Library Graffiti

by Vicky on May 24, 2010

We discovered this pro-library graffiti in the women’s restroom at our branch the other day… How cool is that?  I’ll admit that I have a thing for graffiti.  Several years ago, I ran across this great example on Flickr from Barcelona (Creative Commons license:Some rights reserved):

By Christian Bering: click image to link to his site.

This was when I was a new librarian at Diné College, the Navajo tribal college.  I was struggling to fit in to a very different culture, and failing dismally to connect with students.  Inspired by this image, I created some digital graffiti of my own as part of a presentation introducing students to the college library:

…and this further inspired the design for a give-away mug.

Few people have any idea of the vastness of the Navajo Nation, which is the size of West Virginia.  Diné College has three campuses with libraries, one in Arizona and two in New Mexico.  But when I began my job as the traveling instruction librarian, students who attended classes at the remote centers didn’t even know that the libraries existed.  I created flyers advertising my upcoming visits using the “Go to the Library ONLINE 24/7″ image, and I also used it (coupled with the “Out of the Clubs and Into the Libraries” image) in a Powerpoint presentation introducing them to the library.  Later we created the mugs to give away to students at the remote centers.

It worked!  The students related to the cool edginess of the graffiti images, and they loved the 24/7 availability of so much information.

Since undergraduate students are notorious for pulling all-nighters to finish papers and projects, they were thrilled to find out how much information was available to support their last-minute information needs. I also designed an information literacy curriculum based on the Diné educational paradigm, which emphasized a balanced approach for conceiving, planning, executing, and evaluating a project, and I showed them examples of the library’s outstanding collection of Navajo materials and walked them through the process of requesting materials to be sent to them. So, like every good instruction librarian, I showed them that research takes time, and I encouraged—nay, exhorted!—them to begin their research early.

But somehow the graffiti and tips on 24/7 resources convinced them that I was on their side and was, in fact, no stranger to last-minute, late-night study sessions.

The “Out of the Clubs and Into the Libraries” image also inspired me to work with a humanities faculty member to start Friday Nights @ the Library, an open-mic community coffeehouse.  This was a way of bringing the oral tradition back into the library, along with music, art, conversation, and other forms of cultural expression.  And it gave me a chance to create my very first actual graffiti on campus!

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Gator Gumbo

by Vicky on May 24, 2010

This week’s Page Presents show featured the book, Gator Gumbo: A Spicy Hot Tale, by Candace Fleming with illustrations by Sally Anne Lambert.

Set in the bayous of Louisiana, it’s the story of Monsieur Gator, an aged and scrawny fellow who has grown sadly resigned to a vegetarian diet and the taunts and jibes of his former prey (who are all too aware that he is now too slow to catch them).

This book’s Cajun lingo makes it a natural for storytelling.  Because of my available finger puppets, I changed two of the small mean animals in the story.  Instead of Madame Skunk, Monsieur Otter, and Mademoiselle Possum, we had Madame Skunk, Monsieur Weasel, and Mademoiselle Crow.

The repetitions are delicious, as M. Gator asks who will help him with each step of the recipe, the little animals rudely refuse, and M. Gator imperturbably says, “Then I will just have to do it myself.”  Still, they can’t help moving one step closer to the pot as they sniff the increasingly irresistible aromas, and M. Gator declares, with each new ingredient,  “Almost like Maman used to make!”

I did my best to channel Justin Wilson, the Cookin’ Cajun.  I especially love the story he tells in this show.

Suffice it to say that, at the end of Gator Gumbo, M. Gator pronounces with satisfaction,  “Mmmmhmmmm…..just like Maman used to make!”

Mr. Matt taught everyone the Hand Jive clapping rhythm (a clavé style second line rhythm used in New Orleans funk.  Everyone caught on to that, so he taught us a variation, and we all clapped our way through Iko Iko.

Have I mentioned that one of the things I love most about Mr. Matt’s Minute is that we get to expose kids to real music from around the world?

(As opposed to kiddie music.)  Don’t get me wrong, there’s some great music out there composed expressly for children.  But kids love music, so why not expose them to the full gamut?

We played Cajun music all during our craft time, and one little girl told me as she danced with her alligator puppet, “I love music, and I just love to dance.  I really really like this music!”

I pushed the envelope a little too far with this week’s paper bag alligator puppet.  I knew that kids would need some help with putting the alligator jaws together, but I made sure that there were very simple shapes that kids would find easy to cut out and paste.  So imagine my shock when I noticed almost all of the parents doing all of the cutting and pasting as their kids watched!

I’m guessing that the whole thing looked so complicated that the parents just took over.

At least now I know where the outer edge of the envelope is!  Design constraints, yes!  (Charles Eames: “I don’t remember ever being forced to accept compromises, but I have willingly accepted constraints.”)

Even though they didn’t get to have the fun of making their own puppets, the kids still loved playing with them.

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At home in the Chinet Museum

by Vicky on May 24, 2010

We like folk art.  But I never thought of myself as a folk artist.

Since starting Page Presents, however, our house is beginning to fill up with LOTS of folk art…my own!

My husband has begun referring to our home as The Chinet Museum.

When he saw last week’s mask prototypes, he commented, “We’ll have to open up a whole new wing in The Chinet Museum!

So we did!

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Who’s In Rabbit’s House?

by Page on May 17, 2010

Hi, everybody!  It’s me, Page!  This week I got to be the star of my own show, Page Presents!

Vicky and I got inspired by Verna Aardema’s book, Who’s in Rabbit’s House (illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon).  In the book, the story of Rabbit (whose house is taken over by a mysterious animal with a scary voice) is presented as a play.  The actors wear animal masks, and each animal tries to help Rabbit eject the bad animal in his or her own way.  Unfortunately, all of their methods involve messing up or destroying Rabbit’s house, so Rabbit does not approve.  The surprise ending teaches a lesson about fear and the unseen.  Vicky liked it because she got to make different sounds for the animals as they came and went.

I got to play all the animals except Rabbit!  I was really good, too.

Vicky thought the kids would have fun picking out one of the “helpful” animals and making its mask.  She found a really cool method, originally for making paper bag masks.  But she wanted the masks to be more colorful, so she used construction paper, which worked beautifully!  Check out this link to a great tutorial on making this type of mask.

She also photocopied some images of African mud cloth for the kids to decorate their masks with.  Her prototypes looked like this:

Frog, Jackal, Leopard, Wildebeest, and Elephant:  Vicky was worried that some child might be devastated by not getting the mask kit of her choice, but everyone seemed to get the one he wanted.  They had fun making their masks, and as soon as they put them on, you could see them take on the persona of their animal.  I guess they learned that from me!

By the way, Vicky changed one of the animals from the story. 

In the book, one of the animals is Rhinoceros, but Vicky didn’t want to figure out how to make rhino horns, so she changed it to Wildebeest, which had easier horns.  Speaking of horns, one of the kids decided that he wanted to be a horned frog.  Anything is possible in the Imagi-Nation!

Oh gosh!  I almost forgot to tell you about Mr. Matt’s Minute this week.  Mr. Matt is Zoey’s dad, and he is a real, honest-to-goodness drummer and percussion teacher!  And he’s a really fun person too.  Since we were featuring another story from Africa, we got to work on the marketplace rhythm some more, and it was the best yet!  This time, after he got us going with the marketplace rhythm, he added a cool counter-rhythm.  They sounded awesome together!  Then he taught everyone the counter-rhythm.  After that he divided the audience into two groups.  One group had to keep playing the marketplace rhythm, and the other group had to play the other rhythm.  Then the two groups switched rhythms.  You might think that I don’t get to do this, since I don’t have any arms, but I have a castanet-clicker that I can hold in my mouth.  I’m getting good at it, too!  Oh wow!  It was really rockin’!  Then Vicky put on some music, and we got to play along with our two different rhythms.  It sounded great!  It was a different song from the one we played with before, too.  (Vicky just told me that it was “Africa” from the African Spirit cd by the Soweto Gospel Choir.)  I think Mr. Matt is amazing!

Here are some more pictures from this week.

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Robots Rock!

by Vicky on May 9, 2010

Space robots were the theme at this week’s Page Presents class.  I taught the kids the American Sign Language sign for “robot” (robotic arm movements), and then we played Robot Commander (a robotic version of Simon Says).

Matt brought a metronome for his Mr. Matt’s Minute of rhythm instruction, and as he gradually increased the tempo the kids had a blast speeding up their robot moves to stay with the beat.

Then, with the help of Page the Bookworm and a toy robot, I told the story of Space Robot @ the Library, which was based on the puppet play “Take Me To Your Library” by Denise Anton Wright (from One-Person Puppet Plays). (Overheard from the audience as the puppet play was about to begin: Little Boy: “Where’s the Worm?” Mother: “We’ll just have to wait and see if he shows up.”)

The Space Robot is making soft beeping noises, and, in a soliloquy, confides to the audience that he is afraid and feels very anxious about meeting his first Earthling.  He exits, and then we see Page the Bookworm, on his way to the library.  Page hears the beeping sound, wonders what it is, asks the audience if they can hear it.  Naturally they assert that it’s coming from a space robot.

Page can’t believe this, but eventually admits to the audience that they were right, after he has a close encounter with the space robot.  Page tells the robot that he is on his way to the library to return his books and to check out some more to take home and read.  The robot does not understand the words, “library,” “book,” and “read.”  Page gets his library books and demonstrates.  The space robot is excited and wants to take this technology back to his planet.

Page explains that the books belong to the library and are shared by everyone, so he can’t give them to the space robot.  However, he points out that there are digital versions of the books that he will download into the robot’s memory.  The space robot happily returns to his planet, and Page waves goodbye and rushes on to the library to tell everyone about his adventure.

After the story, the kids made robot bodi-puppets (I got this idea from Storytelling with Puppets, by Connie Champlin).  This time I remembered to tell the parents to be sure to measure the robot body parts against their child and make any necessary adjustments before stapling it together!

This one belonged to a very short kid!


I had been reading about Dave Eggers’ TED wish that people would engage creatively with their local public schools, and about how his fabulous 826 Valencia tutoring center inspired others around the world to open.  Since the original location was zoned for retail, they had to open a store at the tutoring center, and so they created The Pirate Supply Store to serve the working buccaneer.  This model proved to be so successful that all the subsequent 826 tutoring centers have featured a store, including the Brooklyn Superhero Supply Co. in New York, the Boring Store (surreptitiously supplying secret agents) in Chicago, the Time Travel Mart in Los Angeles, the Greater Boston Bigfoot Research Institute (in Boston), and the Greenwood Space Travel Supply Co. in Seattle.

The 826Michigan center in Ann Arbor features the Liberty Street Robot Supply & Repair shop.  I thought the kids would appreciate the seal of approval that a manufacturer’s label would provide for their robots.

I also discovered a lot of old AOL cds in a cupboard, which would be a great feature for robots of the digital age, and I gathered together assorted stickers and labels, as well as a box of various foam shapes.  We used leftover insulation from a roofing project for the arms and legs, and I created little wheels by covering sections of wrapping paper tubes with heavy-duty aluminum foil.  And yes! the large letters and numbers came from my 2009 Stendig calendar.

The kids made amazing robot bodi-puppets.  A parent commented, “I think this is not just for kids, because we parents love robots too!”

Afterwards, we all put on our robots and danced robotically to the techno sounds of Daft Punk’s Robot Rocks.  Andrew, our über-cool rock band drummer page, said, “I walked into the library and I thought, whoa, I hear techno-rock….Daft Punk…Robot Rocks!  Chill.”

I was pleased to notice afterwards that all of the robot books I had on display before the program had been checked out…or else stolen by a space robot!

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Random acts of whimsy

by Vicky on May 2, 2010

I’m in love with the books of Baba Wagué Diaketé!  They are a storyteller’s dream, including action, drama, songs to sing, sound effects, and characters that take on a life of their own.  When I started thinking about featuring Diakité’s book, The Hatseller and the Monkeys, for this week’s Page Presents class, a vague memory surfaced of a footlocker in our storage area that was allegedly full of monkeys.  When I investigated, I could see part of a hand and a foot sticking out pitifully, but the hasp was stuck.

I enlisted the help of my colleague Anne, and we raided the tool drawer for something to pry it open with.  As the hasp gave way, the lid sprang open, and suddenly there were flying monkeys everywhere!  The locker had been tightly stuffed with 15 dogs and 13 monkeys. which burst free from their confinement explosively.  Anne promptly declared that we should line up the monkeys on our staff room couch, and I gleefully assisted.

Something tells me that monkeys will begin to appear frequently in the Page Presents show!

It was easy to talk my boss, Linda, into taking the part of the naughty monkeys for our storytime drama, since she had recently stolen the show as the (overly) helpful fairies (plural!) in our tandem telling of Margaret Read MacDonald’s story, “The Little Old Woman Who Hated Housework” at our spring concert.

In the story of The Hatseller and the Monkeys, the hatseller sets out on his way to a big festival without taking time to eat breakfast.  Halfway there, he gets tired and sits down to rest under a tree.  Soon he is snoring, and this alerts the monkeys to his presence.  They sneak down and steal his colorful hats.  When he wakes up and finds his hats missing, a hilarious exchange with the monkeys ensues, with the monkeys imitating everything he does.  After being pelted with mangos by the monkeys, the hatseller takes time out to eat the fruit and soon comes up with a better idea to trick the monkeys into giving back the hats.

Linda got out our big ladder, which we draped with camouflage fabric and greenery.  To our eyes, it looked satisfyingly tree-ish, especially when we added the monkeys all over it.  I’m not sure what the library patrons thought.  I kept seeing people approach and stand there bemusedly staring at it with their mouths open.

Mysterious monolith appears in Seattle's Magnuson Park on 01/01/2001

The appearance of a very tall, tree-ish ladder in the middle of the children’s room apparently had very nearly the same effect as the appearance of the Monolith in  Stanley Kubrick’s film, 2001: A Space Odyssey.  (Speaking of random acts of whimsy, a monolith appeared on Kite Hill in Seattle’s Magnuson Park on January 1, 2001, only to disappear and reappear mysteriously in other locations around town).

We had a great time with our dramatization of the story, and the kids loved seeing the antics of the naughty monkeys.

The Hatseller and the Monkeys storytime

Afterwards the kids made kufi hats from bulletin board border trim (another storage closet find!) and construction paper.  I found this idea in several places on the Web.  To make the hats a little more authentic, I found a photo of kente cloth and made a couple of color prints, which I cut up for additional trim for the hats.  It was a great project for the kids to make with minimal parental intervention, and they all went away proudly wearing their new kufis.

Kids wearing kufi hats made from paper

Matt and Zoey were back this week, and we repeated the African marketplace rhythm from last week for Mr. Matt’s Minute of rhythm instruction.  We had a younger group of kids this time, but many of them were still able to catch on to the rhythm, and the ones who didn’t were inspired to dance enthusiastically to the music (Angelique Kidjo’s “Battu” from the African Playground cd).

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Jabberwocky

by Vicky on April 26, 2010

“‘Twas brillig, and the slithy toves / Did gyre and gimble in the wabe…”

I’m planning to report on most of my Page Presents classes, as time permits, going back to the first of the year.  For our storytime class last month featuring Lewis Carroll’s Jabberwocky, I tried out a little participatory drama.  Page the Bookworm announced that our theme for the day was silliness, and thus we had to start out by shaking our sillies IN (not OUT) to the tune of Raffi’s Shake My Sillies Out.

Then I showed them a big pop-up book, Silly Heads, by Cathy Shuttleworth et al., and I started mixing up the fairy godmother in the tiara with the wizard’s beard, or putting the pirate hat on the bejeweled ingenue princess, etc., etc.  This elicited much hilarity.

By now, they were getting into the spirit of silliness, so Page showed off his Jubjub bird costume as I explained the story of Jabberwocky “in prose.”  Then I divided the group into two sections.  “You are the Slithy Toves,” I told one section, bestowing upon them colorful gauze scarves to wave from side to side.  The other group got wands with crepe paper streamers.  “You are the Mimsy Borogoves,” I instructed them, “and you must pop up from time to time and wave your tentacles.”  My husband wore an owl mask and held other owl masks in each hand, so he resembled a three-headed Mome Rath.  One head would pop up, uttering a mournful “Moooooome…”  Then the middle head would shriek “Raths!” and the third head would comment wryly, “Outgrabe…”  It was quite a performance.  He also operated the Fr-r-r-umious Bandersnatch, a dragon-like kite.

I played the father, the son, and the Jabberwock.  We used a large dragon head puppet for the Jabberwock, which was perfect for flinging off in its death throes and then galumphing back with.  Some background music added atmosphere to our dramatization.

Afterwards the kids made paper plate masks.  They had the option of using a whole plate or using one of several templates provided to shape the plate before embellishing it.  I just put out a lot of odds and ends from our crafts closet, and the children did the rest.  I had been looking forward to trying a very open project like this, which I thought would be pedagogically much better for developing their creativity.  They had a wonderful time with their mask-making, and continued their dramatic play wearing the masks.  Long after the session ended, one little boy was still wearing his mask as he looked at picture books.

By the way, while we’re on the subject of Jabberwocky, please don’t miss the humor and artistry—and fabulous puppets—of the Crabgrass Puppet Theater’s performance!

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The Magic Gourd

by Vicky on April 25, 2010

This week in our Page Presents class, I had to take over Mr. Matt’s Minute of rhythm instruction, since Matt’s daughter Zoey had the croup.  Matt had emailed me his idea about teaching an African “marketplace” rhythm that the kids could play on their bodies.  This worked out really well.  I started out at a very slow tempo, and when everyone was slapping out the rhythm on their knees and hands, I asked them if they could do it faster.  We gradually worked up to a much faster tempo, and then I played Angelique Kidjo’s Battu, from the African Playground cd.  Everyone did amazingly well at keeping the rhythm going at this very fast tempo!  Whenever they started to lose the beat, I had them switch to clapping out downbeats.  Then on the next time around we would go back to the marketplace rhythm.  It was fun and challenging!

Then I told the West African story, The Magic Gourd, by the wonderful Baba Wagué Diakité.  I had help from my handsome black Rabbit puppet and my new Chameleon puppet.  It is a time of prolonged drought, and Rabbit is poor and hungry and hard at work trying to find a few roots to feed his family.  He takes time to free Chameleon from a thorny bush, and Chameleon gives him a magic gourd that fills with whatever is asked for.  Rabbit shares his plenty with his friends and neighbors, and soon the greedy king hears of the gourd and sends his guards to take it by force.  With the help of Chameleon, Rabbit tricks the king into giving back his gourd, and the king learns a lesson about generosity.  Rabbit and Chameleon, of course, already know that true friendship is the greatest treasure of all.

For our weekly craft, we made our own magic gourds.  My original idea was to use Chinet paper bowls, but I couldn’t find any, and I didn’t want to use plastic.  I happened upon this great template from Martha Stewart, which worked just like…magic!  I enlarged the template, traced it onto recycled file folders, and cut it out.  It was a perfect preschool craft because the kids could do everything themselves.  I had printed out examples of African mud cloth, which the kids could cut up and glue onto the flat template.  Then we punched holes in each petal section, and the kids could lace the heavy twine through the holes and cinch up the petals into a bowl.  Here are two views of the one that I made:

…and here is a gallery of the ones made by the kids!

I love how each child brings his or her own sense of design to create a unique work of art.  In the story, Chameleon demonstrates the magic gourd by asking it to fill with insects, which he proceeds to gobble up.  Elijah showed me how he filled his bowl with black-and-white animal images that reminded him of Chameleon’s insects, and he and his friend pretended to gobble up the contents of their gourds with gusto.  Avery had taken some of the red, green, and yellow construction paper strips into his finished bowl, and he told me, “See, here are some carrots and some peas and some corn in my magic gourd!”

One mother told me that she had taken her child to a storytime at a different branch, and afterwards he declared, “I like Ms. V.”

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National Library Week

by Vicky on April 20, 2010

Well, actually National Library Week was last week, but we were so busy at my library that I’m just now coming up for air.  On Snapshot Day, the photo that got away was the huge throng of people waiting to get in the library when it opened.  I thought, “Oh, it’s a flash mob!”  There must have been 30 people jammed up outside the doors, all dressed in bright colors, including one person with a huge multicolored golf umbrella.  It was a Kodak moment if there ever was one.  Unfortunately, my boss (who had the camera) got called away to deal with something and I did NOT want to delay opening the door!

The day before tax day, there were a lot of people needing to use the library computers to file their taxes.

I ran across this cool video by thewikiman:

I can’t wait to play around with xtra normal!

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There’s hope for my nose…

by Page on April 18, 2010

Yippee!  I solved the problem of the image gallery showing up on all the pages!  “Think Different” is my motto.  I scrapped the image gallery and created a set of rotating header images, so you get a different image every time you load or refresh a page.  I think it looks pretty spiffy!  We are almost ready to go live, I think.

Vicky looked at the site on a PC at work the other day and came home all horrified about it, so we had to resize all the images.  Yowie, my pain is like a red, red nose after all this clicking and dragging.  I’m really hoping that everything will look OK the next time she checks it out.  Then maybe I’ll feel well enough to return to my co-hosting job at Page Presents this week.  I want to show everyone the site so they’ll know I haven’t been slacking!

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