This document provides information about a summer reading program called "Read & Roar" at the Westerville Library located at 126 S. State St, Westerville, OH 43081. It includes recommended book lists and activities for ages 3-11, as well as information on how to sign up and track reading. Crafts like masks and bookmarks are described. The content was found on various teaching websites and more program details can be found at the library's website.
The document describes 18 different mythical creatures including mermaids, griffins, cyclops, unicorns, moon mice, carnivorous plants, stone guardians, and more. For each creature, it provides the creature category, estimated danger level on a scale of 1 to 9, typical habitat, diet, and catchphrase. The creatures described come from a variety of categories including amazing aquatic, mixed mammal bird, mystical land roaming, lunar rodent, mega flora, mystical mineral, phantom furies, and more.
The document provides discussion questions about the Lumberjanes comic book series. It prompts the reader to talk about the adventures in the series with friends and family. Several details about the first book are highlighted, including the original name of the camp being scratched out to replace "girls" with "hardcore lady-types," suggesting the camp is for empowered women. The document also asks the reader to describe the five main characters and why snippets from the manual and badges are included, reflecting the story's theme that all women are welcome at camp no matter how different they feel.
The Lumberjanes Beastiary Card Game is played with 60 cards depicting magical creatures. The objective is to make matches of cards and avoid getting the Bearwoman Card at the end of the game. Players take turns drawing cards from a deck or requesting cards from other players in an effort to make matches of two or more of the same creature cards. Special cards allow players to steal or swap cards. The player with the most matches at the end wins, unless they are stuck with the losing Bearwoman Card.
This document provides information about a summer reading program called "Read & Roar" at the Westerville Library located at 126 S. State St, Westerville, OH 43081. It includes recommended book lists and activities for ages 3-11, as well as information on how to sign up and track reading. Crafts like masks and bookmarks are described. The content was found on various teaching websites and more program details can be found at the library's website.
The document describes 18 different mythical creatures including mermaids, griffins, cyclops, unicorns, moon mice, carnivorous plants, stone guardians, and more. For each creature, it provides the creature category, estimated danger level on a scale of 1 to 9, typical habitat, diet, and catchphrase. The creatures described come from a variety of categories including amazing aquatic, mixed mammal bird, mystical land roaming, lunar rodent, mega flora, mystical mineral, phantom furies, and more.
The document provides discussion questions about the Lumberjanes comic book series. It prompts the reader to talk about the adventures in the series with friends and family. Several details about the first book are highlighted, including the original name of the camp being scratched out to replace "girls" with "hardcore lady-types," suggesting the camp is for empowered women. The document also asks the reader to describe the five main characters and why snippets from the manual and badges are included, reflecting the story's theme that all women are welcome at camp no matter how different they feel.
The Lumberjanes Beastiary Card Game is played with 60 cards depicting magical creatures. The objective is to make matches of cards and avoid getting the Bearwoman Card at the end of the game. Players take turns drawing cards from a deck or requesting cards from other players in an effort to make matches of two or more of the same creature cards. Special cards allow players to steal or swap cards. The player with the most matches at the end wins, unless they are stuck with the losing Bearwoman Card.
The document lists the titles, authors, and genres of various graphic novels and books for teenagers and children. There are over 20 listings that include series such as The Avant-Guards Volume 1, The Backstagers Vol. 1: Rebels Without Applause, Goldie Vance Volume 1, and Princeless Volume 1: Save Yourself. The genres listed are teen graphic novel, J fiction, and J graphic novel.
The document lists various books from the Lumberjanes series, including 19 volumes in the original series, 5 standalone graphic novels, and 4 chapter books. It encourages checking off books that have been read and finding more books through the westervillelibrary.org website.
This document presents a game where the reader must determine whether various facts are true or false by doing research. It lists 25 statements and instructs players to label each one as true or false without checking the answers in the back. The goal is to correctly label as many statements in a row as possible through independent research. It reminds players that speed does not guarantee accuracy and encourages taking the time to verify answers before checking the key.
The document lists the titles and call numbers of 20 non-fiction books for young readers covering topics about science, history, animals, and puzzles. The books explore subjects such as the human brain, biology, mysteries from the past, animal facts, and challenging trivia. A variety of non-fiction genres are represented including science, history, biology, and general reference.
The document lists three books from the "Two Truths and a Lie" series - "It's Alive!", "Histories and Mysteries", and "Forces of Nature" - and instructs the reader to check off any books they have read and reserve them all through the website for the Westerville library.
The document instructs the reader to write three stories - two based on true events from history or their own life, and one fictional story. It suggests including photos, drawings, and quotes to support the stories. Once written, the reader should present their stories to a friend to see if they can determine which story is a lie.
The document provides instructions for writing a fable, including traditional components of fables such as featuring an animal with human traits, highlighting a prominent character trait, including a problem and resolution, and conveying a moral. It outlines steps to create a fable such as brainstorming ideas, listing character traits, writing a draft with setting, dialogue, problem, solution and moral, getting feedback, and writing a final story in a notebook with illustrations.
This document lists the titles of 24 young adult fiction books, including series, grouped by their genre classifications of "J FICTION". The books cover a range of topics and stories, from Amari and the Night Brothers to Twinchantment series.
This document provides character cards from the book Tristan Strong to cut out, mix up, and match. It lists the main characters Tristan Strong, Gum Baby, Brer Rabbit, Keelboat Annie, Anansi, Junior, and High John.
The document provides discussion questions about the book "Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky". It asks the reader to think about how the main character Tristan feels about himself based on his name, how he views adults in his life, how the author connected to other stories, and about Tristan's first interaction with Gum Baby. The purpose is to get the reader thinking critically about themes and events in the book and to encourage talking about it with others.
The document lists three books in the Tristan Strong series by Rick Riordan - Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky, Tristan Strong Destroys the World, and Tristan Strong Keeps Punching. It instructs the reader to check off any books they have read from the list and then reserve all of the books from the Westerville library website.