Home About Big Learning Treasure Troves Newsletter Books Workshops Blog Search Site Map Links

Subscribe

Archive

Book Review Index

 

Big Learning News 6-8-04

Big Learning News
Karen Cole's Guide to Real-World Learning with Kids
Issue 2:22 June 8, 2004


Welcome to Big Learning News, and a special welcome to our new subscribers.

Advertise in Big Learning News or on BigLearning.org. Our rates are reasonable and our subscribers have excellent taste, at least in newsletters. E-mail for rates and other information:  info@biglearning.org .


Table of Contents

Summer Volunteering
Book Review: Making Books That Fly, Fold, Wrap, Hide, Pop Up, Twist, And Turn
Venus Transit


****ADVERTISEMENT****
BANJO MAN FRANK CASSEL
Mountain Fever Band
Lively and Engaging Entertainment for
Community Events, Special Occasions
Children's Parties, Seniors
PO Box 303
Kensington, MD 20895
Phone: 301-933-9190
E-mail: BanjomanFC@aol.com
URL: http://hometown.aol.com/banjomanfc
************************



Summer Volunteering

No "boredom buster" is more powerful than doing good for others. So if you're worried about your kids spending the summer glued to the Game Boy, you'll love this list from Youth Service America, 100 Ways to Make a Difference in Your Community. It includes great ideas that even kids could do, like "Make 'I Care' kits with combs, toothbrushes, shampoo, etc. for the homeless."  Here's the link for the list.

http://www.servenet.org/test/scj/cont/dsp_cont_item_article.cfm?actionType=view&contentId=1994

If that long link doesn't work, try this "reprint."

http://www.wwaytv3.com/Global/story.asp?S=762991


Book Review
Making Books That Fly, Fold, Wrap, Hide, Pop Up, Twist, And Turn: Books for Kids to Make by Gwen Diehn (Lark Books, 1998).
Ages 11 and up.

Buying information

As Gwen Diehn explains, a book can be just a cover and some pages, with the author's message carried by the text and illustrations. Or, the book itself can be part of the message. "A book of poems about flying that has pop-ups that fly up off the pages may be more interesting than a book of poems about flying that has ordinary flat pages."

This is a book about how to make books that are works of art, where the shape and interactivity of the book express the author's message as much as the text and illustrations do. Diehn marries idea with technique throughout the book. Each project is an idea, such as a museum book that unfolds to give the reader the feeling of walking through a museum. As she explains how to do the idea, she works in all the necessary bookmaking techniques.

That means that if you're looking for a certain technique, like how to sew a binding, you'll have to depend on the index. The organization is classic Big Learning - you learn lots of useful things while creating a project you care about.

Diehn can be a bit mysterious in her introduction to each project. Sometimes you read it and say to yourself, "OK, but what is it?" Sometimes you have to wade through the detailed descriptions just to decide whether this thing is something you want to make or not. The finished-product photographs are often insufficient to show you how the book works.

Diehn is careful to say that she doesn't want the reader to treat her projects like a cookbook; rather they are starting places for the reader's own creativity. Maybe that's why she's a little mysterious.

This is a book that any artist or writer should have - a great idea resource with useful practical techniques.

(By the way, this is a great book to have around for kids who do a lot of projects for school. The techniques in this book could turn any dull assignment into something really special.)

Buying information



Venus Transit

I confess, we didn't get up at 5am to see the Venus Transit, that rare astronomical event where Venus moves across the sun. But I have to say the web version is very impressive, and you don't need special glasses to view it safely. You can see a movie of the entire transit at

http://www.sec.noaa.gov/sxi/SXI_Venus_Transit.MPG


The movie is actually an animation made by stringing together satellite images taken by the NOAA GOES-12 Satellite X-ray Imager. After you watch the animation, try moving the scroll bar at the bottom of the screen. Not only can you make Venus fly back and forth across the sun, you can see the sun rotating.



*******************************************
Fight Hunger
You Click. Corporate Sponsors Pay. The Hungry Eat.
http://www.thehungersite.com .
*******************************************



 


Big Learning News © 2004 Karen Cole
All Rights Reserved.


 

©2003 Karen Cole Privacy Policy HomeAboutTreasure Troves Newsletter WorkshopsBooks Column Site Map Karen ColeLinks