Stacey Loscalzo

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Dec 15

Our Tiny Dancer

by Stacey

This weekend was Katherine’s Holiday Show. When she began her journey in to the world of dance, I truly thought it would be a blip on the radar. Rob and I have no (and mean no!) rhythm and Caroline’s foray in to the dance world revealed that she very much takes after her parents in the rhythm department.

Therefore you can imagine our surprise when Katherine began to truly love dancing. For awhile, I thought her love affair would not last but we are years in to this journey with no signs of stopping. You can’t help but feel happy when you watch Katherine on the stage. Her joy is contagious.

DSCN0944Last weekend, I sat and looked over the schedule for the week and was overwhelmed. There were a ton of rehearsals and long, long days ahead of us.

DSCN0945It all seemed like it was going to be a bit much and in truth, our weekend was filled with rehearsals and shows, with late nights and sore feet. But it was also filled with friends and teamwork, and lots and lots of dedication.

IMG_5914If truth be told, I used to agree with the people who thought that the real athletes played sports and the rest of the girls danced. The more time I spend with dancers and the more closely I watch the older girls, I understand just how strong and flexible and truly talented these girls are.

IMG_5905I feel really lucky to have joined a world that was completely unfamiliar to me and to see a side of dance that I never would have seen were it not for our favorite tiny dancer.

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Dec 10

This House Needs a Mouse: A Review

by Stacey

Every so often I receive a request from an author or publicist to review a book. I usually decline because I truly want the books that I feature in this space to be of my choosing. I worry that if I review books that were suggested to me, I might loose some of the authenticity that I value in my reviews.

So needless to say, when Alison from Writing and Wishing reached out to me about This House Needs a Mouse, I took a little bit to decide.

After previewing the book, I decided that it was a pretty great story so here we go.
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This House Needs a Mouse begins with a mother’s search for a family mouse that will eat all the crumbs in their house. As time passes, the family outgrows their house with a mouse and must move on. When a new family  moves in, they are not pleased with their inherited rodent and seek out a cat to take care of their  perceived problem. As it turns out this is not a mouse who will go away easily and over time, the family comes to appreciate the mouse for who he is. In the end, people and rodents live happily ever after.

From the author:

A beautifully illustrated children’s book with a difference, This House Needs A Mouse is a fun tale of a mouse who seeks a life outside of his caged existence, and through a series of events, finds himself free and experiencing life with all its ups and downs. It’s not just a read-along for your child, this book aimed at 3 to 8 year olds, is a teaching tool for budding readers and writers. Filled with mentor text such as alliteration, vivid verbs and purposeful repetition to name a few, This House Needs A Mouse is educational and delightful.”

This House Needs A Mouse is available now on the book’s websiteAmazonBarnes and Noble, and Big Tent Books.”

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Dec 08

Give Books as Gifts? Yes, You Can!

by Stacey

 

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A few years ago, I gave a presentation at our local community school called “Give Books as Gifts? Yes You Can!” I then turned the presentation in to an article and it was featured in a few regional parenting publications. The other day, I wondered if I had ever posted the article here and a search reveals that strangely, I had not.

This seems like a pretty good time to remind everyone that books really do make awesome gifts. I have a few posts on my mind about specific titles for both children and adults that are upcoming but for today, I thought I would share the basics of why it actually is cool to give books as gifts!

Give Books as Gifts? Yes, You Can!

Did you know that there is a positive correlation between the amount of print in a child’s home and their independent reading level? While simply having more books in the house will not make your child a better reader, it does help. The U.S. Department of Education’s National Assessment of Educational Progress found that children with a high interest in books have, on average, 80.6 books in the home while children with a low interest in reading have only 31.7 books.

These statistics may convince grown ups that giving books is a good idea but the books must still be fun for the children.

Gift givers should remember to:

Give books that are easy to read: Children, like adults, enjoy reading easy books and books that are just right for their reading level. Children do not enjoy or benefit educationally from reading books that are too hard. Gift giving is not an ideal time to challenge a child. Let teachers do that and give gifts that are fun. For a child to truly comprehend a book, they must read it with 98% accuracy so choose books a child can read on their own.

While reading easy books, children can focus on meaning and enjoy humor or suspense while gaining ‘mileage’ as readers. They can process many words and build up rapid word recognition. And most importantly, while reading easy books, children are happy and that’s what reading and gift giving are all about.

Find great books on a child’s reading level at Scholastic Book Wizard. Enter the title of a book that your child can read easily, determine its level and then search for other titles at the same level.

Give new books, not just your old favorites: Like it or not, children do judge books by their covers. Adults often fall back on books they liked as children when giving gifts but this is not always the best idea. While many books have stood the test of time, there are also wonderful new titles available that appeal to today’s children.

To find new titles, get to know a few children’s literature book bloggers. Occasional visits to a few blogs will help you to know the current titles that children will love. Betsy Bird at Fuse #8 Productions, Jules Danielson at Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast, Travis Jonker of 100 Scope Notes, Jen Robinson at Jen Robinson’s Book Page  and Colby Sharp at Sharpreads consistently recommend great books.

If you prefer looking for titles between the covers of a book, try A Family of Readers edited by Roger Sutton and Martha Parravano for some great, current recommendations.

Give different types of books: Different kids like different types of books. Often a child who doesn’t like to read is the child who has only been presented with one type of book. Some children love the stories held in fiction while other, more fact loving types need non-fiction to enjoy the reading process. Still others will develop a love of poetry if it is presented in a fun way. See the side bar for a list of current books in different categories.

All children love receiving toys as gifts but if given well, books can be equally popular. When receiving books, children can have a good time and sneak in a little bit of learning without even knowing they are doing it. With just a bit of thought and planning children can shake a present and say, “Yeah! Another book!”

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Dec 03

A Photo Walk: Books Before Bed Style

by Stacey

There are lots of times that I wonder what I was thinking by agreeing to be our home and school president this year. Last night was not one of those times.

I love a good book fair so a well run Books Before Bed is pretty much one of my favorite things on the planet. Thanks to an amazing book fair committee and a super supportive principal, our gym was hopping with readers last night.

I thought I would let you in on the fun!

DSCN0906In previous years, we have set up the book fair in a hallway but this year, we expanded to the gym. It felt like our very own store!

DSCN0911Our principal came to read, jammies and all. She had the kids laughing, chatting and super involved with a great reading of Hevre Tullet’s , Press Here.

DSCN0912I loved seeing all the sleep time styles.

And then there are my favorites.

Children pouring over books together.

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And one little girl, so caught up in her book, that she was able to ignore all the noise around her.

DSCN0916Happy reading everyone!

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Dec 01

Favorite Picture Books: This Week’s Adventures

by Stacey

We read some really fun books over the past week. Let us know if you have read and loved any of these or if you have others to share. We love to watch our ‘to be read pile’ grow. 19156006

Sebastian and the Balloon by Philip C. Stead tells the sweet story of a little boy who sets off in a hot air balloon to “see something new for a change.” Along the way, he makes new friends and has many exciting adventures.

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The Iridescence of Birds by Patricia MacLachlan with pictures by Hadley Hooper paints a simple description of Henri Matisse’s many childhood inspirations. The colors in the book make you want to run right out and grab a set of paints.

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Maple and Willow Together by Lori Nichols is a perfect sister story. These sisters love each other, fight and then make it all right. The story felt so true to life as the mom of two lovable sisters.

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Take Away the A by Michael Escoffier and Kris DiGiacomo may be my favorite current alphabet book. I tend to dislike alphabet books if truth be told but this one is so smart, you just can’t help but love it. I’l just give you a little preview… Did you know, for example that with the D, a dice makes ice? Me neither but now you do!

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This Books Just Ate My Dog by Richard Byrne is laugh out loud funny. The book does indeed eat a dog along with many other things and it is up to you, the reader, to rescue the victims from the book’s grasp.

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The Best Book in the World by Rilla has gorgeous illustrations and lovely language about the power of books. That said, this may be a book loved more by the grown ups than the children. I couldn’t get enough of it but Katherine wasn’t so sure. Perhaps I just shouldn’t have read it right after This Book Just Ate My Dog.

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Wednesday by Anne Bertier is a genius of a book. It is part art inspiration, part reminder to work together and part fun. Follow the adventures of a square and a circle as they transform themselves and their day in to a big adventure.

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Hug Me by Simona Ciraolo tells the tale of a cactus who looks for love in all the wrong places until he finds the perfect friend.

 

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Nov 26

Picture Books: Our Favorites This Week

by Stacey

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Flora and the Penguin is the amazing wordless tale of a dance between a girl, a penguin and a fish. And yes, that is a good thing.

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The Girl and the Bicycle is another wordless book. This time a story is told of wanting, planning and generosity.

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100 Things that Make Me Happy left us wanting to write our own list. And maybe take a stab at rhyming them all as well!

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Where’s Mommy? has appeared on many best of and mock Caldecott lists and I know why. The story is fun and the illustrations are incredible. The illustrator creates amazing little worlds on the pages.

 

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Nov 24

What I’m…

by Stacey

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Watching…

Homeland: I was worried because the beginning of this season was a bit bothersome but I’m in love again.

The Affair: I am intrigued by this show in general and by it’s format in particular. The two sides of the same story are fascinating. It’s always amazing how different people view the same event. This show is especially fun for me because we were in Amagansett when it was filming.

Modern Family: We are watching this one as a family which is super fun. Well, it was super fun except for the episode when Phil’s father brought home a prostitute. That was super awkward.

Listening to…

Serial: I have been listening to this podcast when I run and I am hooked. Week by week, an NPR reporter tells of her experience investigating an old murder case. The serial (get it!?) nature of the telling makes it super exciting to follow.

Reading… 

Unbroken: I read this for my book club. I didn’t finish in time for our meeting on Friday and I’m honestly having a bit of a hard time getting back in to it. That said, I’m glad I’m reading it and I do think I will finish.

Wearing… 

Last week it was in the 20s and 30s. The beginning of this week it will be close to 70 and then on Wednesday it might snow. So, my outfits have been a bit all over the place. My go to, when the weather allows, is a Gap Bowery tee-shirt (these tees are so soft!), a cardigan, Lucky Lolita Boot Cut  jeans (the best fitting jeans I’ve had in years!) and my most favorite leopard print flats. When the temperatures drop, I’m forced in to skinny jeans and tall boots to keep myself warm but I am nowhere near as comfy.

Eating…

I went back and searched for old posts in this series and one I wrote in the spring talked about how much sugar I was eating. That time, I blamed it on the overlap of Easter and my birthday. Now, I can blame Halloween. I’m going to try again to cut back this week. We’ll see how that goes…

 

 

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Nov 20

Picture Book Month & The Common Core

by Stacey

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I love that November is Picture Book Month and that there is an entire web site devoted to it. I have received daily e-mail updates this month alerting me to new posts written by favorite children’s book authors all titled, “Why Picture Books Are Important To Me.”

In all honestly, I have been crazy busy this month (see my post from Monday titled The Disease of Being Busy) and have been keeping most of these posts to side to read when I ‘have more time.’ I have skimmed many of them but today was the first time I read a post completely all the way to the bottom.

The post was written by one of my absolute favorite authors, Marla Frazee. After telling a beautiful story about reading a picture book aloud in the book store to her college age son (at his request!), she ends with this, “It was magical. The book. The shared moment. The seared memory. That’s why picture books are important.”

And then I scrolled down and saw a section titled, Curriculum Connections. There was a great lesson presented. At first, I was a bit taken off guard, thinking that this site celebrated the love of picture books not the use of them in our curriculum. That said, though, I am an educator so I do love that there is a great way to introduce Frazee’s latest, The Farmer and the Clown, to a classroom of kids.

At this point though, I had a feeling about what was coming next and it wasn’t a great feeling. I scrolled down slowly waiting to see if my suspicion was correct. It was. At the very bottom of the post I read this, “Correlates to the Common Core Reading Literature standards:RL.K.1,3,7,10; RL.1.1,3,7; RL.2.1,3,7″

Sigh.

I suppose it is the way we are all going. Like it or not. And truthfully, there are parts of the Common Core that I like. But I don’t like there are standards listed at the bottom of a post about the love of the picture book.

I love and respect the woman behind the Picture Book Month site. Elizabeth Dulemba writes gorgeous books and is an amazing mentor to other writers. Katie Davis is the genius behind multiple picture books and the incredible podcast Brain Burps About Books. In fact, I attended an amazing retreat with Katie a few years back and was incredibly inspired by her energy, creativity and intelligence. She is a gift to the children’ literature world. Wendy Martin is talented illustrator who I admittedly don’t know too much about but if she’s friends with Elizabeth and Katie than I’m sure she’s awesome.

So why?

I would love to understand the reasoning behind putting these standards in their posts. If I was sitting with the founders of Picture Book Month over coffee I would ask. I would ask if they felt that a love for the book wasn’t enough? Rhetorical question, I am sure. And I would inquire if they were asked by teachers to include the standards? Maybe?

So I’d love to know what you all think? Do we truly live in an age when loving picture books is no longer enough? I often threaten to buy a house boat and sail around the world, homeschooling our girls. I don’t think this is really the thing that will push me to buy the boat but it might be on my list…

Thoughts?

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