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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Katie Cleminson, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. One way to launch a library! (or 4 ways to celebrate World Book Day)

If you were invited to design a school library launch, how would you go about it? What events would you want to facilitate? Who would you want to involve?

These questions have been very much on my mind since the start of the year, for designing and delivering a school library launch is exactly what I have been asked to do by a local infant school. Can you imagine how excited I feel?

It’s an honour to be asked and trusted by the school to design a whole day of activities and I’ve loved every minute of it so far. Library Launch day is February 12th and now we’re counting down the days…

With apologies to NASA, whose original image I've modified.

With apologies to NASA, whose original image I’ve modified.

Having got to the stage where I’ve everything prepped and in place, I wanted to share my plans and resources with you as many of them are easily replicable in families, in classrooms, in clubs, anywhere would you might like to help young children and their families get excited about books. And with World Book Day coming up next month, you could take any of these ideas and use them to celebrate perhaps my favourite day of the year :-)

Today I’ll share the activities the 3-5 year olds will be getting up to, and next week I’ll share the session plans for Year 1 (5-6 year olds) and Year 2 (6-7 year olds), although I believe many of the activities could be adapted to work with children of any age.

ottoWe were keen to get as many children into the new library during the day as possible so each class of 3-5 year olds will spend one session going on a treasure hunt for book characters in the library. The basis of this session with be Katie Cleminson’s Otto the Book Bear, in which a bear in a book steps off the pages and into real life. Having read the book, kids (in pairs) will be given a treasure card to identify which books and book characters they need to find in the library.

Some of the sheets of cards kids will be given so they know which characters to hunt for in the library

Some of the sheets of cards kids will be given so they know which characters to hunt for in the library

No doubt 30 kids hunting 30 soft toys is going to be quite chaotic! Once all the characters are found, the session will finish with a reading of one of the books found by the kids during the session.

A couple of trips to charity shops resulted in a good number of soft toys that either were actual book characters (for example I found Paddington Bear, Pooh, and Poppy Cat without even really looking), then I raided my kids’ soft toys and chose ones which matched (near enough) great books. So, for example, I am borrowing a soft toy squirrel and teaming it up with A First Book of Nature, by Nicola Davies, illustrated by Mark Hearld.

I supplemented these with a few extra official character soft toys (who wouldn’t love the excuse to get a Mog cat or Tiger who came tea toy?). Castlemere Books, based in the US, is the most comprehensive site I found for official book character soft toys, though I didn’t end up using them because of shipping costs to the UK.

Some of the characters kids will be searching for in the library!

Some of the characters kids will be searching for in the library!

On returning to their classrooms the kids will paint/colour their own bookshelves and Otto the bear. You can download the shelves here and the bear here.

shelvesandbear

lululovesstoriesThe second session will be based around Lulu loves Stories by Anna McQuinn and Rosalind Beardshaw (follow the link to read it for free online). This is a gentle story about a child who is taken to the library every Saturday by her father. Each book they read together inspires different sorts of play, from being on a farm (having read about Old Macdonald) to making a pretend aeroplane (having read a story about going on an adventure).

Each table in the classroom will be set up with a different activity taken from Lulu Loves Stories: there will be one with princess dressing up, one with farm animals and one with construction toys. A fourth table will be set up for each child to create their own library to take home, by selecting and gluing lots of images of children’s book covers onto these shelves.

shelveswithscatteredbooks

I’ve spent a fair few evenings cutting up old publishers’ catalogues to create enough “library stock”, but other than time in preparation, this activity has been very cheap to prepare with many publishers willing to send catalogues upon request. (If you were working with older kids you could simply give them the catalogues and ask them to do some fantasy shopping – seeing what books they themselves would chose for their library would no doubt be very informative.)

On a fifth table children will be able to cut out Lulu bookplates. These are available as part of an activity guide on the US publisher’s website. Don’t be confused by the name change – Lulu (in the UK) becomes known as Lola (in the US), but this doesn’t affect the bookplates.

This session will be rounded off by reading Lulu reads to Zeki also by Anna McQuinn and Rosalind Beardshaw, which is a simply delightful (and funny) window into a later stage in Lulu’s life;she now has a younger brother, and is passing on the love of books her father instilled in her to little Zeki, reading to him whenever possible.

mylittlestorybookThe third session for the 3-5 year olds will open with a reading of I Love My Little Story Book by Anita Jeram, which is all about the delights you can find inside different books, and the various places they can transport you to.

Each child will have the opportunity to make their own bunny which comes with a hidden story book of its own. It’s a simple collage activity to make the bunny out of an envelope, a pompom, some dried spaghetti, googly eyes and cardboard ears, all stuck on to an envelope, inside which each child will find a blank mini book (blue to match the one in the story). Kids will be encouraged to make the story book their own with whatever mark-making they like.

rabbit

bunnysbookThe mini books are each made from a sheet of A4 paper, using this technique, my favourite way of making small paper books as it requires no sticking or stapling.

As well as there being tables set up with fairy tale activities (castles and knights to play with, dressing up, plastic animals in a forest play scene) kids will also be able to colour in and cut out several book plates designed by Anita Jeram.

These are all available to freely download (as long as you’re not using them for commercial purposes) from this brilliant website, http://www.myhomelibrary.org/, created by former Children’s Laureate, Anne Fine.

If time allows a reading of I like books by Anthony Browne will finish off this session. This is a very simple introduction to different types of books with just one sentence on each page. It’s a great reminder that there are all different sorts of books you can enjoy reading, not just story books.

charlie-cook-s-favourite-bookThe fourth session of the day will be based around an all time classic, Charlie Cook’s Favourite Book by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. Once the story has been shared, each child will be given their own cardboard treasure chest to embellish with sticky jewels. I sourced some great treasure chests (from http://www.littlecraftybugs.co.uk/) so large that kids will be able to store favourite books inside them.

treasurechests

Elsewhere in the classroom during this session kids will have the opportunity to dig for buried treasure in a sandpit, make aliens out of green playdough, and play with plastic dragons, as well as the chance to colour in this Charlie Cook sheet which you can download from the official Gruffalo website, or to draw their favourite book on this Charlie Cook activity sheet from the US Scholastic website.

This session will be wrapped up with a reading of We are in a book by Mo Willems – a perfect book for this age range where the oldest kids may well be able to join in with reading this funny story about what characters in a book think about their readers.

And as well as all of this, all classes will have a session with the award winning author who is coming to join the school for the day… but more about this in a later post!

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3 Comments on One way to launch a library! (or 4 ways to celebrate World Book Day), last added: 2/1/2013
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2. A quick reminder! Last few hours to help me raise funds for Book Aid

You’ve just got a few hours left to help me raise funds for Book Aid International

“Lines close” at 9 pm tonight (UK time), and the winner of the original illustration by Katie Cleminson, plus the lucky folk who get signed books from her, or signed prints from Chris Haughton will be announced shortly there after.

What am I on about, you say?

To celebrate World Book Day I set you a challenge:

Guess how many books I had in my house on World Book Day.

The person who guesses nearest the mark wins Katie’s illustration above, and 7 others chosen at random get the signed books and prints. To make a guess, leave a comment ON THE ORIGINAL POST (I’ve disabled comments on this post).

How does this game raise money for Book Aid? Whilst I can’t require you to make a donation, I can strongly urge you to do so. As it happens, everyone who has commented so far has also donated, even though they didn’t have to!

You can make a secure donation via my Just Giving site: http://www.justgiving.com/Zoe-Toft.

International friends! My Just Giving site is totally secure and you can donate via PayPal. Please don’t be put off by the fact that payments appear in £(Sterling) – this will just be converted into your local currency on your bank statement, and there aren’t any currency charges or anything like that. I’m happy to post the illustration and other prizes securely worldwide, so there’s nothing to stop you taking part, I hope :-)

Yes, I’ve reached my target, but don’t let that stop you! I’m now aiming for £500 in fundraising. I’m sure you can help! Even a donation of £1 is much appreciated.

So… if ever you’ve enjoyed a post of mine, or found the tweets I share useful, please consider making a donation to Book Aid. And then do come back and try your luck with my books!

Thankyou!

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3. World Book Day, Katie Cleminson and raising money for Book Aid

Hip, Hip, Hooray! Today is World Book Day!

World Book Day is a celebration of authors, illustrators, books and (most importantly) it’s a celebration of reading. In fact, it’s the biggest celebration of its kind, designated by UNESCO as a worldwide celebration of books and reading, and marked in over 100 countries all over the world.

And to celebrate it here on Playing by the book, I’ve teamed up with the brilliant author and illustrator Katie Cleminson to raise funds for Book Aid International.

Book Aid International increases access to books and supports literacy, education and development in sub-Saharan Africa. Last year I raised funds for them by carrying out a Librarithon with M and J. This year, you can once again donate to Book Aid International via my Just Giving page:

http://www.justgiving.com/Zoe-Toft.

To help me reach my fundraising target Katie Cleminson, one of Booktrust’s Best New Illustrators 2011, and the creator of Box of Tricks, Wake Up!, and Otto the Book Bear, has donated this original, signed illustration:

This wonderful illustration (inspired by the traditional fundraising game, Guess the Number of Sweets in the Jar, with Otto the Book Bear looking on lovingly) is approximately 12cm x 15cm and is drawn in ink, watercolour, and charcoal. It was drawn with a pipette, and a fine nib.

It could be yours!

How? Simple! Make a donation to Book Aid, via my Just Giving page, and then come back here and guess the number of books in my house today (March 1st 2012). The person with the number nearest to the correct answer wins Katie’s amazing illustration.

Practicalities: To enter this free prize draw simply leave a comment on this post with your best guess as to the number of books in my home.

Technically speaking (because of the intricacies of UK Gambling law) I cannot require you to make a donation to Book Aid to enter this free prize draw, so theoretically speaking you can enter the prize draw simply by leaving a comment on this post… BUT Katie and I have teamed up because

3 Comments on World Book Day, Katie Cleminson and raising money for Book Aid, last added: 3/1/2012
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4. A book loving reading session at school

As some of you know last term I started reading regularly to two classes of 5 and 6 year olds at M and J’s school – reading great stories just for fun, to show them that learning to read isn’t all about phonics and literacy but also about exploring, delighting and laughing.

The sessions went better than I could have hoped for and this term I’m been asked back but on slightly different terms – I’m now being given an hour every Friday afternoon to read and do book related play with the kids. Can you imagine how happy this makes me :-) ?

Today I have my first session; 30 kids (a mixture of 5,6 and 7 year olds) and our theme is books and libraries.

I’ll be starting the session with Otto the Book Bear by Katie Cleminson and Library Lion by Michelle Knudsen and Kevin Hawkes and I shall round it off with Delilah Darling is in the Library by Jeanne Willis and Rosie Reeve and Dog Loves Books by Louise Yates.

In between the two reading sessions we’re going to make our own pocket libraries.

To do this the kids will first decorate some blank matchboxes with bits and pieces (we’ll be using regular matchboxes rather than craft ones as we didn’t have time to order them). Then the kids will be taking a few of the mini books I’ve prepared (folded card with a small piece of paper stapled inside) and choosing frontcovers for their books from a wide selection I’ve cut out from publishers catalogues. They’ll glue their covers to the front of their books and once they’ve got 3 or 4 they’ll put them inside their matchbox and have their very own pocket library.

A pocket library being read by some playmobil!

If there’s spare time, or the kids just want something else to do, they’ll be able to make their own mini versions of the bookshelf wallpaper M, J and I made here.

Click to view full size image ready for you to print if you wish to use yourself.

Kids will be offered a shelf of their own to paint and encouraged to come up with book titles for the books on their shelf. There will be plenty of book characters to colour in, cut out and eventually stick on to their shelves. To start with we’ll be using Gruffalo, Octonauts, Eric Carle and 3 Comments on A book loving reading session at school, last added: 9/16/2011

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5. Katie Cleminson’s 8 books on route to becoming an illustrator

When I recently fell in love with Katie Cleminson’s newest book, Otto the Book Bear, I had fun re-reading an interview I did with her last year. It was my first ever interview with an author/illustrator and I was so nervous!

Since then I’ve got to know Katie a little better and so I recently asked her if she would share with us 8 books that reflect pivotal moments in her life so far, with particular reference to her journey towards becoming a published author/illustrator. Here’s what she had to say…

The amount of time between first deciding I’d love to make my own picture books for a living, and doing it for real, was only about three and a half years. That was the length of my course at Art School, and so this list is from that time. Before that, my mind wasn’t on children’s books – I’d thought of becoming everything from a muralist, wildlife artist, to an interior designer.

The House at Pooh Corner written by A.A Milne, illustrated by E.H Shepherd.

Shepherd’s illustrations have been imprinted on my mind since the age of 6. However looking at these drawings as an adult, and still feeling the pull of them, reignited a childhood desire to create my own illustrated books.



Frankenstein by Mary Shelley.

Shelley wrote this breathtaking book between the ages of 17-19, that fact blows me away every time. I first read this aged 20, and I couldn’t believe something so complex, complete and powerful could come from such a young mind. It made me feel like anything was possible.



Alice in Wonderland by Suzy Lee.

During the summer I turned 22, I went with a friend to visit her Aunt who lived in Milan. We visited the Corso Como bookshop and I found this, and I’ve been a fan of Suzy Lee ever since. It felt as though I’d found a masterpiece! Also, for the first time the production of a book, the printing, binding, fonts, even the paper, really interested me.



The

3 Comments on Katie Cleminson’s 8 books on route to becoming an illustrator, last added: 8/18/2011
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6. Save our Libraries! Reserve this book today!

Last week we were on holiday in a county where 9 libraries have had their funding withdrawn. If volunteers can’t be found (putting aside the whole issue of whether volunteers running libraries is a good thing) the libraries, more than a quarter of all the libraries in the county in question, will shut their doors for a final time within a year.

The message this sends out to me is “We, the powers that be, don’t care about imagination, exploration, understanding. We don’t care about community.

Image: Phil Bradley

And yet, without imagination, exploration, understanding and community what sort of life would we lead? Would it be the sort of life we want to lead?

A great deal of what I document here on the blog is about how books spark our family’s imagination, encourage us to explore and help us to understand the world around us. The blog is important to me as it helps create, bring together and nurture a community that I’m delighted to be a part of.

And whilst many of the books I review here are ones I’ve bought or been sent, it’s the library that is the backbone of so much that I do with the kids. It’s the library I turn to for books on crafty projects, it’s the library I turn to for books recommended by readers of this blog, it’s the library I turn to to find older books by authors who are new discoveries to us, it’s the library I turn to for browsing which sparks ideas, thoughts and eventual adventures which end up here on the blog.

It’s the library that I hope you first turn to when you read a review here of a book you think sounds wonderful.

So when I read Otto the Book Bear, the latest book by Katie Cleminson, I hugged it! It’s a book about the magic of libraries and the life book characters can lead. It’s about the joy of being read (and as a writer, if only of a blog, I definitely appreciate this), and it’s beautiful, tender and full of optimism.

Otto is a book bear with a special secret. Although he is “at his happiest when children read his book“, when no-one is looking he can escape the pages of his books and come to life. This ex-folio exploration is lots of fun until the day his book is packed up and taken away before Otto can return to the safety of his pages.

He searches and searches for a new home but without success. Just as he is on the verge of giving up, Otto sees “a place that looked full of light and hope“. Given my preamble above I’m sure you can guess what sort of building this might be; yes – a building full of books, imagination and friendship – a library.

Otto is thrilled with his new home, and the friends he makes from other books but best of all, “now Otto had lots of readers – and that made him the happiest book bear of all.

If you read my review

5 Comments on Save our Libraries! Reserve this book today!, last added: 8/4/2011
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7. 49 brilliant picture books from the past 5 years as chosen by award winning illustrators

At the start of this month I published a list 50+ brilliant picture books with contributions from several illustrators I’m fortunate to have “met” (at least online). The list was intended to be an source of ideas and inspiration.

One interesting aspect for me of that list was how many of the books chosen were published 30, 40 or even 50 years ago. This observation made me want to look for the best picture books of recent years – to find some inspiration amongst the newest, brightest picture books available.

To help me in this quest I turned to this year’s winners of the Booktrust New Best Illustrators Award. These illustrators “represent the best rising talent in the field of illustration today, [they] demonstrate remarkable creative flair, artistic skill and boundless imagination in their work“, so who better to ask for some suggestions as to the best, fresh picture books?

So now, as the month draws to a close I offer you another springboard into a selection of amazing picture books. I hope the list will whet your appetite, stoke your imagination and make you hungry to visit the library. Here’s what our award winning illustrators chose and why they chose it…

Kevin Waldron

  • Un Lion á Paris by Beatrice Alemagna
    Absolutely gorgeous. Beautiful, beautiful art. Why isn’t this book everywhere?
  • The Enemy: A Book about Peace by Davide Cali, illustrated by Serge Bloch
  • I love the invention of Serge Bloch. Well delivered message.

  • 4 Comments on 49 brilliant picture books from the past 5 years as chosen by award winning illustrators, last added: 4/28/2011
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  • 8. 50+ picture books every child should be read – a non-prescriptive list for inspiration

    Last week the UK Secretary for Education Michael Gove suggested that children as young as 11 should be reading 50 books a year as part of a drive to raise literacy standards. This raised a lot of eyebrows amongst the British book-loving public, not least as it comes following large cuts in funding for libraries in the UK.

    Whilst most commentators of course agreed that reading should be encouraged, many argued against a prescribed list of set length:

    I feel it’s the quality of children’s reading experience that really matters. Pleasure, engagement and enjoyment of books is what counts – not simply meeting targets” ~ Anthony Browne
    The important aim is a reading that should be wide and deep rather than numerical” ~Alan Garner
    When it comes to reading books children should be allowed – and encouraged – to read as much rubbish as they want to” ~ Philip Pullman

    In response to Gove’s 50 books a year suggestion, The Independent newspaper published an article “The 50 books every child should read“, containing books for 11 year olds suggested by Philip Pullman, Michael Morpurgo, Michael Rosen and others. This list gave me lots of food for thought. Of course I want to do all I can to encourage a love of reading in my children, and one of the ways I do this is by reading lots and lots to them – if they don’t love books when they are 6 it’s unlikely they’ll love books when they are 11 or 16.

    So I try to let them read whenever or whatever they want, but I also try to ensure they’re surrounded by superb, stimulating, brilliant and breathtaking (picture) books. But how do I, you, or any other person discover and choose such books?

    I approached six brilliant UK-based illustrators and asked them to contribute towards a list of books every child should be read. Tim Hopgood, James Mayhew, Jan Pieńkowski, Katie Cleminson, Viviane Schwarz and Clara Vulliamy all very gamely accepted my challenge of producing a list of 10 or so books each that they love.

    This list is not prescriptive, this list is personal. This list does not claim to be the definitive top 50 picture books of all time, although it certainly would create a fantastic library for any child. This list is merely a starting point and this list, hopefully, will generate lots of discussion; I look forward to hearing what you think about the books, authors and illustrators which have been included (and those which have been left out).

    Tim Hopgood

    Tim says “This is not my top 10 – that would be impossible! My top 10 changes constantly as I discover more and more new (or sometimes old) picture books to add to my collection. And I don’t claim to be an expert on what makes a great picture book. The list I’ve put together is simply 10 books that I find inspiring and enjoyable to look at time and time again and hope others will too!

    3 Comments on 50+ picture books every child should be read – a non-prescriptive list for inspiration, last added: 4/1/2011
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    9. Interview with author and illustrator Katie Cleminson

    Today I’m honoured and excited to be bringing you my very first author/illustrator interview here on Playing by the book – an interview with Katie Cleminson, Best Emerging Illustrator in the Booktrust Early Years Awards 2009, and author and illustrator of two glorious books, Box of Tricks (Magic Box in the US) and Wake Up! (Cuddle up, Goodnight in the US).

    I hope you’ll enjoy the interview – and do make sure you enter the international giveaway at the end of this interview for a chance to win a signed copy of Wake Up! (if only I could enter my own competitions!). Now let’s hear from Katie!

    Katie Cleminson

    Playing by the Book: Hi Katie, it’s an absolute delight to be interviewing you for Playing by the Book – your first book, ‘Box of Tricks‘, is one of our family’s favourite picture books, one we return to often.
     
    Katie: I think Playing by the Book is a very inventive idea, and the artwork your children created inspired by ‘Box of Tricks‘ was so lovely to see! I admire any way of getting children interested in books, reading, and being creative. Bravo!

    Playing by the Book: Thank you Katie! Now, to kick off, could you start by telling us a little about how you became an author and illustrator – have you been writing and drawing since you were little, or is it a passion that developed later in life?

    Katie: I always loved to draw as a child, I did a drawing of a blackbird from life when I was four, and my mother thought it was very advanced for my age. I continued to draw predominately animals as I grew up, and I started to invent my own stories when I was around 9. I was lucky that my parents were always very encouraging about everything I created.

    Image from Box of Tricks, Copyright: Katie Cleminson

    Playing by the Book: What a great start you had. I think you’re absolutely right about the importance of encouragement. Of your first book, ‘Box of Tricks‘, you’v

    3 Comments on Interview with author and illustrator Katie Cleminson, last added: 7/26/2010
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    10. Magical birthdays

    Photo: digitalART2

    Photo: digitalART2

    Just before Christmas it was M’s 5th birthday. We had a really happy weekend, first her birthday at home with just the 4 of us playing, playing, reading and playing, and then the following day enjoying ourselves enormously at her dinosaur party (which I’m so happy to report couldn’t have been a bigger success :-) ). Although new books frequently find their way into our home I had been looking since the summer for something special with a birthday theme to give to her, and about a month before the big day I struck gold with Box of Tricks by Katie Cleminson (for some reason retitled as Magic Box in the US).

    This perfect story opens with the birthday girl, Eva, receiving a very special present – a large cardboard box. As we all know, cardboard boxes are full of opportunities for imaginative, magical play when it comes to kids, and this box is no different. As if like Alice falling down the rabbit hole, Eva jumps into her box and is transformed into a master magician, able to conjure up delights, including what she wants more than anything else in the whole world – a pet polar bear called Monty.

    Eva goes on to conjure up more fantastical magic tricks, throwing a wonderful party, with great food, great music and lots of carefree, joyful dancing, and when every one has had their full of celebrating Eva is able to magically click her fingers and quite by magic everything (well, almost everything…) vanishes.

    box_of_tricks_inside2

    I love this story because it captures the magic of the simple cardboard box and celebrates the power of imagination. Eva is a great little character – omnipotent, as all children like to be, and yet charming with it! She can magic up her greatest desires at will – an aspect of the story I’m sure appeals to M a great deal, even if she doesn’t express it quite in these terms :-)

    And if the story itself were not enough to make you love this book, the illustrations are fresh and gorgeous! Simple and uncluttered but oh so full of charm, delight, warmth and fun. Katie Cleminson primarily uses only 3 colours in her illustrations – black, red and blue, and pairs up her ink drawings with splatters and drops of paint (surely inspired by her declared passion for Jackson Pollock) that perfectly conjure up a sense of magic in the air.

    box_of_tricks_inside1

    I’m so glad I found this book, and if you have a birthday in the offing I couldn’t recommend it highly enough. We gave it to M along with a cardboard box and a large cuddly polar bear inside and it has definitely proved

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    11.


    "If Antoinette Portis's Not a Box and Emily Gravett's Monkey and Me had a love child, it might just be this book"

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