The Superhero Princess blog is the official blog of the Sanford Harmony Program. This program is being developed to enhance how boys and girls treat and think about each other during childhood, laying the foundation for harmonious relationships in the future. Superhero Princess, written from a parent’s perspective, shares the same mission as the Sanford Harmony Program – to strengthen connections between boys and girls. Superhero Princess represents the potential that exists for our boy and girls when we encourage them to come TOGETHER and engage in meaningful and positive ways. Through anecdotes infused with research and theory, we explore the social, emotional and relationship development of children. — About Superhero Princess | Superhero Princess
Children’s Literature and the Inner World | Centre for Research in Young People's Texts and Cultures
What are the rights of children? What is our responsibility, as citizens of the world, to defend them? A uniquely qualified panel of authors and activists, including Khmer Rouge Genocide survivor Arn Chorn-Pond, discuss the global state of children’s rights. Drawing on both scholarship and personal experience, in this “Year of Janusz Korczak,” commemorating 70 years since the children’s rights pioneer perished at Treblinka with his charges from the Warsaw Ghetto orphanage, the panel will explore the history of the Children’s Rights Movement and how past atrocities can inform contemporary advocacy on local, national, and global scales, paying particular attention to ongoing violations in Uganda by the Lord’s Resistance Army. —
PEN American Center - Children’s Rights
When: Saturday, May 5
Where: Cooper Union, Frederick P. Rose Auditorium, 41 Cooper Sq., New York City
What time: 5:30–7 p.m.
With Wojciech Jagielski, Arn Chorn-Pond, Patricia McCormick, and Ruta Sepetys; moderated by Janne Teller
Free and open to the public
Co-sponsored by The Cooper Union, PEN Children’s Book Committee, and Polish Cultural Institute
The Artistry Of 'Children's Picturebooks' Revealed | NPR
Top 10 Books (and Media) About Bullying | The ExpandED Exchange -
> I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention Freaks and Geeks. It is not a book, but it’s a smart, nuanced television show that, I think, ‘reads” as a literary text. This show ran for one year (’99-00) on NBC and is now a cult classic and critical favorite; in regards to bullying, its strength lies in connecting greater socioeconomic forces to the lives of bullies and their targets. (Note: I’d also be remiss if I didn’t mention Glee. And Mean Girls. And Everybody Loves Chris. And 30 Rock’s “Reunion” episode.)
The Harry Potter series: Nobody would ever merely describe this series as “books about bullying,” but bullying relationships of every kind are woven throughout all seven texts. Hogwarts is cluttered with a wide variety of power dynamics—between older students and younger, between professors, between professors and students—the list goes on. Older readers will appreciate how J.K. Rowling deftly re-casts her aggressors into targets, then into bystanders, and back again, and vice versa. — Top 10 Books (and Media) About Bullying | The ExpandED Exchange
Talking to Kids About Bullying: Where to Start | The ExpandED Exchange -
Last, research shows that reading is a great way to teach kids empathy and other forms of social and emotional intelligence—if that’s true, then the act of learning to read is a path away from bullying. Try to expose children to literature about other cultures, traditions, and ways of living–that’ll ensure the biggest bang for your buck (or library card).
Home - American Youth Literary Magazine -
We are a literary magazine made by kids for kids. We need submissions for our first edition. Submissions are due by March 25,2012, and the article will be published on March 31, 2012 and can be found under the Documents page then. You can submit at the Contact Page.
We are not a business, nor are we an organization. We are a website.
Why Books Are Better Than e-Books for Children | NYTimes.com
Children's Book Awards Announced | NYTimes.com
(via Child’s Own Studio | custom making soft toys with children)
I adore this blog with ALL MY HEART.
FANTASTIC.
Jan Berenstain, co-creator of the Berenstain Bears, has died - USATODAY.com
Flamingo Rampant! Gender Independent Kids Books | HTMLGIANT | Roxane Gay -
Kids’ ability to see themselves in books available to them is an incredibly valuable thing. Any parent, teacher, librarian, or caregiver will tell you that kids love books that reflect their daily experience. Kids with dogs like it when the kid in the book has a dog; kids with non-nuclear family structures cherish books in which families like theirs are shown.