Wednesday, 30 August 2017

NATIONAL POETRY DAY

Celebrate National Poetry Day in the Library


To celebrate National Poetry Day GSS Library held a poetry competition. Winners announced at the open mic day on Friday 1 September.Winners poems will be published on this blog. Watch this space.


Enid Blyton

Our School library has about 40 books written by Enid Blyton. Come in and check them out!!!
Enid Blyton Display

Image result for enid blyton books images

Sunday, 13 August 2017

Hell Reading Challenge


The HELL Reading Challenge

Our school is signed up to the  HELL Reading Challenge. It  is a great way to get our students enjoying the pleasures of stories — with the bonus of free pizza rewards.
The HELL Reading Challenge is free, and it is so easy! Children receive a stamp on their pizza wheel for each book they read, and once seven books have been read they can redeem their pizza wheel for a free 333 kids’ pizza at HELL.
See Mrs Butcher to get your wheel stamped or drop it off at the library and pick up a new wheel.
HAPPY READING!!!!
Image result for image Hell pizza wheel

Tuesday, 11 July 2017

BOOK WEEK

Book Week 2017


In Week 9 of Term 2 we celebrated our annual Book Week. We ran a Scholastic Book Fair where books could be purchased for personal use or donated to the library.

Our two special guests this year were storyteller Stu Duval and author Melinda Szymanik.





Melinda  shared her books and gave us some writing tips. She said to write you need to start with three things: Imagination, Experience and Curiosity.

Melinda said check out this website if you want to enter your story in a writing competition.

https://fabostory.wordpress.com/

Write Stories. Win Prizes.

✯ What Is FABO? ✯

FABO is a free writing contest for kids! There’ll be a new story to write every fortnight.
We all enjoyed hearing Melinda's new book Fuzzy Doodle which is a finalist in this year's Book Awards for Children and Young Adults.

Image result for fuzzy doodle book


SPACE

SPACE

Our Term 2 whole school inquiry was around space and beyond. We were fortunate to have around 70 non fiction books on space in our own library.




Wednesday, 15 March 2017

Margaret Mahy

MARGARET MAHY


This interview below is from The Christchurch City Library website when they interviewed Maragaret Mahy in 2002.

Pop into our school  library and have a look at the Margaret Mahy display. Have you read any of her books? She is the author of many children's and young adult books.

We celebrate her birthday on 21 March.




Interview with Margaret Mahy

Photo of Margaret with BaxterName: Margaret Mahy
Date of birth: 21 March 1936
Date of death: 23 July 2012
Place of birth: Whakatane
What is your favourite food?
Salad sandwiches
What was your most embarrassing moment?
When I was expecting my second daughter and was rather large and round, my pants fell off as I walked down a city street - Cambridge Terrace - in Christchurch.
How do you relax?
I read. I walk around my garden. I go to sleep (I do this quite easily).
Who inspired you when you were little?
Rudyard KiplingBeatrix Potter. Later I was thrilled by books written by Mary O’HaraMy Friend Flicka and Thunderhead.
What were you like at school?
I was talkative and probably rather annoying. I tried to live stories and make other people believe they were true.
Book Cover of Down The Back of the ChairWhat was your favourite/most hated subject at school?
My favourite subject was English which included writing essays (they were called “compositions” in those days). My most hated subject was probably mathematics. I grew slower and slower at solving the problems we were given. In my last exam (when I was in the Fifth Form) I got 10% out of 100%. Years later, as an adult, I took a correspondence course in mathematics and quite enjoyed it, but the ways of teaching mathematics had changed by then.
What was the book you most loved as a child?
I loved a great mixture of books… King Solomon’s Mines by Sir Henry Rider HaggardThe Little White Horse by Elizabeth Goudge. I loved the stories of Pooh Bear by A. A. Milne and I read and re-read Grimm’s Fairy Tales.
Which person from the past would you most like to meet?
I would like to meet Lewis Carroll - the author of Alice’s Adventures in WonderlandThrough the Looking Glass, and The Hunting of the Snark.
Who is your favourite author/children’s author?
I don’t really have a favourite. I have a whole lot of favourites. One of my favourites is the British author Diana Wynne Jones.
Book Cover of The Great Piratical RumbustificationWhy did you want to be a writer?
I think it was because I was a keen reader. I think I wanted to squeeze myself right into the stories I read, and I think I managed to do this at times by writing stories of my own.
Do you have a special place where you write your books?
I write in my bedroom - but it is also my study or workplace. The fax machine is right beside my bed. (My old cat likes to sleep on the fax machine which is always warm). Next to the fax machine is my computer, and next to the computer is the printer. Then there are books and many piles of paper.
What’s the best thing and worst thing about being a writer?
It is wonderful when someone says they have enjoyed some story I have written. Of course it is wonderful to be paid for a story. The worst thing is writing and rewriting something - and then re-writing it again. Sometimes a writer knows something is wrong with a story - but can’t quite work out what it is.
If you weren’t a writer, what would you like to be?
I would probably be a librarian which is what I used to be before I became a full-time writer. I enjoyed many things about library work, and knew more books then than I do now.
What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
I think writers have to be quite tough. They often have to put up with disappointment. Even when you have been published for many years publishers can still turn down stories, even stories the writer has worked on for days and weeks and months. I think writers ought to read a lot, and it is often good to be working on more one story. If your first story does not work out it is comforting to have another story to fall back on. Most writers have to work hard - to write and re-write their stories. Good luck!

Sunday, 12 March 2017

DR SEUSS

Dr Seuss's Birthday  2 March


On Thursday the 2nd of March we celebrated Dr Seuss's birthday in the library. 
Mrs Scanlan and Mrs Hahn enjoyed reading some of their favourite Dr Seuss stories. The librarians gave out Dr Seuss stickers and bookmarks as well as colouring activities.