Pages: A Bookstore presents Dav Pilkey, author of the bestselling Captain Underpants and Dog Man series, in an appearance at the Redondo Beach Performing Arts Center. TICKETS ARE REQUIRED and go on sale September 1 at midnight. For more information contact Pages at 310-318-0900 or https://www.pagesabookstore.com/event/dav-pilkey
Dav Pilkey Author Event—Tuesday, October 16, at 6:00 p.m.
Pages: A Bookstore presents Dav Pilkey, author of the bestselling Captain Underpants and Dog Man series, in an appearance at the Redondo Beach Performing Arts Center. TICKETS ARE REQUIRED and go on sale September 1 at midnight. For more information contact Pages at 310-318-0900 or https://www.pagesabookstore.com/event/dav-pilkey
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Welcome back, Dragons! I hope you had a wonderful and restorative summer. This begins my ninth year at Pennekamp, and I think we have a great year ahead!
The library is a resource for the entire Pennekamp community--students, teachers, staff, administrators, and families. You can visit the library whenever it is open except during class visit times. The library is open from 7:45 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. every weekday (except school holidays), but on occasional Wednesdays the library closes at 1:30 p.m. so that I can attend districtwide library staff meetings. This year the library will be closed around lunch time for 30 minutes. On Monday and Tuesday, this closure will be from 11:35 to 12:05, and on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, the time is 11:05 to 11:35. Grade 4 may visit the library during lunch recess on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Grade 5 may visit the library during lunch recess on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Every class visits the library every week. Before and after school, families may visit the library until it closes, but after school children must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. Students are permitted to check out the same number of books as their grade level; so, for example, a first-grader may take one book and a fifth-grader may take five books. Parents may check out ten books at a time. Kindergarteners are also allowed to check out one book but they keep their library book in their classroom. The loan period is one week. A book may be renewed three times, for a total of four weeks. Although there is no fine for late books, patrons are asked to return books promptly. (There may be a long waitlist for the very book you have checked out!) You will receive a courtesy notice every week stating what you or your child have checked out and when it is due. Payment must be made for books that are lost or damaged significantly. Please encourage your children to handle books with care. In particular, now that many of us carry water bottles, it's important to protect books from moisture. This website is the best way to find out what's happening at the library. The class visit schedule shows when your child's class is coming to library and therefore what day he or she needs to bring any library books to school. On the Current/News page of this website you'll find a blog entry each week that describes what we are doing in the library and why--if, for example, I am reading books in support of curricular topics or related to a civic or cultural event. On the Weekly Readalouds page you can see what I am reading to each grade. If I show any internet content during class visits, I will usually link to it from my weekly blog post or the Weekly Readalouds page. You are obviously aware of the website since you are reading this post! If you find it interesting, I'd be grateful for your recommending it to other Pennekamp parents. I'd like to express my thanks to the Pennekamp PTA, which is far and away the main source of funding for library materials. When your child brings home a beautiful book from the library, that book was almost surely purchased with PTA funds. I would also like to thank MBEF for funding my position as well as for the many other ways MBEF benefits our students, teachers, and community. Thank you, in turn, to the families that support the Pennekamp PTA and MBEF--your generosity makes our library possible. |
Barbara Siegemund-Broka, library resource specialist, maintains this blog to inform Pennekamp students and families about library news and related content. Any opinions expressed here are solely her own.
What's Ms. Barbara reading?How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy, by Jenny Odell
Worth repeating:
His eyes are soft. “Do you know why I became a librarian?” I wait for him to tell me, because of course I don’t. “Dewey,” he says. “As in the decimal system.” I’m not sure if he’s joking or not, but he continues, “I like order. I like organization. The idea of all the information in the world, all organized, everything in its place—I like that idea.” He clears his throat. “But I’ve been doing this job for a long time. And the thing I’ve learned is that stories aren’t about order and organization. They’re about feelings. And the feelings don’t always make sense. See, stories are like …” He pauses, brow furrowing, then nods, satisfied in finding the right comparison: “Water. Like rain. We can hold them tight, but they always slip through our fingers.” I try to hide my shock. Joe doesn’t seem like the poetic type. His caterpillar eyebrows knit together. “That can be scary. But remember that water gives us life. It connects continents. It connects people. And in quiet moments, when the water’s still, sometimes we can see our own reflection.” --From When You Trap a Tiger, by Tae Heller, winner of the 2021 Newbery Medal Archives
August 2021
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