Learn more about the five finalists for the first annual Amelia Elizabeth Walden Award.
Students learn more about libraries as part of National Library Week.
Students research different awards given by the ALA and do an activity based on one of the awards.
Children love books that rhyme and to create their own rhymes. It's a fun way to learn how words sound similar to one another!
Explore fairy tales told in both old and new ways and use an online tool to help children create their own "fractured" version of a fairy tale.
Have children explore the different parts of mystery writing by making a puzzle about a favorite book. They can then invent and write their own mysteries using the online Mystery Cube tool.
From dishes to doors, find shapes all around you while strengthening important reading and math skills.
While enjoying a book that features a journey, children write postcards from the perspective of the main character for each stop along the trip.
After reading If You Give a Moose a Muffin, have a "Muffin Party"! Children will write invitations, follow a recipe, and enjoy sharing their homemade muffins.
Brainstorm popular expressions with friends and family, then explore their meanings through game play and writing/drawing/cut-and-paste activities.
This activity can help teens create picture books that a teen caregiver can then share with children.
After reading a book or magazine, children and teens can choose a section and transform it into what's known as a "found poem."