Tag Archives: storytimes

Pajama Story Time

pjThree of our branches begin offering a drop in pajama story time on Monday, June 10. The story times are in the evening, so put your little ones in their PJs and bring them to the library for stories, rhymes, and songs! All of these sessions are drop in so no pre-registration is necessary.

The Amelia Branch story time begins at 6:30 p.m. Attendees ages 0-6 are invited for stories, songs, and crafts with their parent or caregiver. For more information, call the library at 752-5580.

The Felicity Branch story time starts at 6:00 p.m. Attendees ages 0-6 are invited for stories, songs, rhymes, games and crafts each week. For more information, call the library at 876-4134.

The Milford-Miami Township Branch story time starts at 6:30 p.m. Parents and caregivers join their children ages 0-6  for books, songs and early literacy tips each week. For more information, call the library at 248-0700.

FamilyNight: Prepositions

Howdy! This Tuesday was our first OFFICIAL FamilyNight of the year and we kicked it off with one of Ms. Garria’s favorite story time themes- Prepositions! What’s that? You think prepositions are lame? Or worse, you’re like Ms. Laura and you’ve been out of school for so long that you don’t even remember what a preposition is?

Don’t worry, prepositions are EASY! The kids caught on right away to what they are. Prepositions show how two things relate to each other. To start out our FamilyNight we had a practical lesson in how they work. It went like this: if you think of two things, say Darth Vader and Darcy’s Donkey, a preposition would tell you where they are in relation to each other. You could, if you were so inclined, put Darth Vader ON the Donkey. Or the Donkey could chase Darth AROUND the room, UNDER and OVER all the tables. Or Darth and Donkey could both get a time out for being too rowdy in the library and have to stand AGAINST the wall and watch the kids enjoy FamilyNight. Just, you know, for example.

All of our books and games featured excellent prepositions. We read:

prepositions

Our Ready to Read Early Literacy activity this week was Playing. Kids can learn a lot about language even when playing with non-literary toys. Play helps them to think symbolically and teaches them how to express themselves. We got out our big parachute and practiced our prepositions by making it go up IN the air, laying it ON the ground, but most importantly, by running ACROSS and THROUGH it while the adults made it dance. We also had a delicious snack of Fruit Loops, which we put through their prepositional paces as well; we put them ON our noses, BEHIND our ears, made them travel AROUND our heads and finally put them IN our mouths (yum!). Even our craft was prepositionally awesome. We used construction paper to weave decorative patterns, with the time honored technique of putting the paper strips OVER, UNDER and THROUGH each other.

darth

Our next FamilyNight will be Tuesday, February 5th. We’re going to celebrate Chinese New Year with stories, game, crafts and treats. Register online or call the branch (513-528-1744) to sign up your family. Don’t forget we have StoryTime every Wednesday and Thursday as well! Toddler time is at 10:30 and PreschoolTime is at 11:30. Hope we see you soon at the Union Township Branch Library!

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Family Story Time: Stars

Hello again! While Story Time at the Union Township Branch might have stopped for the month of May, we just started our new series of evening story hours. Family Night meets on the first Tuesday of every month at 6:45. Our goal is to allow families with weekday school and work conflicts a chance to enjoy stories. All ages are welcome at Family Night, and we highly encourage our visitors to wear their pajamas!

Our Summer Reading theme this year is Read: Morning, Noon and Night, so our evening Family Time themes are all about the night.

Our first session met Tuesday May 1st, and we talked about Celestial Bodies (the kids were very interested to learn that bit of fancy, grown-up lingo). We read lots of stories about the stars and moon:

Our last book, Stars had a great idea, which we used for our craft. It suggested that we make a star and keep it in our pockets for days that we don’t feel so shiny. So, all of our attendees got to make and personalize their very own star to keep in their pocket, as well as one to give away to their favorite person. (After all, while you should always share, you don’t want to give away YOUR star, because then you wouldn’t have one anymore!) I made mine a star-shaped magic wand, so that I could banish all bad days that dared to occur in my presence.

Family Night will be happening every month; we’ll meet again June 5, from 6:45-7:30 to talk about Things That go Bump in the Night! Come with the whole family, wear your PJ’s and bring your favorite stuffed friend to hear stories about creepy, crawly, spooky monsters and to make your very on pet monster to take home with you!

Register online here, or call the Union Township Branch at 513-528-1744 to save your spot! Remember to check out all of the awesome events happening at the Clermont County Public Libraries this summer for both children AND adults!

 

 

StoryTime: Robots

This month at  Union Township’s StoryTime, we’re learning about People. And this week, we talked about my favorite type of people, Robots! What’s that–you don’t think robots are people? You better not let them hear you–robots have feelings, after all. We also talked about my second favorite type of people, Superheroes (the two go hand in hand, of course). We read some awesome stories, most of which featured our metal friends (try these titles in addition to my list of what we read).

We also had a special visit from our Five Little Superheroes. They flew in to hear our robot stories and hung out on the flannel board for the rest of class. The kids all learned a cool rhyme:

Five Superheroes
Five superheroes ready to fly,
Here comes a villain. Stop that guy!
This superhero can save the day.
Off he flies—up, up and away!

Last session we learned about the Every Child Ready to Read Six Skills for Early Literacy. This time we’re switching things up and focusing on the new Ready to Read 2 program, which focuses on five simple practicestalking, singing, reading, writing, and playing–that develop language and pre-reading skills in children. We try to have children do all five at the library. You’ve heard about our dance contests and our crafts, but we also spend time working on our other skills, such playing. Every StoryTime ends with cooperative free play, featuring either educational toys or, as in the case of this week, our craft. We used our technological mastermind skills to make our very own robot toy to take home, but first everyone really enjoyed zooming them around the room during play time.

I hope you can join us for our next StoryTime at the Union Township Branch. We’re taking the month of May off to visit our schools promoting summer reading, but we’ll be meeting again in June with a whole new schedule. We will still have ToddlerTime on Wednesday at 10:30, as well as All Ages StoryTime at 11:30 on Wednesdays and 10:30 on Thursdays. We’ll also be having a special monthly Night Time Family StoryTime, the first Tuesday of every month at 6:45. Hope we see you there (wear your PJs!!)

StoryTime: Miss Cara’s Favorites

should I share my ice cream?Welcome to your first peek at StoryTimes at the Amelia Branch! We’ve just wrapped up our spring session, but we can’t wait to see everyone this summer to explore the Dream Big! theme. You can join us by signing up for All Ages StoryTime on Thursdays at 10:30, starting June 14th.

During the last week of April, we ended our spring StoryTimes with the best books of all (according to Miss Cara, anyway). Because we were celebrating my favorite books, our literacy skill this week was Print Motivation, which basically means that kids learn to love books and reading by having fun experiences with books, especially if the adults in their lives spend time reading and enjoying books with them. You can develop this skill by bringing your kids to the library, having many books available for them, and spending time reading to them.

In ToddlerTime, we read books by some of my favorite authors for toddlers:

Preschool StoryTime featured some longer stories that are by more of my favorite authors:

We wrapped up both StoryTimes by creating huge butcher paper murals that we rolled out on the carpet so that all the kids could draw their favorite things about StoryTime. These murals are hanging on the walls of our meeting room at Amelia, so the kids can enjoy their artwork when they visit the library. I hope to see you this summer at Amelia; until then, happy reading!

StoryTime: Ms. Garria’s Train of Thought

We had StoryTime this week all planned out. Really, we did. Our session on Concepts is over and we’re moving on to a few weeks about People. Ms. Garria picked out lots of great stories for us about people, like Children Make Terrible Pets and The Boy who Cried Ninja (two of my favorites!).But then our morning shuttle arrived right before StoryTime and it had a copy of Mo Willems‘ new Pigeon book The Duckling Gets a Cookie!? in it.

Needless to say, EVERYTHING changes when a new Mo Willems book shows up. So, instead of having a session on People, we changed our plan and talked about Things That Are Alive. Now, normally, the books we read have some sort of common theme running through them, but this week it would be easy to think they have nothing at all in common with each other. But, if you follow Ms. Garria’s train of thought it all starts making sense. See if you can keep up:

Finally, we made our craft, a self-portrait collage that shows how we were feeling today (because we ended our stories with feelings AND things that are alive usually have feelings!).

In some strange and slightly twisted way, this new theme of ‘train of thought’ actually ties in with our Ready to Read early Literacy Skill for the week: Narrative Skills.

Narrative skills is the ability to describe things or events and to tell and re-tell stories. Being able to talk about and explain what happens in a story helps children understand the meaning of what he or she is reading. Good narrative skills lead to good reading comprehension.

Parents can help children strengthen their narrative skills by allowing them to talk with you and by listening carefully when he or she talks or tells stories. Encourage interaction by asking open-ended questions, by asking children to tell about their day or an event or by asking them to tell you about the book instead of just listening to you read the story. Choose books that repeat or predict to encourage telling and retelling of the story or choose wordless books that allow children to tell the story. Encourage ‘picture walking’ – allow your child to retell the story using the illustrations as guides.”

We hope to see you next week at the Union Township Branch StoryTime!

StoryTime: Counting

one pup's upHola! I hope your week was as good as ours at the Union Township Branch!

This week we continued our series on ‘Concepts’, talking about Counting. There isn’t much that kids enjoy more than shouting out the numbers once they learn them and we had an extra rowdy story time because of it. We also talked about our Ready to Read literacy skill, Phonological Awareness, a little more in depth than usual, so you get to learn a little more than usual about it too.

Basically speaking, Phonological Awareness is the ability to hear and distinguish the smaller sounds in words. Being able to hear the beginning and ending sounds that make up words will help children sound out words when they begin to read. Once a child has this ‘phonemic awareness’, they become aware that sounds are like building blocks that can be used to build all the different words and most children have any easier time learning to read.

One of the best way so to help you child grown their Phonological Awareness is to read stories with lots of rhyming words. And lucky for us, it seems that most counting books feature lots of great rhymes that are easy for kids to spot (when they already know how their numbers sound, it’s easier to pick out words that sound the same). This week we read:

I also pulled some harder number books for our older kids (since it was Spring Break in some of our schools we had some siblings visiting StoryTime). Two of my favorites that are sadly too long/hard for regular StoryTime are The Rabbit Problem by Emily Gravett and 365 Penguins by Jean-Luc Fromental.

Ms. Garria made this week’s flannel board to go with the song Pretty Ladybug. Poor Ladybug starts out with no spots and no numbers, and the kids help us add her spots in one by one, and add the numbers as they go:

Pretty Ladybug
(to the tune of London Bridge)
Ladybug has one black spot
One black spot, one back spot
Ladybug has one black spot
Pretty Ladybug
(Repeat with #2-6)

For our craft this week we practiced our painting skills, with a little twist! We used masking tape to block of parts of our paper, painted with our water colors and then removed the paint and counted how many white lines we ended up with!

We hope we see you next week at StoryTime!