Joy is the Magic Word – For Everyone

This re-post is a letter to teachers.  It’s the foundation of connecting with children, and teaching, and making a difference.

Frankly, it is a life lesson.  It’s all about how we see things – our outlook and attitude.

Dear Teachers,

As you start your new school year there is one word that will get you through the uncertainty and the worry.  It’s the same word that is the heart of educating.  That word is ‘joy’.  No, it’s not the happiness that children bring.  It’s the happiness that you bring because it inspires and ignites the mind and the heart of children.  Yes, that’s how it works.

Children come to you with big eyes, looking at you to teach them.  They don’t know what to think.  They want to learn, yet what they really want is to be inspired to learn.  That is where you can make a difference.

What do you like?  Because whatever it is, from math to music, that ‘like’ will become your best buddy, your guiding star, and the foundation to teach all the things that you like.  It will also become a portal to help you teach the things you may not enjoy.  If you know that every day you have some window of time to teach what you love, then you become an educator.  You go beyond teaching curriculum; you teach the child.

Do you like reading?  Does Because of Winn-Dixie or Charlotte’s Web make your heart jump?  Well, carry that book around and read it aloud on the playground, in the lunchroom, or at the bus stop.  If this is your passion, children will know, and they will listen.  They will learn.

Do you like science?  Carry a tuning fork, magnet, magnifying glass or flashlight in your pocket.  Pick up interesting pieces of nature and explore them with children.  This is one of the fundamental constants for learning.  If you are grounded in nature and science, bring your curiosity and discovery to the classroom and the playground; then the world will open up for children.

Do you love music?  Sing your favorite songs, sing the words to a book, sing poetry, or just sing the words that you say.  If this is your passion children will know.  They’ll listen and learn.  Introduce children to the music you love.  I bring my record player and old albums into the classroom.  Some years they love Beethoven, other years the Beatles.  The point is, they will love the music because you do.

Do you love art?  Don’t be afraid to use real artist’s watercolors when introducing art.  Children enjoy learning about famous pieces of art, too.  If you treat a child like an artist and treat the work s/he creates like a masterpiece, the results are remarkable.  When a child has created something and is incredibly proud, ask the child to give the art a title and record that to the work of art.  This simple affirmation has done more for the confidence and character of children than most anything I have done.

You may only like one thing, but that alone will open the door to help you teach the rest.

We all know that the emotional and social pieces for children need to be ‘there’ before effective learning takes place.  Well, flip-flop that fact from the child to the teacher.  If you the teacher are not grounded in an emotional and social component of educating, then how in the world can you get your message across to children?  You have to share your love and passions.  That’s your joy.  In that way, you are sharing you.  And, all that children want to know is that you love them and love what you are teaching.  If they know that, the floodgates will open to learning.

Maya Angelou was right when she said, “…people will never forget how you made them feel”.  The children I have taught for decades often return to school to visit.  They can’t put a finger on what it was in my classroom, but they come back.  Joy is the magic word.

Jennie

P.S.  Life-101 is find your joy, live your joy.

Posted in behavior, Expressing words and feelings, Heart, Inspiration, joy, Love | Tagged , , , | 80 Comments

Two Important Books to Read on 9/11

This is a repost… because it is important.  These are two books everyone should read.  One is the true story of an old, retired fireboat that literally saved the day for firefighters on 9/11.  The other is a book about America and the flag… and so much more.

On this day, 9/11, we must remember the tragedy.  We must never forget the bravery of firefighters and police officers, and so many people who stopped their lives to do the right thing.  There are stories to help us remember.

One of the best is the true story of the John J. Harvey, a retired fireboat that came to the rescue on 9/11 and became a hero.

I was fortunate to see this original painting.
Pictures speak a thousand words. 

If you are a history buff, a lover of boats, or someone who wants to know a powerful, true 9/11 story, this is the book.  Really.

9/11 is a day to feel proud of America.  When tragedy strikes, we come together as people, communities, and a nation.  One of the best books about America brings to life our history, past and present, through the American flag.

Sew together,
So together

Books and stories are the keepers.  They hold the past, the present, and the future.

Jennie

Posted in America, American flag, Book Review, children's books, Expressing words and feelings, Giving, Giving thanks, history, literacy, patriotism, picture books | Tagged , , , , | 36 Comments

Best Picture Books This Summer

It’s not often I discover a terrific new picture book.
This summer I hit the jackpot.


The Yellow Bus, by Loren Long

Loren Long is a great author and illustrator.  His book, Otis, about a farm tractor and a cow is well known and one of my favorites.  This new book is nothing at all like I expected.  After reading the book, I had a strong sense of Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree and Virginia Lee Burton’s The Little House.  I told Loren Long on FB, and he immediately came back to me and said, “That’s exactly how I felt.  Those were the two books.”  Wow!

Penelope Rex, by Ryan Higgins

Ryan Higgins is well known for his hilarious Mother Bruce books.  His new character is Penelope.  She’s a T-Rex, yet she is just like everyone else.  This is the second book in the series, and it hits home with children.  Penelope has a new pet, a saber-toothed cat.  He’s a problem, a big problem.  Penelope has to be brave, and figure out how to control her pet.

The Little Red Chair, by Cathy Stefanec Ogren

This is a timeless book, deemed to become a classic.  Mia sees a red chair in a store window and knows it is the perfect chair for her.  The first page of the book reads:

The little red chair tightened its buttons, fluffed its tufts, and straightened its tiny brass wheels.  Squeakity-squeak!  Maybe today, thought the little red chair.

The chair goes through life with Mia, the seasons, and the ensuing years.  Throughout the story, the chair always has love and hope, and a squeakity-squeak.  The big move comes, and the chair…. well, you’ll have to read the story.

Lost. Found., by Marsha Diane Arnold

Wordless books are powerful.  When a book has only two words – Lost, Found – the power is intensified.  A stiff wind blows away bear’s scarf.  Lost.  Beaver finds it and wraps it into a cap.  Found.  The scarf gets caught on a tree branch.  Lost.  And so the story of the scarf goes from animal to animal, each discovering a different use for the scarf, yet always ending in Lost and Found.  When all the animals, together, find the lost scarf, their excitement tears the scarf into threads of yarn.  Another Lost.  Bear comes to the rescue.  The Found is both knitting the scarf back together and the Found of new friends.

Sea Dog BOATS, an Alphabet Book,
by Astrid Sheckels

For boat lovers and dog lovers, this is THE book for you.  Each letter in the alphabet depicts a boat, from Airboat to Zodiac.  The illustrations bring every boat to life, along with its dog driver.  Walter the sea dog is in the D boat, the Dory.  I learned about N a narrowboat, and Q a q-ship.  Can you guess what X is?  This is a wonderful book.  Boats and dogs make the alphabet come to life.

Jump for Joy, by Karen Gray Ruelle

Joy loved dogs.  She had always loved dogs and wanted a dog.  Big dogs, little dogs, it didn’t matter.  She’d know her dog when she saw him.  Jump loved kids.  He’d loved kids for as long as he could remember.  Jump wanted a kid, big kid, little kid, spotted kid, curly kid.  It didn’t matter.

That sets the stage for Joy and Jump going through the seasons making something from nature.  Joy made a dog out of flowers in the spring and called him Tulip.  Jump made a kid out of sand in the summer and called her Sandy.  Each structure, cleverly named, ends up ruined by the weather.  The following spring their first creative structures  begin to bloom, and the rest is history.

Jennie

Posted in Book Review, children's books, Imagination, Inspiration, literacy, picture books | Tagged , , , , , | 64 Comments

DogTown

I just finished reading one of the best books, DogTown, by Katherine Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko, and had to share my excitement.

It’s friendship, bravery, loss, humor, and heart.  Oh, is it ever heart.

“Your heart is a muscle,” I told Mouse at dinner that night.  “It grows stronger the more you use it.”

Chance is a dog in a shelter.  How he got there is complicated.  He has to make friends, learn how to live, and get along with the new electronic ‘robot dogs’.  Everyone who comes into the shelter seems to prefer them over real dogs.

When the Reading Buddies from school make their weekly visit, Chance is never picked.  Quinn, one of the kids, just can’t find the right dog or the right book – until he discovers Metal Head, one of the robot dogs.  Metal Head can read, and he reads aloud Green Eggs and Ham, which becomes life-changing for Quinn.

The shelter has many interesting dogs, with characters as big as life, and also a mouse.

When Metal Head is convinced he can find his family, he plans an escape with the help of Chance and Mouse.  Finding his family is truly life-altering, and plants seeds of doubt.  Chase and Mouse try to rally Metal Head.  It comes down to heart – which will grow stronger the more it is used.  So, does an electronic robot dog have a heart?

The arc of the story begins here.  Chance has quite a journey, physically and emotionally.  Can he try to find his home?  How will he get there?

It’s complicated.  It’s wonderful.  It’s emotionally packed in the best of ways, laced with humor and excitement.  It’s life’s ups and downs, and of course dogs.  It’s a beautifully written story.

Jennie

P.S. Picture book recommendations tomorrow.

Posted in Book Review, books, children's books, Dogs, Expressing words and feelings, Heart, Inspiration, literacy, Love, reading, robots, wonder | Tagged , , , , , , | 28 Comments

A Children’s Book in the Sky – Swimmy

And there it was,
flying high like a quiet beauty.
“Swimmy”
My beloved picture book.
The first book I read aloud to my preschoolers,
forty years ago.

Jennie

Posted in children's books, Imagination, Inspiration, Nature, picture books, wonder | Tagged , , | 56 Comments

READ

My two favorite READ posters
from Literary Hub @ lithub.com

Dolly Parton has done more
for putting books into the hands of children
than anyone.
Bless you, Dolly.
Look at the books she is reading!
Every Very Hungry Caterpillar Day
is a good day.
I’m filled with joy.

Yo-Yo Ma is reading Goodnight Moon.
It doesn’t get better than that.
I recite this book to children every day,
just before chapter reading.
It’s a ritual that brings children comfort and language.
Yo-Yo’s beloved cello gets to enjoy the book.

P.S. Stay tuned for my favorite new picture books I read this summer.

Jennie

Posted in books, children's books, Imagination, Inspiration, literacy, picture books, reading aloud | Tagged , , , , | 64 Comments

Winged Victory

The plants and flowers are thriving,
all but the little guy in the back,
spreading his ‘wings’ and trying to grow.


Winged Victory is growing a baby flower.

Winged Victory is the end of summer and summer camp,
watching children thrive and grow,
braving the big water slide.

Winged Victory is nailing the query letter,
with mega kudos from the picky editor,
and immediately knowing the book comps.
It is Harry the Dirty Dog and Guji Guji
riding The Polar Express.


Winged Victory Statue

“The most interesting thing in the world to me has always been a free, spontaneous expression of human nature – whether in a thought, a symphony, a poem, a painting, a statue, or an act of everyday life that shows the qualities of mind, heart, and soul which, in my opinion, are the indispensables in any work of art.”
          ~Letter by Dr. Albert C. Barnes to
         Leopold Stokowski, March 18, 1925~

Jennie

Posted in children's books, Expressing words and feelings, Inspiration, literacy, Nature, picture books, Quotes, Teaching young children, wonder | Tagged , , , | 68 Comments

The Carle, and More

I never tire of visiting the the Eric Carle Museum, because every visit has something new and exciting.  Yes, every visit.

I had no idea his favorite color was yellow.
No wonder he has created so many suns.

This is the first photo I have seen with
the Very Hungry Caterpillar
perched on Eric Carle’s shoulder.

I have read this over and over again.  It’s powerful.
I want to yell and jump up and down, because this is the fundamental way to introduce young children to art and literature.

When Eric Carle died, this was the cover of the New York Times Magazine.  No words needed, his shoes say it all.


One of my favorite authors, Astrid Sheckels, has written a new book.
It is always exciting to listen to an author present their book and having a meet & greet at the book signing.

Walter the sea dog from Astrid’s previous book, Sea Dog is part of this new and wonderful alphabet book, Sea Dog Boats.

Here I am, under an Eric Carle tree.  Lucky me!

Jennie

Posted in art, Book Review, Dogs, Eric Carle, Expressing words and feelings, Giving thanks, Inspiration, literacy, museums, picture books, The Arts | Tagged , , , | 70 Comments

40 Year Bookends

All in a day, I bumped into ‘bookends’, parents of a student in my first class forty years ago, and parents of a child this past year.

Michelle was one of my first students.  The local newspaper came to take photos when the new school opened.  1984.

There I am along with Michelle on the far right of the photo.

She never really left.  As the years went by she became my Summer Camp assistant counselor (we had so much fun), and we even accidentally wore the same clothing.

Michelle visited on occasion to read or do science experiments with the children.  She was always a terrific guest.

School closed for a few years while we (finally) did the big rebuild that we desperately needed.  Fortunately we were able to move into a great space in our local prep school, almost across the street.  By that time, Michelle had been a teacher at the school for many years.  On occasion she would walk to our playground area on the campus to say hello.  Here is the conversation I will never forget:

Hi Michelle!  How is teaching going?

Great.  I’m a Director.

Wait, you’re not old enough to be a Director.

Jennie, I’m 40.

After my shock we laughed.  Well, we laughed our heads off.

My other ‘bookend’ parent belongs to Wren, who had a wonderful year in my classroom.  She was the reader, the Gloria lover, the friend to everyone, ‘sharp as a tack’ and ‘bright as a star’.

We even sang together on YouTube.

Wren’s dad was so excited to see me and share a photo of Wren with ‘the’ magazine.

We talked and talked, remembering the past year.  One day I will hopefully have decades of memories with Wren, as I have with Michelle.

Jennie

Posted in Early Education, Inspiration, preschool, School, Teaching young children | Tagged , , | 71 Comments

Children Helping

Posted in Uncategorized | 19 Comments