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!

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Kindergarten Readiness: A Discussion Series

Common Ground has been around 49 years.

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In that time, we have made some incredible discoveries about how children learn and thrive.

Having a curriculum dedicated to kindergarten-readiness for our 3 yr and 4 yr class rooms has proven to be essential to a child’s comfort, confidence, and comprehension in their kindergarten classroom.

Disclaimer: This does not mean we want your three year old sitting at a desk all the time!

We actually want the opposite of that! We have talked about how essential big body activities and play-based learning are to a child’s holistic development. We have discussed the need for peers to really create a learning space rife with new ideas and curiosity.

As a parent AND a teacher, I covered my initial concerns for children not in kindergarten readiness programs HERE. I especially touched on children who were not in any kind of program during the Covid-19 social distancing effort.

Having a daily schedule in a classroom completely dedicated to their exploration with peers who provide endless inspiration is key to a learning spirit. We want to share our experiences, our research, and our findings with you by taking a deeper dive into how a two year kindergarten readiness program benefits:

  • Natural number sense — an awareness that mathematics is present in all things

  • Scientific process — independent search for answers to their questions

  • Emotional regulation and social confidence

  • Physical fitness and general endurance

  • Attention, comprehension, and participation

  • Learning as a PROCESS over a destination

  • Prewriting and Imaginative Independence — We discussed at length how Emergent Writing is nurtured from ages 3-5 HERE, but will touch on it as we discuss other aspects of a child’s growth and development

We will be discussing Rising Kindergarteners and our Private Kindergarten on February 9th, but we encourage anyone with a child who will be 3 by September 30th, 2021 to enroll them in a readiness program. Follow our journey, ask questions, and do your research! We will also provide further reading on the subjects at the end of each post and discussion.

We are constantly learning and growing as well! As teachers, we love learning almost as much as we love your kids, and want to nurture them with you. Let’s do this together!

Warmest Regards,

Ms. LJ



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GIVE TIME: Fill out this Department of Education survey!


Dear Families,

The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE), the Virginia Early Childhood Foundation (VECF), and the University of Virginia are conducting the 2020 Virginia Survey of Families with Young Children. The purpose of this survey is to better understand children’s care and/or education experiences during COVID-19.

Please take few moments to complete this survey by January 25th: vafamilysurvey.info  

The purpose of this survey is to better understand children’s care and/or education experiences during COVID-19. 

  • All Virginia families of young children, birth through kindergarten, can take the survey. 

  • The survey will take about 10-15 minutes and is voluntary. 

  • The survey is available online in English or Spanish. 

  • Families can take it on their phone, tablet, or computer using the link above. 

  • All information from this survey is anonymous. The survey does not ask families for their names or their programs’ names. 

  • The survey is about their children’s care and/or education experiences during COVID-19. 

  • The survey is not about evaluating any program. 

Please make sure to share this this post with every Virginia resident that you know that had a young child, birth through kindergarten so that we can help the VDOE, VECF, and UVA gather this information.

Thank you so much for your help and participation on this!

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