08-11-03 or 1179

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From: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults and Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
To: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults and Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Sent: Monday, August 11, 2003 11:01 PM
Subject: PUBYAC digest 1179

PUBYAC Digest 1179

Topics covered in this issue include:
1) Juv Online Database Recommendations
by "deborah campbell" <deborah_campbell@hotmail.com>
2) Teen Stumper
by Sherrie_Wilson@ci.longmont.co.us
3) book club help needed
by melissa.carr@kanawha.lib.wv.us
4) stumper - Silent Night & mouse story
by Charlette Jouan <cmjouan@yahoo.com>
5) Reminder - Teen Advisory Group Survey
by "Tracey Firestone" <tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us>
6) Christmas Card craft compilation (long)
by Susan Fisher <sfisher@lib.williamson-tn.org>
7) Stumper -- Friendship between young girl and old woman
by "Katrina Neville" <KatrinaN@moval.org>
----------------------------------------------------------------------
From: "deborah campbell" <deborah_campbell@hotmail.com>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Juv Online Database Recommendations
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Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:45:48 CDT
Hi All,
I'm starting to run out of space for reference books and would like some
recommendations of online databases that are better than their print
counterparts. In particular I'm interested in reference works that are used
more by staff than by the public (like A to Zoo or a good poetry index,
etc). Please respond to the email below and I'll compile a list if there's
an interest.
Thanks for all your help!!
Deborah Campbell
Youth Services Coordinator
Loveland Public Library
campbd@ci.loveland.co.us
_________________________________________________________________
MSN 8 with e-mail virus protection service: 2 months FREE*
http://join.msn.com/?page=features/virus
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From: Sherrie_Wilson@ci.longmont.co.us
To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org
Subject: Teen Stumper
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Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:45:56 CDT
A patron is looking for a book published in the 70's, teen girls at a
slumber party make prank calls saying, "I know what you did last summer",
but it's not I Know What You Did Last Summer or The Pigman. Any ideas would
be appreciated.
Thanks!
________________________
Sherrie Wilson
Teen Services Coordinator
Longmont Public Library
Longmont, CO 80501
(303) 651-8891
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From: melissa.carr@kanawha.lib.wv.us
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: book club help needed
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Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:46:05 CDT
Hello. I was wondering if anyone has started a book club for children
ages 8-12 and if so, how do you present the book talk. Do you also do
activities such as crafts with the book talk? Has it been a success?
Any and all information is greatly appreciated.
thanks
melissa
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From: Charlette Jouan <cmjouan@yahoo.com>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: stumper - Silent Night & mouse story
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Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:46:14 CDT
Hi Everyone,
I hope you can help a patron of mine. She's looking
for a book retelling the story of the song Silent
Night. It's the same story told in Silent Night : a
Mouse Tale by Betsy Hernandez, but it's not this book.
Basically, it's Christmas time and a starving eats the
leather of the bellows on the piano(?) and as a result
the community can't play the Christmas songs. The
song Silent Night is composed so that it can be sung
without musical accompaniment.
If you have any ideas, please respond to me off-list
at cjouan@wcpl.lib.oh.us
Thanks in advance for your help.
Charlette Jouan
 
__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free, easy-to-use web site design software
http://sitebuilder.yahoo.com
------------------------------
From: "Tracey Firestone" <tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us>
To: <tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us>
Subject: Reminder - Teen Advisory Group Survey
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:46:22 CDT
Dear Listserv Members:
A week ago today we announced that YALSA is designing a web site for Teen
Advisory Groups (TAGS); to meet the needs of those whose groups are already
running and those who are thinking of forming such a group in the future.
In order to tailor the web site to meet the widest range of needs, YALSA's
TAGS Task Force seeks your input via an online survey.
Please, if you have not already, take a few moments of your time to complete
the short survey, available at http://www.leonline.com/yalsa/tagssurvey.html
until Friday, August 15th. Once the results have been compiled and
analyzed, you can look forward to an online resource that will assist you as
you work with your teens. We've already had over 475 people add their
voices, let yours be heard as well!
Thanks in advance for your assistance,
YALSA TAGS Task Force
********************************************
This message is from tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us
AKA: Tracey A. Firestone, MLS
Young Adult Specialist
YALSA's TAGS Task Force Chair
Suffolk Cooperative Library System
627 North Sunrise Service Rd
Bellport, NY 11713
Phone - 631-286-1600 x1352
FAX - 631-286-1647
Visit the YA Librarians' Homepage
http://yahelp.suffolk.lib.ny.us
------------------------------
From: Susan Fisher <sfisher@lib.williamson-tn.org>
To: PUBYAC <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>
Subject: Christmas Card craft compilation (long)
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Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:46:31 CDT
Thanks for all the great ideas for crafts to make with old Christmas
cards. Here's the compilation of ideas:
One of our favorite things to do with recycled Christmas
cards is to make
bookmarks from them. We use our Ellison die cutter to
cut plain,
rectangular bookmarks with a hole in one end for kids to
add a ribbon. (You
could cut them by hand easily, too.) All of us have fun
figuring out which
part of the picture on the card will make the prettiest
bookmark and
positioning the die accordingly! If you use cards that
don't have anything
hand written on the back of the picture, there is a place
for whoever is
making the bookmark to add a name or simple holiday
message with stamps or
markers.
Have fun,
Betsy
Betsy Stroomer
A very simple craft, but a craft none the less:
As children, my mom would give us the fronts of old
Christmas cards and a small cup. We traced the cup on
the card with a pencil, then cut it out. With a hole
punch and some yarn, these circles became name tags
for the next year. They are big enough for smaller
children to write on them.
Good luck on your Christmas card crafts!
Charity Leonette
For younger children I use a hole punch and punch holes
around the card.
Then they can "stitch" around the edge with yarn and a
plastic darning
needle. Older kids I cut circles about 3 1/2" in
diameter, and fold the
edges in (towards the outside - good side) to form a
triangle in the center
(does that make sense?) Then they are glued edge to edge
to make a geodesic
dome. I don't recall how many cards it takes. For
in-between ages, we just
cut circles, fold them in half top to bottom and glue
several together with
a string in the middle to make a ball with "fins". This
can be adjusted in
simplicity by how many circles are used.
Carolyn
Town Hall Library
We've cut stocking shapes, punched holes on the edges and
did a lace a lace-up craft with red or green yarn. After
they're done, you can give each child a tiny candy cane
to put in their stocking. They can also be used as
ornaments.
Celeste Fong
Librarian
Ontario City Library
Colony High Branch
3850 E. Riverside Drive
Ontario, CA 91761-2603
Make ornaments. Cut #? circles (same size) from fronts.
Gule edges to
form kind of globe. It is on internet and crafts books.
Have to think
and no time, but cool craft. If interested, let me know
and I'll find
more. I plan to do it this year.
Christine Gogolowski
Y/YA Services Librarian
Trenton Veterans Memorial Library
Trenton, Michigan 48183
We made Chinese lanterns out of old Christmas cards.
Here's
how. Fold a card in half lengthwise and cut from the fold
to a 1/2
inch from the edge of the card. Cuts should be spaced
maybe 1/2
inch apart. Then open it up and tape together
lengthwise. Place
crumpled yellow tissue paper in lantern for flame. Add
string to
hang.
Merry Christmas!
Heather
 
Heather McCutchen
Children's Librarian
Forsyth County Public Library
660 West Fifth St
Winston-Salem, NC 2710
I just made a simple craft by cutting out animals and
shapes with a die-cut
machine and let the kids make a collage on construction
paper with a string
hanger. I was worried they might not recognize the
animals, but have no
fear, and if they don't you can turn them over. Also,
you don't have to
discard the religious cards.
There are a number of cheap, easy greeting card crafts in
Jumbo Book of Easy
Crafts: Kids Can Press 2001 by Judy Ann Sadler.
Julie Kant
Children's Librarian
I have done this simple craft with all ages. Save plastic lids from
margarine
tubs. Trace around the lid on the card and cut out the shape. Glue it
inside the
lid. Trim with lace or glue glitter around the inner edge. Punch a hole
in the top
of the lid and tie a ribbon through the hole for a hanger.
Lynda M. Gamble
Youth Services Librarian
Thank you! My compatriots here tell me frequently that they are tired of
me
planning so far ahead of them and making them look bad. Now I can tell
them someone is ahead of me, so they can stop complaining.
We once made tree ornaments from cards and t-paper tubes. Cut a two inch
piece of tube. Cut the top inch into five points,evenly spaced, like the
points
on a crown. Fold the points out to the side. You now have a round frame
with five star points. Paint it and glue it onto a card with some part
of the
picture showing through the frame, eg. a teddy's face, a stocking, etc.
When
the glue sets, cut away the excess card. Add a hanger for a tree
ornament or
a sticky magnet so it can go the fridge.
You can also make ornaments from circles cut from cards. Cut ten circles
of
the same diameter. Run a loop of yarn/string/ribbon through the center
of one
circle using a needle, set aside. Fold the other nine circles in half
taco shell
fashion and cut from the center of the crease toward the outer edge, but
NOT all the way through. Slide the folded circles, evenly spaced, onto
the
flat circle and spread open, like when you open a book to make it stand.
The
ornament is ready to hang by the loop you attached before.
Note: This craft requires NO GLUE!, and, hence, is very popular around
here, except that we do it with orange circles in the fall to make
pumpkins.
Hint: The cutter from a button making machine makes nice uniform
circles. If
the circles are precut, the children need only select their circles and
assemble. Another idea: Add a jingle bell to the hanging loop and the
finished
ornament will jingle.
Those are all the ideas that leapt to mind. It's too hot and muggy here
to do
much Christmas thinking.
Peg Siebert
Blodgett Library
Fishkill, NY
You can punch holes in the sides and tie them together
with yard or use tape
and create houses and villages with roofs, chimneys,
doors, and windows.
Peggy Odom
If you have access to an Ellison Machine they have some nice dies to cut
shapes out of the cards. I've cut little frames from card stock or fun
foam. Let
the kids decorate the frames and cut pictures out of the cards to use as
the
framed photo.
Cards also make nice bookmarks, tho this doesn't entail much creativity
on the
part of the child beyond maybe adding a ribbon.
One of the local scout troops made books out of the cards & donated them
to
daycare centers & the hospital.
I'm anxious to see others' ideas on this topic as I have LOTS of
Christmas cards
that people have donated.
Sally
 
We use old Christmas cards to make boxes. We stitch them
together with thread (red and green is nice) on all four
sides except for the top which we leave open on 3 sides.
Sheilah O'Connor
I saw this craft in a book here, I think, or perhaps a
magazine. I
haven't tried it yet myself, but it was so pretty. They
used those
clear glass "stones" people buy for fishtanks or vases,
and then traced
around them on cards to cut out specific things. Then
just glued that
piece of card to the glass stone, along with a piece of
ribbon to hang
it.
I think I would let the kids pick out the pictures and
stones, trace
and glue. Then I would attach the ribbon with a hot glue
gun to be sure
it held.
I found the larger clear glass stones at a local Dollar
Tree, and there
were about 20 in a bag for $1, so it's not expensive. I'm
not sure
about what glue to use, although I'd probably use the
quick-drying
tacky glue for this.
Susanna Holstein
Elk Valley Branch Library
Charleston, Wv
I have one but am afraid it might be difficult for little
ones. Are their
parents available to help?
You can make little shoe ornaments with cards, ribbon and
a single-hole
punch. I will try to send to the directions and pattern
this week but can't
guarantee as it is the last week of summer reading club
and both my
assistants are off this week. Yes, I know, that's crazy
but one is on
extended medical leave and the other her 25th wedding
anniversary. I'll get
my revenge next month.
Renee Tobin
I have an idea for using old christmas card to make tree
decorations.
Just have the kids cut out a picture from the old
Christmas card and
then glue a clothespin on the back which can then be used
to attach the
item to their Christmas tree.
 
 
--
Susan Fisher
Bethesda Public Library
4905 Bethesda Road
Thompson Station, TN 37179
615.790.1887
fax: 615.790.8426
sfisher@lib.williamson-tn.org
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From: "Katrina Neville" <KatrinaN@moval.org>
To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: Stumper -- Friendship between young girl and old woman
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Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 10:46:44 CDT
Help! I've been racking my brains trying to think of this title/author:
The book is about an African-American single mom and her daughter who =
move to rural South Carolina (?). Mom is at work most of the time, so =
the daughter befriends the old woman who lives at the end of the road. =
The old woman has a lot of cats. There is a scene in which the girl is =
visiting during a frightening storm. There is also a scene where all =
three go to a barbecuebrarty at the local juke joint. It is later =
discovered that the old woman's grandson, who had gone to Vietnam and =
was thought lost, is the girl's father and they are reunited toward the =
end of the story.
This is a chapter book, published only a year or so ago.
If you have any ideas, PLEASE email me at katrinaen@earthlink.net (this =
is a correct address -- I flaked last time!).
TIA,
Katrina
Katrina Neville
Children's Librarian
City of Moreno Valley
=20
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End of PUBYAC Digest 1179
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