Read Across America Day March Second

Reading is an essential building block to every child.

It is the key to a universe of learning.

It is an essential guide to empathy and understanding Other.

It is the breadcrumb path leading into a forest of imagination.

It is a shared experience for bonding, love, and growth.

It’s also just really really fun.

NEA's Read Across America is an annual reading motivation and awareness program that calls for every child in every community to celebrate reading with the theme: Celebrating a Nation of Diverse Readers.

Every month the National Education Association has recommended books for kids of every age.

Here are February’s Books - The Theme is “Explore Families and History”

Here are March’s Books - The Theme is “Play with Stories”

It’s Also Dr. Seuss Week!

Dr. Seuss’s birthday is Wednesday, March 2nd. We use Dr. Seuss books throughout the year in our classrooms, but we have been reading them a lot in the run up to Dr. Seuss week! We would love for you to ask your kids which Dr. Seuss books they like, which they’ve read, and then share your favorites!

One of the ways to celebrate is doing family readings in whacky places. Build a fort to read a book in! Turn off all the lights and read by flashlight! Read behind the shower curtain in a bathtub filled with pillows! Remind your kid (and yourself!) that reading is an ADVENTURE that you can go on without a single step. If you loved doing it, snap a picture and share it with us! We would love to create an album of our families celebrating reading and being together.

We will also be doing clothing themes every day next week! See below for details!

Make sure that they have back-up clothes that are weather appropriate if they’re wearing costumes or other odd pieces of clothing.

Let us know if you have any questions, and share your favorite kids books in the comments!

Your CG Family

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Friends of CG Fridays!: SCRAWL BOOKS (With Exciting Upcoming Events!)

Scrawl Books over in Reston Town Center is a fabulous gem on Reston’s “Shop Local” Crown.

When I found out they were putting in a little bookstore right on the corner of Reston Town Center, I was absolutely delighted. It is within reasonable “Lunch Break” walking distance. It has an amazing selection, and whatever they don’t have they’re willing to order. They support local authors.


MOST IMPORTANTLY, their events promote early literacy and support several wonderful causes. In short? They’re just Good people. Good people doing Good things. And we love having friends like that.

When we contacted them a few years back to do live readings in their store, they were so supportive! They not only let us swipe their stuffy sleepover idea, but they donated items for the stuffy goodie bags!!

On Friday, March 26th, they’re actually doing their own Stuffed Animal Sleepover featuring Children’s Author Ethan Berlin! Children drop off their stuffies for a night of amazing activities, including a reading by Ethan Berlin himself of his new book I am not a Dog Toy.
Sign Up
Here if you are interested.

And now, they are going to be doing a BOOK FAIR WITH US in April to celebrate Common Ground Childcare’s 49th Birthday.

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When: April 12th to April 19th (LINK INCOMING, STAY TUNED). It is an online bookfair, so it goes 24/7 that entire week!

Where: Scrawl Books will have a page for us on their website, so we will post the link for that when it’s available.

How: We will have recommended books and classroom wishlists on our special link, but you can buy any of the books on the site once you have clicked through! It is not just for kids, stock up on your adult summer reading too!

Why:
- Books are brain food:
For our birthday, we are promoting early literacy, consistent literacy, holistic literacy. Reading is good for everyone of every age, no matter what style of book you’re reading. Pick books out for you, your kids, your friends, your family, your school. Pick books out to donate to charity, or for your child’s classroom.
- #ShopLocal: You will be supporting a local business! Scrawl Books is a Reston treasure, and supporting them is supporting your whole town.
- Fundraiser Time: Scrawl books will keep track of how many books are purchased during our book fair and Common Ground will get a percentage of the proceeds! Is there a better birthday present that?

The Pandemic has hit all of our local businesses hard. Right now Scrawl Books is open for curbside pick up and delivery, and we hope that our Covid-19 numbers will go down and enough people will become vaccinated that we can all be together again. Until then, Scrawl Books has agreed to do live online readings for our classrooms on Wednesdays. They are partnering with us and supporting our school. The very least we can do is talk about how wonderful they are, and recommend them every chance we get.

THANK YOU, SCRAWL BOOKS!!

Love Love Love,

LJ and your Common Ground Family

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Women's History Month: Fantastic Books for Kids

Hello Common Ground Readers!

TODAY IS READ ACROSS AMERICA DAY!!

March is also WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH, so we decided to share ten of our most favorite books to share with your children. Reading to children is essential. It is food for their imagination. It is integral to the development of empathy and understanding people not like them.

Reading is a gateway to the entirety of what we can know. All you have to do is hand them the keys.

  1. Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black History by Vashti Harrison: Buy Here - Little Leaders educates and inspires as it relates true stories of forty trailblazing black women in American history.

  2. What will I be? by Jayla Joseph: Buy Here - There are no limits on the greatness we can achieve! A positive & powerful picture book showing Black girls planning for their futures.

  3. Little Feminist Board Book Set by Lydia Ortiz: Buy Here - It is never too early to learn about amazing women of history! This set of board books teaches our littlest leaders about women activists, artists, leaders, and pioneers with colorful pictures to capture their imagination.

  4. Fantastically Great Women who Changed the World by Kate Pankehurst: Buy Here - Share a different story each night, fill your children’s brains with all of the wondrous things even one person can do to change the world.

  5. A Is for Awesome!: 23 Iconic Women Who Changed the World by Derek Desierto: Buy Here - Why stick with plain old A, B, C when you can have Amelia (Earhart), Malala, Tina (Turner), Ruth (Bader Ginsburg), all the way to eXtraordinary You―and the Zillion of adventures you will go on?

  6. Shark Lady: The True Story of How Eugenie Clark Became the Ocean's Most Fearless Scientist by Jess Keating : Buy Here - Who doesn’t love sharks? Who doesn’t love a woman awesome and brave and smart enough to swim with sharks just to learn about them? Read your little marine biologist all about Eugenie Clark!

  7. My Little Golden Book about Ruth Bader Ginsburg: Buy Here - The Little Golden Books all about amazing women are phenomenal, and this one is no exception. Add it to your shelf for your little freedom fighter.

  8. The Girl who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill: Buy Here - This one is for middles instead of littles, but it is worth reading to anyone who will listen. Every year, the people of the Protectorate leave a baby as an offering to the witch who lives in the forest. They hope this sacrifice will keep her from terrorizing their town. But the witch in the Forest, Xan, is kind. She shares her home with a wise Swamp Monster and a Perfectly Tiny Dragon. Xan rescues the children and delivers them to welcoming families on the other side of the forest, nourishing the babies with starlight on the journey.

  9. I will be Fierce! by Bea Birdsong: Buy Here - A powerful picture book about courage, confidence, kindness, and finding the extraordinary in everyday moments.

  10. Dear Girl: A Celebration of Wonderful, Smart, Beautiful You! by Amy Krause Rosenthal: Buy Here - A book about how every woman is extraordinary, especially YOU.

Please share your favorite children’s books on amazing women in the comments!

Do you like posts like these?? We have several book lists for all different themes! Here’s one for Children’s Books on Math!

Subscribe to our blog so you don’t ever miss a thing!

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CG Challenges: Mathematical Reading Recommendations!

Fairfax County’s WINTER READING CHALLENGE is such a fantastic idea!! We will be posting recommendations all winter! Today, the recommendations are all Math-based. A deep foundation of number-sense is key to a lifelong love and understanding of mathematics. This is easy to achieve because math is everywhere! It’s in nature. It’s in music. It’s there to help you share a muffin and build the best fort. By embracing all the opportunities to experience math, especially in beloved stories, we are giving our kiddos a leg up while spending quality time with them!

Here is a “top-ten” list of our favorite math books! Buy them for your bookshelf, or help us by picking one up for our classroom! Tangible, physical books that the kids can touch are especially good for growth.

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  1. 1,2,3 to the Zoo by Eric Carle: A classic, colorful story that encourages kiddos to count to ten with their favorite animals. Also provides an opportunity for number pairs. (example: There are five animals! Two lions, three tigers! There are five animals! Four birds, one rhino!)

  2. Feast for Ten by Cathryn Falwell: A count-to-ten book that ties numbers to food and family. Gives the opportunity for a class to have snacks and count them, or to “share” the food they pull together.

  3. Ten Red Apples by Pat Hutchins: Introduction to subtraction from 10-0. Can be paired with an art project

  4. Color Zoo by Lois Ehlert: This covers shapes as well as numbers, and it uses shapes to create bigger pictures.

  5. Ten Black Dots by Donald Crews: Number names and sequences! Number comparisons! General number sense and subitization.

  6. One Red Sun by Ezra Jack Keats: Simple 1-10 book, incredibly lovely, inspires art through mathematics

  7. Five Creatures by Emily Jenkins: A whacky story that is so good for number pairs and comparisons!

  8. Quack and Count by Keith Baker: This is perfect for subitization and number pairs, which is the beginning of addition.

  9. Pattern Fish by Trudy Harris: Excellent for pattern recognition and repetition, as well as how to create patterns on your own.

  10. Rosie’s Walk by Pat Hutchins: This is more for spatial awareness along with distance and proximity. It’s also just a relaxing, fantastic story

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Who We Are: Our Teacher Recommendations for Children's Books.

We have read them all! Twenty Times! In silly voices! We present to you Common Ground’s vetted list of children’s books for every age! When asked, the most popular authors were Eric Carle (overwhelmingly) and Anna Dewdney, but these were the personal favorites for everyone!

  1. Ms. Marita, Infants Teacher:

    1. The Very Quiet Cricket

    2. Fox in Socks

    3. Rex Wrecks It

  2. Ms. Nha, Infants Teacher:

    1. Pete the Cat

    2. Bloop Bloop Goes the Poop

    3. Press Here

  3. Ms. Patty, Infants Teacher:

    1. The Paper Bag Princess

    2. The Polar Express

    3. Llama Llama Yum Yum Yum

  4. Ms. Pinky, Toddler Teacher:

    1. Chicka Chicka Boom Boom

    2. Giraffes Can’t Dance

    3. I Love You, Stinky Face

  5. Ms. Simi, Toddler Teacher:

    1. Five Little Monkeys

    2. Five Little Pumpkins

    3. Mouse Paint

  6. Ms. Kisha, 2s Teacher:

    1. Llama Llama Red Pajama

    2. Little Blue Truck Leads the Way

    3. I’m Dirty!

  7. Ms. Delia, 2s Teacher:

    1. The Gingerbread Man

    2. Where is my Mommy?

    3. The Very Selfish Crocodile

  8. Ms. Janette, 2s ad 3s Teacher:

    1. Pugtato

    2. Puff the Magic Dragon

    3. The Snowy Day

  9. Ms. Vanessa, 3s Teacher:

    1. Brown Bear Brown Bear What do you See?

    2. The Very Hungry Caterpillar

    3. Little Red Hen

  10. Ms. Petty, 3s Teacher:

    1. Corduroy

    2. Little Red Riding Hood

    3. Goldilocks and the Three Bears

  11. Mr. Josh, 4s Teacher:

    1. The Little Old Lady who Wasn’t Afraid of Anything

    2. Dragons Love Tacos

    3. Elephant and Piggie Books

  12. Ms. Adella, 4s Teacher:

    1. Green Eggs and Ham

    2. Caps for Sale

    3. No, David!

  13. Ms. Victoria, School-Age Teacher:

    1. Dream Big, Little One - Vashti

    2. Harrison, is Everyone Ready for Fun? - Jan Thomas

    3. The Grouchy Ladybug - Eric Carle

  14. Ms. Mimi, Assistant Director:

    1. Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What do you Hear?

    2. Wishy Washy

    3. Dear Zoo

  15. Ms. Liz, Director:

    1. Click Clack Moo, Cow's that Type by Doreen Cronin. I just LOVE how the farm animals organize a union to get better working conditions!

    2. What you do Matters series (what do you do with a problem, what do you do with an idea, what do you do with a chance)

    3. "None the Number" series

    4. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

    5. Charlotte's Web

    6. Harry Potter

  16. Ms. LJ, Teacher:

    1. King Baby

    2. Ladybug Girl and the Beach

    3. Prince and Knight

    4. Chapter Book: The Boggart (The Boggart and the Monster is my favorite, but you should read the first one!)

    5. Chapter Book: The Bailey School Kids — Vampires Don’t Wear Polka Dots is #1, but they’re all amazing

    6. Chapter Book: The Hobbit — There are graphic novel versions too, but it’s a classic, it’s a charming read, and it’s worth it.

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