KidSpace Blog

Posts Tagged ‘elementary

Hey kids! What do you see?

eyes

The National Institute of Health has named May Healthy Vision Month!

A lot of times we take our eyes for granted. This is a lovely poem by K.C. Bean that encourages kids to use and appreciate their eyes.

Take a look!

Your Eyes

 By KC Bean

Hey kids!

Have you noticed your eyes?

Squeeze them tight

Then open them wide!

 

What’s all around you?

What can you see?

The biggest sky,

The tiniest flea?

 

Your awesome eyes,

They see all around.

Look to the sides

Look up, look down.

 

Use them to read

Or watch TV.

In bright light or dark

What can you see?

 

The colors, the lights,

The patterns, the shapes

Wherever you look

Is a big see-scape!

 

Love them, enjoy them,

Take care of them too.

Your eyes are a wonderful

Part of you.

Visit K.C. Bean on Facebook!

Got the FCAT Blues?

Here is a school poem to lift your spirits during this FCAT week!

The Very Best Feeling
~by Betsy Franko

There’s excited,
delighted,

scared,
and mad.

There’s happy,
embarrased,

surprised,
and sad.

But the very best feeling
that we’ve ever had,

the one that we have every day,

is the feeling we get
when the final bell rings,
and there’s nothing to do but just PLAY!

From the book:

Have you ever wanted to write your own story? 

Are you a kid between 5 and 14 years of age? 

Well, we have just the contest for you! 

The people who created Children’s Book Week (this year it’s celebrated May 2-8th) want you to submit a book for a chance to win super cool prizes like $350 to print your book or a poster signed by a bunch of famous and amazing authors! 

 

Here’s the info, so get creating, ok!?  You need to email them your book no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday, April 22, 2011.

If you need any inspiration come by the library; we have all sorts of great stories to get your imagination pumping!

 

Happy Writing,

Ms Kathy

Whether you are heading to the stadium, watching on TV, or signing up to play, baseball season is here! The game of baseball has evolved over time, catching on and becoming uniquely American in the 1850s! Now a national pastime, the game is part of our culture in the form of family traditions, movies, heroes, and even poems! One of the most famous baseball poems is Casey at the Bat. It was written in 1888 by Ernest L. Thayer. This poem tells a gripping tale about a fictional baseball team, the ‘Mudville nine’ and star player, Casey.

Please enjoy this excerpt of Casey at the Bat. Visit the library to check out the complete poem!

Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic Sung in the Year 1888.

The out look wasn’t brilliant for the Mudville nine that day’
The score stood four to two with but one inning more to play.
And then when Cooney died at first, and Barrows did the same,
A sickly silence fell upon the patrons of the game.

[...]

Then from 5,000 throats and more there rose a lusty yell;
It rumbled through the valley, it rattled in the dell;
It knocked upon the mountain and recoiled upon the flat,
For Casey, mighty Casey, was advancing to the bat.

[...]

Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt;
Five thousand tongues applauded when he wiped them on his shirt.
Then while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into his hip,
Defiance gleamed in Casey’s eye, a sneer curled Casey’s lip.

 

 

March is Women’s History Month and a great chance to celebrate the freedoms and accomplishments women have earned throughout our history!

Women have been doing great things throughout history. In ancient Egypt, women could own property and inherit wealth. To find out more about women in history, check out our WorldBook Online database. Search for the keywords: WOMEN and HISTORY and get hundreds of great articles that you can use for reports or just read for fun! Don’t miss the Primary Sources section. You can read letters written by women hundreds of years ago!

On top of that, today ( March 8 ) is International Women’s Day. In fact, 2011 is the 100th anniversary of this special occasion!


 

Click here for a list of books that we carry all about women in history!

Happy International Literacy Day!

Although, here at the library, every day is a Literacy Day!

This Wednesday at 6pm will be our Families Reading Together event! We will have a special reading of I Love Our Earth by Bill Martin Jr. and a composting program for kids!

*

In celebration of the Earth and Literacy, here are a few selections from the book, Earth Songs by Myra Cohn Livingston

 

Little O, small earth, spinning in space,

face covered with dizzy clouds, racing,

chasing sunlight through the Milky Way,

say your secr3ets, small earth, little O,

know where you lead, I follow. I go.

 

Patched together

With land and sea,

I am earth,

Great earth.

Come with me!

Tundra covers me; swamps sodden, dank,

Banked with moss, a soft, spongy morass.

Grassy bogs blanket my soaked crust here.

sere, barren plains slush through marshed found

mounded with sedge on wet, withered ground.

 

The Roald Dahl Reading Dahlathon reading challenge!

Kids, ages 7-13:

  1. Pick up your Official Reading Rournal here at the library!

  2. While you’re at it, sign up for our Kids Club, Book Club for grades 2-3! This month’s book, The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me by Roald Dahl of course!

  3. Read 3 Roald Dahl books by December. (If you join the book club, you will have already read one!)

  4. Mail in the entry form from your Reading Journal to win prizes!

 

For more information and official rules, see Roalddahl.com


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