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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: interaction, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. First the Egg

The

Title: First the Egg

Author and Illustrator: Laura Vaccaro Seeger

Hardcover: 32 pages

Publisher: Roaring Book Press (September 2007) 

Reading Level: Preschool

Theme: Science, Interaction, Read-aloud, Informative

What came first? The Chicken or the Egg? Laura  Vaccaro Seeger tries to answer the question in this interactive book. What caught my attention was the cover; simple yet vibrant. As you begin to read and go through the book, you can't help but touch the small die cuts . The story is very simple and revolves around science. Perfect for young readers!

The story first starts with, "First the Egg" and it explains the transformation it takes; not only for the egg, but this is done for the tadpole, seed, caterpillar, and a word. Like I said before, a very simple and cute book that indulges in many colors.

Enjoy!



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2. Entering the Fray

by Jessica

I didn’t actually make it to the O’Reilly Tools of Change Conference, which took place here in New York earlier this week, but between assorted bloggers, tweets and handy You Tube posts, plus the actual eyewitness reports of colleagues and friends, I was something of a virtual attendee. No doubt actual conference-goers will say that I missed the frisson of excitement coursing through the event (so many smart people assembled to discuss the publishing’s digital future must mean that there is money to be made!), but I feel I’ve gained reasonable insight into the discussion, and if you are so inclined, said insight can be yours as well. For a handy overview have a look at this PW article.

You might then check out social media guru Chris Brogan discussing on-line audience building for authors, or Ariana Huffington, delivering a keynote address entitled “Publishing is Dead, Long Live Publishing.” She makes a good, albeit not entirely new, point that the digital space allows readers a heretofore-unimaginable degree of engagement with the written word. Thanks to the magic of the Internet, readers are now able to join the conversation, to participate in the greater cultural discourse in a direct, visible and sometimes influential way. All to the good, I say, though I must admit that for all the reading I do online, I rarely comment on articles, even those that move me to paroxysms of delight or fits of fury. (Theoretically, these fits should no longer happen, as my on-line reading choices should, as studies indicate, lead me into an echo chamber of like-minded thinkers. I must be following the wrong links, because I still find plenty to infuriate.)

And while I know this question is necessarily self-selecting for its respondents, I wonder how often you weigh in on your favorite sites? Where? I’ve no shortage of opinions, but somehow, aside from this blog, I’ve not developed the habit of expressing them in any google-able format. I suppose I’m a reader/lurker, but in keeping with the exhortations of the Tools of Change cheerleaders, I plan to make a more concerted effort to enter the fray.

3 Comments on Entering the Fray, last added: 2/26/2010
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3. 3 Generations of Grouchiness: The Grandmother Doll

The Grandmother DollAuthor: Alice L. Bartels
Illustrator: Duscan Petricic
Published: 2001 Annick Press
ISBN: 1550376667 Chapters.ca Amazon.com

Finally, a little dysfunction!! With all the stomps, sneers and slams you would expect on the third day of influenza-induced confinement, the candor of this warm, magical story is a rare and welcome treat.

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