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International Literacy Day, September 8: Why U.S. Children Should Understand the Privilege of an Education

3 Sep

On Monday, September 8, we will celebrate International Literacy Day.  Based on an old agrarian model, students in the United States will have just started back to school.  In our area of the country, the return to school usually coincides with the conclusion of the beach season.

U.S. students spend an average of 180 days per year in the classroom.  In the developed world, this places us very close to the bottom of the list for days of school attendance.  At the top of the list is China with 260 days and Japan with 243 days.

Over the summer, we have seen many Hoboken children come to the library to do their summer reading assignments. Motivated students showed up early in the summer and then continued to read independently through the rest of the break.  I am very proud to say that at least 207 students, this year, participated in the library’s Summer Reading Program and cumulatively logged 4367 hours of reading.  The library also promoted pre-school literacy by rewarding younger children for listening to at least ten books.  44 children took part in this program.  According to a document prepared by the New York State Library, “learning slide,” i.e., the loss of knowledge during the summer break period is mitigated by involvement in a library Summer Reading Program:  “Current research points out that increased summer reading reduces summer learning loss.  Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, has stated “A key step toward stopping the “summer slide”, is the development and launch of high quality programs that take advantage of time outside the school day and year to help children learn, grow, and develop” (Elling, 2009).”

It is important that U.S. children understand the privilege of having available to them a free education.  Certainly, there are school districts that perform better than others in the delivery of a top quality education, but the mere fact of an available education is something that is envied by many young people around the world.  International Literacy Day is an excellent opportunity to help your child understand the importance of having an educated and literate citizenry if we are to stand beside other countries that place great importance on educating their children.  One of the best ways to do this is to learn about children, around the world, who fight for the right to be educated.  Especially in the case of young women who are routinely denied the right to be educated in other nations, we must understand that education is a gift from generation to generation.  To quote Queen Rania of Jordan, “If you educate a woman, you educate a family, if you educate a girl, you educate the future.”

The following is a list of books and two recently released documentaries that will teach your children about the determination of many young people around the world to get an education and make a place for themselves as leaders of their communities, their countries, and the world:

Armando and the Blue Tarp School, by Edith Hope Fine and Judith Josephson.

armando-blue-tarp-school

Armando and his father work in Mexico as trash pickers.  Their job seems hopeless and the chance of elevating their station in life is an impossible dream.  Then, Senor David sets up a makeshift school covered by a blue tarp, right near the garbage dump.  Armando’s father resolves that his son will get an education and have a better life. Armando excels in art, and when a fire breaks out in their town, it is Armando’s pictures that bring attention to the town and gets outside support. (Picture Book/ Fiction)

Beatrice’s Dream: A Story of Kibera Slum, by Karen Lynn Williams.

beatrices-dream

Beatrice is a thirteen-year old girl who lives in a Nairobi shantytown.  Each day, she walks to school through mud and dirt.  Her goal is to become a nurse and help the people of her town, and her teachers at school encourage her to learn in an atmosphere of support and safety. (Middle Reader/Young Adult Fiction)

Beatrice’s Goat, by Paige McBrier.

beatrices-goat

Beatrice longs to go to school more than anything else.  However, she knows that school fees and uniforms cost more than her family can afford.  Then, Heifer International gives her a goat that was donated by an American family.  With this precious gift, Beatrice is able to raise the money she needs to have to enroll in school and help her family live a better life. (Picture Book/ Non-fiction)

If Kids Ran the World, by Leo and Diane Dillon.

if-kids-ran-the-world

This brand new entry from an award winning husband-and-wife author and illustrator team supposes a world where children are in charge.  With the optimism and idealism of childhood, the Dillons see a child-created world without hunger, with adequate housing, with available health care, with kindness to all, and education for every person. The book is filled with colorful, multi-ethnic illustrations and a sense that children have the ability to achieve this Utopia. (Picture Book/Fiction)

Malala Yousafzai and the Girls of Pakistan, by David Aretha.

malala-yousafzai

Following the success of the autobiographical book, I Am Malala, by Malala Yousafzai and Christine Lamb, this is a biography of Yousafzai, the young Pakistani girl whose fight for education set her at odds with the Taliban who tried to kill her in order to make an example of her.  In addition to telling the story of Malala’s brave recovery, the book traces the recent history of Pakistan and the conditions that have led to the suppression of education for young women. (Young Adult/ Non-Fiction)

My Name Is Parvana, by Deborah Ellis.

my-name-is-parvana

This is part of the award-winning series by Ellis called The Breadwinner about a young girl who disguises herself as a boy so that she can support her family after her father is imprisoned by the Taliban. In this installment, Parvana, now fifteen years old, continues to fight for an education even though going to school endangers her life under the Taliban regime. (Middle Reader/Young Adult Fiction)

Nasreen’s Secret School, by Jeanette Winter.

nasreens-secret-school

Nasreen is desolate when her parents disappear.  She has not spoken a word since their disappearance.  It is up to her grandmother to try to save Nasreen and she does this by enrolling her in a secret school.  In Nasreen’s Afghani village, girls are not allowed to attend school, so this is a courageous act on the part of Nasreen and her grandmother. Education helps Nasreen to heal and, eventually, to speak again. Illustrated with beautiful folk art pictures.  Based on a true story. (Juvenile/Middle Reader/ Non-Fiction)

Running Shoes, by Frederick Lipp.

running-shoes

When Sophia, a young Cambodian girl, wants to go to school, it requires an act of courage and determination.  In her village, there are few resources, and her father has just died.  Although she wants to continue in school, the trip must be made of foot and she does not have good shoes.  A compassionate social worker makes her a gift of a pair of running shoes that allow her to travel the rocky roads to school each day and continue her education.

A School Like Mine: A Unique Celebration of Schools Around the World, by Penny Smith and Zehovit Shalev.

school-like-mine

This book shows the commonalities and differences of how children attend school around the world.   Children of six continents are shown in their schools covering everything from village schools to urban schools, and rural schools to (American) home schools.  Many pictures illustrate the difference in environment and dress. (Juvenile Non-Fiction)

Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace One School at a Time, by Greg Mortenson.

three-cups-of-tea

In 1993, the author was hiking in the mountains of Pakistan when he became lost.  He was rescued and cared for by local villagers.  Vowing to repay them for their kindness, Mortenson set about creating an initiative to build schools both in Pakistan and Afghanistan.  The story is retold for younger children in the book, Listen to the Wind: the Story of Dr. Greg and the Three Cups of Tea,  also by Greg Mortenson with photos by Susan Roth. (Juvenile/ Non-Fiction)

In addition to the wealth of books highlighting the importance of education to young people around the world, learn more about the effort to empower young women through education in the following two documentaries:

Girl Rising, by Richard Robbins.

girl-rising

The Academy Award nominated filmmaker documents the journeys of nine courageous young women around the world as they fight to pull themselves out of poverty and, against all odds, attain an education.  The stories are voiced by nine well-known actors including Kerry Washington, Liam Neeson, Frieda Pinto, Alicia Keys, Chloe Grace Moretz, Salma Hayek, and Selena Gomez.

Half the Sky, directed by Maro Chermayoff and written by Michelle Ferrari.

half-the-sky

Inspired by the book of the same name by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn, This film travels around the world documenting the oppression of young women who are frequently sold into slavery or prostitution but who have managed to save themselves, and through courage and education, reach back and pull other women out of lives of poverty and abuse.

All of these books and films are available to you and your young people through the BCCLS library system.  Use your library card, this month, to exercise the gift of literacy from which we all benefit.

-Written by Lois Rubin Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian

Don’t Make Me Get My Flying Monkeys!

20 Aug

Scarecrow: I haven’t got a brain… only straw.

Dorothy: How can you talk if you haven’t got a brain?

Scarecrow: I don’t know… But some people without brains do an awful lot of talking… don’t they?

Dorothy: Yes, I guess you’re right.

2014 is the seventy-fifth anniversary of one of the most beloved movies of any generation: The Wizard of Oz.  Come to my house and there will be no doubt that a true Ozophile lives there.  My bookshelves contain copies of Baum’s original book, an amazing pop-up book based on the Oz story, Gregory Maguire’s arch and satirical “spin-off” Wicked, plus the three sequels telling the story of the Emerald City from the viewpoint of each of the major characters.  Since I am first and foremost a self-proclaimed Broadway Baby, you will find Elphaba’s Grimmerie, her magic spell book from the Broadway show, Wicked, and a pop-up book of the set design from the show.  Friends have gifted me with tiny dolls of the Witch, Dorothy, and the Tin Man.  I also own the DVD of the 1939 classic movie and a SYFY channel movie called, Tin Man, in which Zoe Deschanel of New Girl fame plays D.G., a Kansas farm girl who travels to a surreal Oz where she is befriended by Alan Cummings as her half-brained companion, Glitch, and Richard Dreyfuss plays a seriously scurrilous Wizard.

1939, the year that The Wizard of Oz was released, was arguably the most important year in Hollywood’s long history.  During that epic year, six films of note were released by studios: The Wizard of Oz, Gone with the Wind, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and John Ford’s Stagecoach.

With all that greatness, The Wizard of Oz (which did not win the Oscar for its year) is a TV perennial.  As a child, I waited anxiously for the annual showing of the movie on TV, and marveled as the screen turned from dull black and white to glorious Technicolor.  My sisters, old enough to see the film in the theatre, were taken out when the Wicked Witch appeared, scaring them into tears.  My mother never forgave them the wasted price of admission.

However, it all started with a failed businessman named Lyman Frank Baum, born in the Finger Lakes region of NY who moved to the American prairie where he failed to make his fortune but did create the only genuine American fairy tale for children.  Here is a partial list of books about the Oz, the movie, the author, and more, that you will want to explore from the comfort of your “no place like home.”

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum with illustrations by W.W. Denslow.

wonderful-wizard-of-oz

This was the first of some forty Oz-related books written by Baum.  If this is the first time you’ve actually read the books, you will be struck by the fact that, while designed as children’s fantasies, they are actually somewhat scary for the youngest readers. The story is somewhat different from the movie that we all know, but the bones are the same.  One iconic item that was changed was Dorothy’s slippers.  In the book they are silver.

The Wizard of Oz: The Official 75th Anniversary Companion, by William Stillman and Jay Scarfone.

wizard-of-oz-75

All the trivia you ever wanted to know about the movie is encompassed in this coffee table sized volume.  You’ll learn that Shirley Temple was the original choice for Dorothy, but her studio would not lend her out.  So, MGM used Judy Garland, but bound her breasts to make her look younger.  Buddy Ebsen (later made famous in The Beverly Hillbillies) was originally cast as the Tin Man, but developed a severe, life-threatening allergy to the silver make-up he had to wear.  The book includes dialogue, movie cards, and still photography of the original set.  It is a must-have for anyone who treasures the movie.

The Wizard of Oz: A Commemorative Pop-Up Book, illustrated by Robert Sabuda.

wizard-of-oz-popup

Sabuda is the undeniable master of paper engineering and this tribute to the Emerald City is beyond compare.  Included in the book is a pair of green-tinted glasses for viewing the wonders of the Emerald City in its original green.  Open the book to see a tornado rise from the book in all of its three-dimensional glory, as well as a gorgeous pop-up of the Emerald City itself.  The story is abridged, but the illustrations are somewhat faithful to the Denslow originals.  This is a book that is a perfect gift for older children because it is easily destructible.

The Wizard of Oz: A Scanimation Book, by Rufus Seder.

wizard-of-oz-scanimation

Another unique interpretation of Oz in another unusual format.  Scanimation books make the pictures move as children open and close the pages.  Seder takes ten memorable scenes from the story and turns them into an amazing, moving volume.

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by Eric Shanawer.

wizard-of-oz-graphic

This is one of the newest interpretations of the Oz fantasy.  This time it is done in graphic novel, the updated version of comic books.  Just as Classic Comics introduced another generation to stories that might be beyond their reading levels, graphic novels serve the purpose of engaging “short attention span” readers with the wonderful story in a densely illustrated version.

The Real Wizard of Oz: The Life and Times of L. Frank Baum, by Rebecca Loncraine.

real-wizard-of-oz

This faithful, well-researched biography of the author of the original Oz books traces his origins in the Finger Lakes region of New York, to his adult life as a failed businessman in the Midwest.  In fact, his book was something of a social satire, with the Emerald City imitating the Chicago World’s Fair and the Witches of Oz bowing to his suffragette wife and mother-in-law.  Although his books have had long-lasting success, he was treated as a joke and a failure by the fledgling motion picture industry when they tried to make the book into a movie, the first time.

Over the Rainbow, illustrated by Eric Puybaret, based on the song by Harold Arlen and E.Y. (Yip) Harburg.

over-the-rainbow

This book and CD set brings the iconic song to life with folk art and ethereal graphic interpretations of the lyrics.  The CD that accompanies the book includes the song as performed by folk singer, Judy Collins instead of the original Judy Garland version.  It also includes the little sung verse of the song.  A wonderful book for one-on-one sharing with your favorite child.

Wicked, by Gregory Maguire.

wicked

I’ll admit that this fleshed-out, political satire based on Oz is an acquired taste, but it is contemporary fantasy at its very best.  Maguire extends the original story of the denizens of Oz before Dorothy came on the scene, focusing on Galinda (later Glinda) and Elphaba Thropp, the misunderstood daughter of the Governor of Munchkinland.  If you have seen the Broadway show loosely based on this book, you will be surprised by all that was left out to create the on-stage spectacle.  However, the book is a whole different creation as the politics of Oz and the Wizard’s actual evil persona casts Elphaba as a freedom-fighter for the rights of Animals.  This is the first in a series of books by Maguire, each telling the story from a different character’s viewpoint.  IMHO, this is the strongest and best of the series, although the satire in the second book, Son of a Witch, is a nearly undisguised commentary on the presidency of George W. Bush and a bittersweet representation of a gay romance.

This is a short list of all the Oz related books in print and available through the BCCLS library system.  Anyone yearning for the Emerald City need only click their heels and take out their library card to travel beyond the stars and the clouds, over the rainbow.

-Written by Lois Rubin Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian