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    ALA Announces Newbery and Caldecott Winners

     | Jan 25, 2012

    The American Library Association (ALA) announced the top books, video, and audiobooks for children and young adults–including the Caldecott, Coretta Scott King, Newbery, and Printz awards–at its Midwinter Meeting in Dallas.

    A list of all the 2012 award winners follows:

    John Newbery Medal for the most outstanding contribution to children's literature:Dead End in Norvelt written by Jack Gantos

    Newbery Honor Books: Inside Out & Back Againwritten by Thanhha Lai and Breaking Stalin’s Nose

    written and illustrated by Eugene Yelchin

    Randolph Caldecott Medal for the most distinguished American picture book for children: A Ball for Daisy illustrated and written by Chris Raschka

    Caldecott Honor Books: Blackout illustrated and written by John Rocco, Grandpa Green illustrated and written by Lane Smith, and Me … Jane illustrated and written by Patrick McDonnell

    Michael L. Printz Award for excellence in literature written for young adults: Where Things Come Back written by John Corey Whaley
    Printz Honor Books: Why We Broke Up written by Daniel Handler, art by Maira Kalman, The Returning written by Christine Hinwood, Jasper Jones written by Craig Silvey, and The Scorpio Races written by Maggie Stiefvater

     

    Coretta Scott King (Author) Book Award recognizing an African American author and illustrator of outstanding books for children and young adults: Kadir Nelson, author and illustrator of Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans
    King Author Honor Book recipients: Eloise Greenfield, author of The Great Migration: Journey to the North illustrated by Jan Spivey Gilchrist, and Patricia C. McKissack, author of Never Forgotten illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon
    Coretta Scott King (Illustrator) Book Award: Shane W. Evans, illustrator and author of Underground: Finding the Light to Freedom

    King Illustrator Honor Book recipient: Kadir Nelson, illustrator and author of Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans

    Coretta Scott King – Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement: Ashley Bryan, storyteller, artist, author, poet and musician

    Schneider Family Book Award for books that embody an artistic expression of the disability experience, middle school award (ages 9 – 13): close to famous written by Joan Bauer and Wonderstruck: A Novel in Words and Pictures written by Brian Selznick; teen (ages 14-18) award: The Running Dream written by Wendelin Van Draanen

    Alex Awards for the 10 best adult books that appeal to teen audiences: Big Girl Small by Rachel DeWoskin, In Zanesville by Jo Ann Beard, The Lover’s Dictionary by David Levithan, The New Kids: Big Dreams and Brave Journeys at a High School for Immigrant Teens by Brooke Hauser, The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, Ready Player One by Ernest Cline, Robopocalypse: A Novel by Daniel H. Wilson, Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward, The Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt: A Novel in Pictures by Caroline Preston,and The Talk-Funny Girl by Roland Merullo
    Andrew Carnegie Medal for excellence in children's video: Paul R. Gagne and Melissa Reilly Ellard of Weston Woods Studios, Inc., producers of Children Make Terrible Pets based on the book written by Peter Brown, narrated by Emily Eiden, with music by Jack Sundrud and Rusty Young, and animation by Soup2Nuts.

    Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults: Susan Cooper, The Dark Is Rising Sequence
    May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture Award recognizing an author, critic, librarian, historian or teacher of children's literature, who then presents a lecture at a winning host site: Michael Morpurgo, War Horse
    Mildred L. Batchelder Award for an outstanding children's book translated from a foreign language and subsequently published in the United States: Soldier Bear written by Bibi Dumon Tak, illustrated by Philip Hopman, translated by Laura Watkinson 
    Batchelder Honor Book: The Lily Pond written by Annika Thor and translated by Linda Schenck
    Odyssey Award for best audiobook produced for children and/or young adults, available in English in the United States: Rotters produced Listening Library, an imprint of Random House Audio Publishing Group, Random House, Inc., written by Daniel Kraus, and narrated by Kirby Heyborne.

    Odyssey Honor audiobooks: Ghetto Cowboy produced by Brilliance Audio, written by G. Neri, and narrated by JD Jackson; Okay for Now produced by Listening Library, an imprint of Random House Audio Publishing Group, Random House, Inc., written by Gary D. Schmidt, and narrated by Lincoln Hoppe; The Scorpio Races, produced by Scholastic Inc., Scholastic Audiobooks, written by Maggie Stiefvater, and narrated by Steve West and Fiona Hardingham; and Young Fredle produced by Listening Library, an imprint of Random House Audio Publishing Group, Random House, Inc., written by Cynthia Voigt and narrated by Wendy Carter 
    Pura Belpré (Illustrator) Award honoring a Latino writer and illustrator whose children's books best portray, affirm and celebrate the Latino cultural experience: Diego Rivera: His World and Ours illustrated by Duncan Tonatiuh and written by Duncan Tonatiuh
    Belpré Illustrator Honor Books: The Cazuela that the Farm Maiden Stirred illustrated by Rafael López and written by Samantha R. Vamos and Marisol McDonald Doesn’t Match /Marisol McDonald no combina illustrated by Sara Palacios and written by Monica Brown
    Pura Belpré (Author) Award: Under the Mesquite written by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
    Belpré Author Honor Books: Hurricane Dancers: The First Caribbean Pirate Shipwreck written by Margarita Engle and Maximilian and the Mystery of the Guardian Angel: A Bilingual Lucha Libre Thriller written by Xavier Garza
    Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award for most distinguished informational book for children: Balloons over Broadway:  The True Story of the Puppeteer of Macy’s Parade written by Melissa Sweet
    Sibert Honor Books: Black & White: The Confrontation between Reverend Fred L. Shuttlesworth and Eugene ‘Bull’ Connor written by Larry Dane Brimnerand, Drawing from Memory written and illustrated by Allen Sayand, The Elephant Scientist written by Caitlin O’Connell and Donna M. Jackson, photographs by Caitlin O’Connell and Timothy Rodwell, and Witches!: The Absolutely True Tale of Disaster in Salem written and illustrated by Rosalyn Schanzer
    Stonewall Book Award - Mike Morgan & Larry Romans Children’s & Young Adult Literature Award given annually to English-language children’s and young adult books of exceptional merit relating to the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender experience: Putting Makeup on the Fat Boy written by Bil Wright

    Honor Books: a + e 4ever drawn and written by Ilike Merey, Money Boy written by Paul Yee, Pink written by Lili Wilkinson, and with or without you written by Brian Farrey
    Theodor Seuss Geisel Award for the most distinguished beginning reader book: Tales for Very Picky Eaters written and illustrated by Josh Schneider
    Geisel Honor Books: I Broke My Trunk written and illustrated by Mo Willems, I Want My Hat Back written and illustrated by Jon Klassen, and See Me Run written and illustrated by Paul Meisel
    William C. Morris Award for a debut book published by a first-time author writing for teens: Where Things Come Back written by John Corey Whaley

    Finalists for the award: Girl of Fire and Thorns written by Rae Carson, Paper Covers Rock written by Jenny Hubbard, Under the Mesquite written by Guadalupe Garcia McCall, and Between Shades of Gray written by Ruta Sepetys
    YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults honors the best nonfiction book published for young adults, ages 12 – 18, each year:  The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery  written by Steve Sheinkin

    Finalists for the award: Sugar Changed the World: A Story of Magic, Spice, Slavery, Freedom and Science written by Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos, Bootleg: Murder, Moonshine, and the Lawless Years of Prohibition written by Karen Blumenthal, Wheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom (With a Few Flat Tires Along the Way) written by Sue Macy, and Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernsteinwritten by Susan Goldman Rubin

    Recognized worldwide for the high quality they represent, ALA awards guide parents, educators, librarians and others in selecting the best materials for youth. Selected by judging committees of librarians and other children’s experts, the awards encourage original and creative work. For more information on the ALA youth media awards, publishers, and notables, please visit the 2012 Youth Media Awards page on the ALA website or the press release webpage

     

     


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    TILE-SIG Feature: The Role of Technology in Disciplinary Literacy Acquisition and Instruction

     | Jan 23, 2012
    by Dr. Kristine Pytash & Dr. Richard E. Ferdig

    Disciplinary literacy has received a tremendous amount of recent attention. Whereas a one-size fits all approach to literacy instruction fails to recognize reading and writing practices unique to particular disciplines, disciplinary literacy provides a means to appreciate and employ strategies appropriate to given content areas. Moje (2008) argues that young adults must learn the practices of experts in the field and the discourse used during those practices. Such an instructional approach can help students learn how knowledge is created and shared within specific disciplines. 

    There are at least three ways that technology is integral to disciplinary literacy. First, technology can introduce students to the three tenets of disciplinary literacy: discourses and practices, identities and identifications, and knowledge (Moje, 2008). Technology can be a means to provide students access to each of these three tenets, particularly in areas where they might not normally have access to the identities or to the actual practices of unique disciplines.  Second, technology can be a medium for content area teachers to learn the best practices within disciplinary literacy instruction. Third, technology has become ubiquitous in many disciplines. As such, it forms the thread of the discourse, identity, and knowledge within those disciplines. Said differently, technology moves from the means of instruction in the first two methods to the actual content of the disciplinary literacy instruction in the third example.

    Recent research has highlighted this relationship between disciplinary literacy and technology. One example comes from the work of Dr. Michael Manderino at Northern Illinois University. In a paper entitled, "Social Networking as Discursive Practice: Developing Disciplinary Literacy in History", Manderino (2011) studied a group of US History teachers who used a social networking space for students to create fictitious profiles.

    Given the author's interest in multi-modal, student-generated artifacts, students were asked to create an authentic historical profile of someone from the 1960's using pictures, video, and music (p. 13). One of the most interesting findings is that the "use of multimodal sources resulted in higher engagement and richer historical meaning making by students... In terms of disciplinary learning, the use of multimodal sources provided deep engagement and helps foster the student to see the complexity of history" (p. 18). 

    Such research provides promising findings for the use of 21st century tools in studying, obtaining, and practicing content-specific knowledge and skills. Future research should continue to find ways to understand and differentiate the roles of technology as both medium and content of disciplinary literacy instruction. 


    Manderino, M. (2011, April).  Social networking as discursive practice: Developing disciplinary literacy in history.  Symposium paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, New Orleans, LA. 
    Symposium Paper Link (If you are having trouble with this link, try the Google Scholar Link.)

    Moje, E.B. (2008). Foregrounding the disciplines in secondary literacy teaching and learning: A call for change. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 52(2), 96-107.


    Dr. Kristine Pytash is an Assistant Professor of Adolescent Literacy Education, Kent State University, kpytash@kent.edu.  Dr. Richard E. Ferdig is a professor of ITEC and the RCET Research Professor at the Research Center for Educational Technology, Kent State University, rferdig@gmail.com. 

    This article is part of a series from the Technology in Literacy Education Special Interest Group (TILE-SIG)


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    Digital Learning Day is February 1

     | Jan 19, 2012

    Over 380,000 students in twenty-eight states have committed to celebrate Digital Learning Day, a national awareness campaign designed to celebrate innovative teachers and highlight instructional practices that strengthen teaching and personalize learning for all students.

    The first Digital Learning Day will be held on February 1, 2012. It is the culminating event in a year-round national awareness campaign to improve teaching and learning for all children. Digital learning is any instructional practice that is effectively using technology to strengthen the student learning experience. Digital learning encompasses a wide spectrum of tools and practice, including using online and formative assessment, increasing focus and quality of teaching resources and time, online content and courses, applications of technology in the classroom and school building, adaptive software for students with special needs, learning platforms, participating in professional communities of practice, providing access to high level and challenging content and instruction, and many other advancements technology provides to teaching and learning. In particular, blended learning is any time a student learns, at least in part, at a supervised brick-and-mortar location away from home and, at least in part, through online delivery with some element of student control over time, place, path, and/or pace.

    “I’m excited to see the momentum building for Digital Learning Day,” said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia. “These states have really embraced the issue and are planning exciting celebrations within their own states to support the national discussion about effective applications of technology in education.”

    On Digital Learning Day, a virtual national town hall meeting will be broadcast live from Washington, DC, and will highlight four to six satellite locations. The town hall meeting boasts support from twenty-five core partners made up of national membership organizations, and a broad array of stakeholder groups, including principals, school board, content area specialists, and instructional technology professionals;  twenty-seven states that are planning their own statewide celebrations; twenty-six instructional technology experts who are hard at work developing toolkits and resources to support educators at all the state, district, school, and classroom levels; and nationally known companies, such as Intel Corporation, Google, and SMART Technologies.

    The celebration of Digital Learning Day will be tailored within each participating state. Some activities these states are planning include a proclamation from the state governor, a showcase of student work through digital learning, lesson plan contests for teachers, announcements of digital learning projects, and highlights of promising practices within and among states.

    Visit www.digitallearningday.org to learn more about Digital Learning Day or to read the Alliance for Excellent Education’s report The Digital Learning Imperative: How Teaching and Technology Meet Today’s Educational Challenges.

    For example, on Digital Learning Day, the Indiana Department of Education will kick off the state’s twenty-nine-day ―Web 2.0 Challenge. Then, on each day in February, it will introduce a new resource complete with tutorials and tips on its blog. The challenge is for educators to explore the shared tools and post thoughts and ideas about how they could use them to enhance student learning. Additionally, the state will encourage districts to post a three-minute video telling their own Digital Learning story to the Indiana Department of Education YouTube channel.

    "Educators all over Indiana work every day to advance and expand their efforts to take advantage of technology to improve student outcomes," said Candice Dodson, director of eLearning at the Indiana Department of Education. "Digital Learning Day gives us—and all states—a chance to shine a light on the exciting ways digital learning is happening in schools."

    All are welcome to participate in this celebration of innovation. Act now! Join the important national and local discussions by signing up to learn more about Digital Learning Day at http://www.digitallearningday.org.

    The Alliance for Excellent Education is a Washington, DC-based national policy and advocacy organization that works to improve national and federal policy so that all students can achieve at high academic levels and graduate from high school ready for success in college, work, and citizenship in the twenty-first century. For more information about the Alliance for Excellent Education, please visit http://www.all4ed.org.

     

     


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    Toyota Teacher of the Year Applications Due February 1

     | Jan 18, 2012

    The National Center for Family Literacy is accepting applications for the 2012 Toyota Teacher of the Year.

    The winner will receive $20,000 for his or her program as well as a free trip to the 2012 National Conference on Family Literacy (NCFL), which will be held from March 25 through March 27 in San Diego. This will be the 16th year for the annual award. Criteria with an emphasis on parental engagement and a doubled grant prize are both new this year.

    The application, which should be completed online at http://www.famlit.org/toyota-teacher-of-the-year-nomination-form/, is due no later than February 1, 2012.

    The winner will be chosen by a panel of NCFL family literacy specialists, who will review nominations looking for high-performing teachers with the following criteria:
    • Work for a family literacy program, Title I elementary school, preschool or community organization based in the United States. 
    • Serve parents and children with a strong intergenerational approach to helping them learn together and/or use innovative ways to engage parents in their children’s education;
    • Exhibit a record of success;
    • Have novel ideas for expanding their program to benefit families and/or reach to engage more families; and
    • Serve communities and families with high literacy and socioeconomic needs.

    The selected educator will be honored at the National Conference on Family Literacy along with receiving the grant, and one runner-up will receive a $2,500 grant for his/her program and a scholarship to the conference. The recipients will be notified by early March.

    The form must be completed by the nominee’s principal/director/supervisor, and nominee must answer the final question. Programs may nominate up to two educators but must submit a separate online nomination form for each.

    For more information and guidelines, visit http://www.famlit.org/toyota-teacher-of-the-year-award-selection-criteria/.

     

     


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    "Wheels of Change" Book Reviews

     | Jan 18, 2012

    The first month of the year is often a time for reflecting on previous years and resolving to make changes in ourselves and the world around us. Sometimes those changes start with one small act and then another, rippling outward into larger changes that eventually spawn movements and effect social change such as what happened with the civil rights movement. Sometimes the wheels of change come in the form of innovations in different areas such as transportation. Men and women use wheels to move or take to the air, and crossing an entire continent is something that may be accomplished within a day. Because they move and aren’t static, young readers are often intrigued by books that feature cars, trucks, anything with wheels that move. Books that literally feature cars and bicycles or wheels in some form or fashion are a lot more ubiquitous than you might think. For this week’s installment of book reviews, members of the International Reading Associaton's Children’s Literature and Reading Special Interest Group have amassed a fleet of books literally about wheels. In the next two installments of the book review column, we’ll review books that describe how quickly the wheels of change may turn in history or in the lives of fictional characters, often prompting them to change their minds or their actions.

    Grades K-3

    LaReau, Kara. (2011). Otto the boy who loved cars. Illus. by Scott Magoon. New York: Roaring Brook.

    Otto book cover imageThere once was a boy named Otto who simply couldn’t get enough of vehicles that move on wheels. He played car games, read car stories and even ate a car cereal, appropriately named Wheelies. He lived and breathed cars. One morning Otto awoke and found he was a car. At breakfast, he tried to say, “Pass the Wheelies,” but instead out came, “Honk-honk, HONK!” (unpaginated). Because a car is too large to fit on a school bus, Otto had to drive himself to school. Terrible traffic en route forced him to arrive quite late, and he spent the morning idling in the time out corner, waiting for recess. On the playground Otto couldn’t play with the other children because, of course, cars can’t play. He couldn’t even eat what his mother made for dinner because cars can’t eat the food mothers prepare. Otto began to realize that he couldn’t do any of the things he normally did—play, draw or read. Maybe it was time for the auto-loving boy to switch gears. Most children will laugh at this fantasy adventure and consider branching out from their own obsessions with stuffed animals, dolls, Legos or video games.
    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver

    Medina, Meg. (2011). Tia Isa wants a car. Illus. by Claudio Munoz. Somerville, MA: Candlewick.

    Tia Isa book cover imageLiving in the city without family members or access to the beach is hard. Tia Isa knows that it is important to save money to bring the rest of their family to the United States, but still, she longs for a used car, and she knows exactly what kind of wheeled vehicle she wants. She dreams of one that is as green as the ocean she longs to see, the ocean that reminds her of her island home and the family members she misses. While her brother scoffs at the idea of Tia Isa ever being able to amass enough money to reach her goal, her niece is inspired by the project and takes on chores for the neighbors so that they can save money faster. Once they have enough money, Tia Isa finds a used car—green, of course--that is big enough to take the whole family wherever they want to go. Before they head off to the beach, they tape a photograph of the family on the car’s dashboard. In a positive, endearing fashion this story reminds readers that some things are worth the wait and that dreams aren't as ridiculous as others might say. The pencil, watercolor, and ink illustrations are drawn in soft hues, creating a sentimental artistic quality to a story that reminds readers of the freedom a car of one's own affords and the necessity of setting goals.
    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman

    Ransome, James E. (2011). New red bike! New York: Holiday House.

    New Red Bike book cover imageAfter opening the cover of this picture book, readers will be captivated by the first end page with a shiny new bike with a red bow attached to the handlebars. In the next pages Tom, the owner of the new red bike, practices riding his brand-new red bike with his helmet on. He rides up and down the street. He rides around in circles. He zooms down hills, around curves and then returns home. He is so excited about his new present that he travels to his friend Sam’s house. When he turns his back to knock on the house, his new bike disappears. Tom looks everywhere. He looks around the house and under it. He looks up, down, behind and all around. All of a sudden he hears WHIZZZ. Guess who is riding Tom’s shiny new bike? They end up taking turns, sharing the new red bike. The last end page continues the story as Tom and Sam ride off together. Clearly, while two wheels can make better friends than none, four wheels and two bikes with two boys present plenty of possibilities. This straight-forward book could easily inspire children to write their own new present stories and remind them to share what they have with their friends.
    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver

    Rinker, Sherri Duskey. (2011). Goodnight, goodnight, construction site. Illus. by Tom Lichtenheld. San Francisco: Chronicle Books.

    Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site book cover imageWho knows what it is, but there’s something about big trucks and construction sites that fascinates youngsters. This picture book written in rhyming text describing the work that occurs at a construction site will intrigue them and require multiple readings. Construction sites are busy places, filled with plenty of action and noise, but eventually even machines need to cease their labor. As the day winds down, the trucks complete their final tasks. The crane truck raises and places one last beam. The cement mixer pours out one last load. The story follows the big trucks typically found on a construction site, including the ever-fascinating dump trucks, bulldozers, and excavators, as they shut down for the day, satisfied with a job well-done. After all that labor, the machines certainly deserve a rest. The large wax oil pastel illustrations create a peaceful setting as night approaches that contrasts vividly with the motion-filled illustrations of the trucks in motion throughout the day. The cover with the excavator gently cradling the moon is particularly effective in personifying the monstrous machines. Young readers won’t be the only ones who enjoy reading this book about vehicles with very big wheels.
    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman

    Stein, Peter. (2011). Cars galore. Illus. by Bob Staake. Somerville, MA: Candlewick.

    Cars Galore book cover image“Black car, green car, nice car, mean car. Near car, far car. Whoa! Bizarre car!” (unpaginated). The rollicking verse in this colorful picture book will delight anyone who loves moving vehicles. There are fast cars, slow cars, big cars and small cars. And, of course, there are tall cars, short cars and fun-filled fort cars. All of the automobiles are traveling on dark black asphalt roads that crisscross the book’s pages, inviting young children to trace and follow the vehicles with their fingers. One double page spread resembles rush hour traffic with “Cars and cars and yet still MORE cars! (unpaginated). Another page notes rusty, dusty, hunk-of-junk cars that sometime stink and smell. One humorous illustration displays, “Jazz car, soul car, rock’n’roll car. Blues car, song car. Sing-along car!” (unpaginated). In conclusion, a car with a family including a young child takes off on a, “Fun drive, sun drive, gotta-run drive! Dream drive, cool drive…Someday you’ll drive!” (unpaginated). Young readers will enjoy this vivid, vicarious road trip.
    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver

    Sweet, Melissa. (2011). Balloons over Broadway.

    Balloons Over Broadway book cover imageUp, up, high in the sky go those enormous, colorful balloons during the annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade in New York. Young readers will be intrigued to learn that the balloons haven’t always been a part of the parade. In fact, these floating, "upside down marionettes" (unpaginated) first appeared in 1928, the innovation of a brilliant puppeteer, Tony Sarg, who came up with the idea to have balloons replace the zoo animals who once rode in cages on wagons in the city streets, often frightening the children along the parade route. The goauche, collage, and mixed media illustrations are filled with a vibrancy that attests to life’s joys and extraordinary detail, providing readers with the perfect bird's eye view of the parade. Some illustrations make it seem as though residents of the city’s high rises can nod at the balloons as they float right outside their windows. At some points, it's hard to decide whether the balloons have a mind of their own and are in charge of their handlers or if their handlers are actually controlling them. Additional information about the book’s artwork and the man responsible for this popular parade innovation can be found in the back matter.
    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman

    Viva, Frank. (2011). Along a long road. New York: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.

    Along a Long Road book cover imageUsing Adobe Illustrator, the author/illustrator of this picture book has created a continuous thirty-five-foot-long piece of art that comprises the book’s pages as well as drawing by hand the display type for its text. A cyclist travels upon an orange path laid out against a black background, along a very long road, that moves across the countryside. At first, the road is fairly straight, moving through stands of trees, but then it winds up and down, around a town, and through a tunnel. The bicyclist pedals unwaveringly along his route, moving slowly and quickly, by turns, passing through urban and rural settings, at one point, even crossing a bridge. Of course, he encounters a bump or two along the way, but after a brief rest, he climbs back on and pedals off. The illustrations show some of the sites he passes along the trip (amusement parks, clothing on a clothesline flapping in the breeze, passersby waving him on his way), but for this rider, the pleasure of the ride seems to be what matters. Young readers will surely love following the strip that marks his journey. Once they reach the book’s final pages, they’ll want to start their journey all over again, just as the rider does.
    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman

    Grades 4-5

    Atinuke. (2011). The no 1 car spotter: Best in the village—maybe in the world! Illus. by Warwick Johnson Cadwell. Tulsa, OK: Kane Miller.

    The No 1 Car Spotter book cover imageOluwalase Babatunde Benson—better known as No. 1—lives close to a busy road where many cars drive past his village in an unnamed country “on the continent of Africa” (p. 7). His hobby is spotting cars. As a baby he stayed with his grandfather under an iroko tree watching the road. Grandfather taught him the ABC’s, 123’s and how to spot cars such as the Peugeot, Passat and Porsche. Somehow, No. 1 can even spot cars before he sees them. From the sound of their engine, running sweet or backfiring, he knows them. In this brief novel with only four chapters, young readers will learn how wheels improve village life and make a difference in the lives of No. 1’s family. For example, an abandoned Toyota Corolla, with four good tires, is converted into a cart to help his family transport baskets of yams, oranges, mangos, plantains and dried fish to sell at the Saturday market. Two wheelbarrows help No. 1’s Papa begin a new business of carrying people’s goods from one place to another. And, lastly, No. 1 notices when tourist buses travel on the main road. He tells Mama Coca-Cola, who then begins frying akara, a blend of beans, onions and chili peppers, to sell to the hungry passengers when they stop. Simple ink drawings illustrate the different turns and moves in No. 1’s unique and car-filled life.
    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver

    Grades 6-8

    Blackwood, Gary L. (2010). Around the world in 100 days. New York: Dutton.

    The ambitious son of adventurer Phileas Fogg, Harry, is all too aware of his father’s feats of daring, and he accepts a bet that he can drive The Flash, his steam-powered motorcar, around the world in only 100 days. In the tradition of the Jules Verne classic, this 1891 high-speed adventure will have readers throttling their engine as the car races across several continents and bodies of water to the finish line in London. When the book begins, Harry has been arrested for reckless driving. To his father’s dismay, he enjoys driving almost as much as he enjoys tinkering with car engines with his talented mechanic friend Johnny. With his father’s financial backing, Harry sets off on his journey, knowing that this is one bet he must win since losing means he must bow to his father’s dictates and take up a more suitable profession for a gentleman. Racing off with Johnny and two other companions, both of whom may not be trustworthy—Charles Hardiman who comes along to make sure he follows all the bet’s conditions, and Elizabeth, a reporter—Harry must race against time but also against possible sabotage from within. Around the world they go, frightening many pedestrians who have never seen a car before. Harry and crew have all sorts of adventures and humorous moments along the way, but they are ever mindful of the goal of reaching London in time to win the bet.
    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman

    Macy, Sue. Wheels of change: How women rode the bicycle to freedom (with a few flat tires along the way. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic.

    Wheels of Change book cover imageThis is an incredibly informative book that makes history—er, herstory, in this case—a treat to read while pointing out that even the seemingly smallest of innovations in transportation can make a huge difference in lives. Macy shows how the invention and subsequent popularity of the bicycle led to more freedom for men and women. Suddenly, women in particular gained the mobility they had lacked and were able to move from place to place on their own. That increased mobility resulted in a need for more freedom, often in the form of less restrictive clothing so that riding a bicycle was not hampered by clothing that became caught in its wheels. Macy reports these historical developments with great glee, writing as though the events she is describing from the 1880s and 1890s happened yesterday. She even includes detours, details about record-setting women cyclists, and some of the comments made by those who opposed the bicycle because of its tendency to encourage girls along sinful pathways. The book contains photographs as well as trading cards, advertisements, magazine covers, song lyrics, and newspaper clippings about bicycles. Back matter includes a graphic in the shape of a wheel showing the history of cycling and women's history. Obviously, many women rode their bikes to freedom, and this book shows how that happened. Readers may enjoy watching a two-minute clip about how bicycles helped women wheel their way to increased independence at the author’s website at http://suemacy.com/.
    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman

     

     

     

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