Holly can’t quite seem to keep out of the limelight. She’s featured on author, Donna Shepherd‘s new blog, POODLE AND DOODLE.
Writing Poetry about THE World’s LARGEST Ball of Twine
Okay, have you been doing it?
No Fooling–April Is All About POETRY
Friday Fun at KidLit Central
I’ve posted an entry at KidLit Central today on writing SENSE-ATIONAL SCENES.
March Is Women’s History Month
I’m afraid much of March has gone by before I’ve had time to celebrate WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH. But any day is a good day to honor a notable woman. Today I’d like to celebrate AMELIA EARHART.
Lenten Meditations for Children: Jesus Suffers for Us
Another week of Lent has passed. We’ve had many chances to draw closer to Jesus. Have we taken the choices to do so? Or perhaps instead made choices which took us farther away?
- Make a Lenten Cross poster for your family and place it in a central location. Help your children understand how Jesus died for our sins. Provide small pieces of paper which family members can use to pin or tape their sins onto the cross. (For more info on this activity, visit Fridge Art.)
- Celebrate loving acts done for family and friends during Lent. Place an empty Easter basket on the dining table with a pile of plastic grass beside it. For each good deed or prayer said for others, the family member can place some grass into the basket. Hopefully, by Easter Day there will be a big fluffy pile inside the basket on which to place Easter eggs.
Children’s Book Classics–What Are Yours?
Parents pass their likes on to their children. Especially, their love of reading. Books they liked as children will be shared with their own children.
Lenten Meditations for Children: Helping Others Carry Their Crosses
We’ve almost finished the third week of Lent–half-way through. I made some intentions at the beginning of Lent. Some of them I’m doing better on than others. One of my intentions was to spend more time in prayer, but I’m not too sure I’ve been following through on that one as I should.
- Have your child grocery shop with you. Help him pick a less expensive food (perhaps breakfast cereal) than he usually eats. Collect the saved money during the rest of Lent then help your child donate the money to a needy organization.
- Have your child make a list of ways that she could aid members of your family. You could post it on the frig or bulletin board, and she can check off her kind deeds.
- Have your child make a list of ways that he could aid students and teachers at school. Again, you can post it in a prominent place and celebrate his loving acts with him.
- Help your child sort through her clothes and toys. She could donate gently worn/used items to a homeless shelter.
Newbery Honor Author — Ingrid Law
The American Library Association has a short video interview with Newbery Honor author, Ingrid Law, talking about her wonderful book, SAVVY. To find out more about SAVVY, read my review of it along with another super fantasy story, THE GIRL WHO COULD FLY.