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Maywood Community School

I’d like to send a sincere thank you to Brenda Hain, librarian extraordinaire, and to all the staff and students at Maywood Community School in Burnaby. I spent the last couple of days in
Brenda’s library, meeting her intermediate students, and talking about books. It was an amazing time! Thank you to everyone for your kind welcome, and your great enthusiasm. You have a very special school.

I loved the art on your school walls! The mural shown above is a tree formed from the hand prints of all the students in the school. The tree trunk is composed of prints of the students’ forearms. The tree is representative of the feeling of the school — that everyone is included and important.
Lovely!

Joyful Jan!

We’ve reached the final installment in my Phoenix profile series. 

Introducing… Jan Keese, Iowa Teacher of the Year for 2007! 
Jan is a 3rd Grade teacher with enormous passion and dedication. She is so passionate, in fact, that she received the top teacher award for her state, and had the great honour of going to the White House to receive her award from the President of the United States. (Jan’s on the right.)
Jan spent the fall using our books in her classroom, and creating writing and literacy activities to accompany them. She brought stacks of writing projects from her students, and shared her results with the assembled audience. We were so impressed!
If you’d like to read about the Teacher of the Year program, go here. If you’d like to be moved by the power of an excellent teacher, check out Jan’s video called “Why I Teach” here. Get out your hanky!
That wraps up my series, unless there are any audience members who’d like to send me their photos of the day. If so, I’ll post them on this blog if you email them to me.
Thanks for reading! Cheers!

Lively Linda!

Linda Bailey was a key member of our Phoenix symposium, and she is the clever, funny author of picture books, novels and nonfiction, all of which have enormous “kid-appeal.” These days, she is probably best known for her Stanley books, the stories about the goofy canine named Stanley, who has a series of funfilled adventures with his doggy pals. The photo here shows Linda with her golden retriever, Sophie, the real-life dog who was the inspiration for Stanley.

Linda and I have been friends for a long time, and I have had the great privilege of having had a ringside seat to her active imagination and creative process, as she worked through her many books. In addition, she was the one, so many years ago, who first urged me to send a manuscript to a publisher. I might never have been brave enough to do that without her encouragement. Thank you, Linda! 🙂
Linda’s most recent Stanley book, Stanley’s Beauty Contest, is newly on the bookstore shelves. I urge you to seek it out. And, if you’d like to find out more about Linda and her charming books, please check her website here.
Cheers!

Ticket to the IRA…

I’m taking a brief interlude in my profiles of presenters from the Phoenix symposium to explain how we all got to go to the IRA conference last weekend. 

Margriet Ruurs had the excellent idea of proposing our symposium day to the IRA selection committee, and then asked us all if we’d be willing to participate. (Wasn’t she brave?!!!) Once Margriet’s proposal was accepted, there was a flurry of activity as the 6 of us prepared slide-show presentations for the day.

Some of us were able to get some financial support from our publishers to attend (a big thank you to Kids Can Press and Tundra Books!), but most of us flew on our own airline points, paid for our own hotels and spoke for free. Why would we do this? Times are tough in the publishing biz, and it’s really up to authors and illustrators to do a lot of their own promotion these days. Margriet, clever woman that she is, saw a great opportunity for us to share our books with an audience of amazing literacy specialists and reading teachers. 
It was a wonderful day, and I am thrilled to have taken part, and would do so again in a heartbeat. If you’re an author, and keen to go to the IRA, do what Margriet did. Send in a proposal, and get speaking!
For all of you dedicated, reading enthusiasts who were in the audience: It was a real treat to meet you! Thanks so much for kindly (and enthusiastically!) spending the day with us.
Check back soon for the final two profiles: Lively Linda (Bailey) and Joyful Jan (Keese).
So long for now!

Sensational Sara!

Sara Holbrook was the engaging, talented poet in our group at the Phoenix IRA. She performed her poems throughout the day, with tremendous energy and finesse. I was touched by her sensitivity to difficult issues in children’s lives, and the way she is able to teach kids to use poetry in a powerful way to express themselves. 

As well as being a marvellous poet, she is a gifted educator, and was able to lead us through a fascinating (and fun!) poetry writing exercise. To find out more about Sara and her clever poems, please check her website here. Some of her poetry collections are titled, The Dog Ate My Homework, Am I Naturally This Crazy, and I Never Said I Wasn’t Difficult.
It was a pleasure and privilege to meet Sara and see her perform her poetry. She really inspired me!

More about our other symposium partners to come soon. Cheers!

Magnificent Mary!

Mary Casanova was another amazing author on our program in Phoenix. I hadn’t met her before, but was charmed by her books — some 25 of them, including award-winning novels and picture books. Many of her books have a wilderness theme, no doubt influenced by her living on the Minnesota-Canadian border. 

I was intrigued by her question: “When does a picture book become poetry?” And, in fact, her picture books read like poetry. I especially enjoyed hearing about two books: “Utterly Otter Day” and “One-Dog Canoe.” 
Mary has a masterful way with written language, and each word in her picture books was carefully chosen to give the maximum impact in meaning and sound. She also exhibits a delightful sense of humour that I really enjoyed. If you’d like to read more about Mary, check out her website here.

I’ll be posting about our other panel members over the next few days. Check back soon. 
Cheers!

Marvellous Margriet!


Our symposium in Phoenix turned out to be an amazing celebration of books and literacy. Everyone in the room was clearly a keen champion of kids and reading. I can’t imagine meeting a more dedicated group of people anywhere! 

For the next few posts, I’m going to feature a single author from the symposium and tell you a little bit about her books. Today, I’ll start with Margriet Ruurs, who may be the biggest champion of literacy that I’ve ever met. Margriet organized the day and lined up the 5 authors and 1 teacher of the year to speak. She coordinated us all, and put our slideshows on her computer, then acted as MC for the day-long workshop. She was an incredible trouble-shooter (both with the technology and in any other little glitches that popped up) and a tirelessly optimistic host. I told her she was a force of nature. And she was!
Margriet has written some 25 books for children, many of them about nature and fictional animals, and she travels the world, speaking at reading conferences, schools and libraries. Wherever she goes, she carries her message of the importance of reading. Tomorrow, she is on her way to China and Burma for 5 weeks to speak at international schools. In addition to writing and speaking, she has created a global book exchange program, as well as coordinating book donations for needy schools around the globe. 
One of my favourite books by Margriet is called, “My Librarian is a Camel: How Books are Brought to Children Around the World.” In essence, it’s a photo essay that shows mobile libraries in remote parts of the world. These libraries move from place to place in remarkable ways: by bus, boat, elephant, donkey and more! These unusual libraries are often the only way that people in remote areas such as in Thailand, Mongolia or Azerbaijan can access books. I really wish I had written that book! I also really wish I’d seen those libraries. (Do you detect a note of professional jealousy? 🙂
I’ve got a lot to learn from Margriet: fearless traveller, bold optimist, and the best darn promoter of literacy that she is.
If you’d like to find about more about Margriet and her books, please check her website here.
Check back soon to hear about the other authors at our symposium. Cheers!

Symposium Handouts

This note is for those of you who attended our symposium at the Phoenix IRA last Saturday (and anyone else who’s interested). 

When we ran out of my printed handouts on writing & publishing, and curriculum activities to accompany my books, I promised to email copies to anyone who wished them. I spent this afternoon sending these out, but alas, some of the emails have bounced back. If you are someone who is hoping to receive a copy of the handouts and didn’t, please email me and I will get them to you ASAP. Send your message to: deborah@deborahhodge.com.

More to come on the conference soon. 
Cheers!

Phoenix Highlights

I’m back from Phoenix, which I’m pleased to report, was a sensational experience! Over the next few days, I’ll jot down some detailed thoughts about the weekend conference (and will post some photos), but for now, I’ll list a few highlights. 

Highlights:
* Meeting the amazing folks in our audience: dedicated literacy specialists, teachers and reading coaches from all over North America. I couldn’t imagine a more passionate, committed group of reading enthusiasts anywhere. 
* Hearing the other authors on the program talk about their books. Wow! They were inspiring.
* Feeling the warm sun on my waterlogged Vancouver skin
Surprises:
* Phoenix folks were wearing sweaters and jackets. They thought it was cold!
* Hearing the Phoenix radio announcer say that in the chilly Canadian city that Obama visited (Ottawa), people ice-skate to work.
* Picking an orange growing in a tree outside my hotel.
I’ll post again in the next day or two, with more thoughts on the conference, but for now I’d like to send a heartfelt thank you to the wonderful folks who attended our symposium, and shared their thoughts on teaching, children’s books and their love for reading. Thank you, thank you!

Phoenix Bound!


My Keynote presentation is finished, my bathing suit is bought, my bags are (almost) packed, and my passport is at the ready. I’m flying to sunny Phoenix tomorrow to speak at the International Reading Association conference with my pals and fellow authors, Linda Bailey and Margriet Ruurs. (See my earlier post here to refresh your memory.) Wish us luck!

I’ll post a full report on my return. 🙂

Cheers!