The Colorado Libraries for Early Literacy announced the winners of the first-ever CLEL Bell Picture Book Awards. The winners are:
Open This Little Book, by Jesse Klausmeier.
Readers open the cover to discover five characters, each with their own little book, all within the pages of the first. Open This Little Book celebrates the pleasures of reading, sharing, and having a book of your own.
Early Literacy Practice: Write
The Things I Can Do, by Jeff Mack.
Hand-written text and exuberant collages illustrate this story of a boy who takes great pride in his accomplishments. Reading skills and writing skills develop together, and the format of The Things I Can Do invites children to see themselves as authors as well as readers.
Early Literacy Practice: Sing
Nighty-Night, Cooper, by Laura Numeroff.
A small kangaroo requests song after song to help him fall asleep, and his mother obliges by making up her own words to familiar tunes. Singing songs together is a powerful way to build phonological awareness skills and vocabulary, and Nighty-Night, Cooper models how a parent can use songs to create a comforting bedtime routine with a child.
Early Literacy Practice: Talk
Moo! by David LaRochelle
A very vocal cow commandeers the farmer's car and sets off on an adventure. The entire story is told with just two words: Moo! and Baa! The speech bubbles and the very limited vocabulary help children make the critical connection between the words we say and the print on the page.
Early Literacy Practice: Play
Nino Wrestles the World, by Yuyi Morales.
Nino takes on all the toys in his room with and amazing series of lucha libre wrestling moves. When his sisters wake up from their nap, they challenge him to a match, too! Who will be victorious? Nino Wrestles the World joyfully demonstrates the language-rich, open-ended play that contributes to a child's narrative skills.
The five winning books consist of one title in each of five categories representing an early literacy practice; Read, Write, Sing, Talk and Play. The books, in their content, theme, or design support caregivers' interaction with their children through early literacy practices. Research has shown that engaging children in these practices builds language skills and prepares children to become successful readers.
For more information, visit the CLEL Bell Awards webpage where you can see the 2014 shortlists and see the full nominations lists.
Cathy
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