azzahrawi named and modelled the magazine after a cartoon character called Sindibad from her childhood in Kuwait. Sindibad was an adventurer who travelled the world, meeting people and learning things.

The magazine has a Jordanian designer, an Egyptian illustrator, Canadian contributors and is printed in Winnipeg.

'Muslim kids need to be a part of North America,' said the editor-in-chief, who's lived in North America for 15 years. The Arabic language instructor who has taught in Buffalo, N.Y. and Regina before coming to Winnipeg said she's worked with school kids on newspapers, who enjoyed seeing their writing in print. They need to see themselves reflected back in the media, she said.

In the first copy of Sindibad that came out this summer, her son, Bara, 14, interviewed a young provincial chess master about his sport.

'We're starting to get into the media more,' said Bara. 'It's nice.'

There is still a place for print publications because a magazine is easier to carry around than a laptop, said Bara who is starting at St. Paul's High School this fall.

His mom is hoping the quarterly publication will attract more readers and eventually advertisers so it can expand to 24 pages as well as the Internet.

'I believe it's worth the money, time and effort.' Azzahrawi said her husband, a pathologist at the Health Sciences Centre, backed the start-up of the magazine. Copies have been sent to Islamic schools across North America and Indigo bookstores are carrying it as well.

'It's open for everybody,' she said.

'My goal is to introduce Islamic knowledge in a fun way.'