Noise on Tuesday

Dear Library Patrons,

There will be construction on the ground floor and second floor of the library Tuesday as the old reference desk and a wooden barrier on the 2nd floor are removed.

All floors of the Library will remain open but we expect that there will be some noise and dust.

Apologies for any inconvenience this may cause.

If you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact:

Monique Flaccavento, Acting Director, OISE Library – monique.flaccavento@utoronto.ca.

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New Titles at the OISE library – Exciting New Fiction for Children and Youth

Finalist for the 2014 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature, Deborah Wile’s Revolution, Book 2 in The Sixties Trilogy, is a new, powerful, and complex young adult novel. While Revolution focuses on two fictional characters, their story is embedded in the true historical events of Greenwood, Mississippi during the summer of 1964, known as Freedom Summer, when volunteers, met with violence and threats, launched a campaign to register as many newly enfranchised African-American voters as possible. Drawing on excerpts from songs, news articles, images, and other ephemera from the events in Greenwood and the wider civil rights movement, Wiles’s layered narrative honestly depicts the violence and bigotry of the era while also appealing to relatable and age-appropriate themes of growing up and facing family changes.

A is for apple, B is for baby, C is for… yawn! Unexpected, funny, and irreverent, Oliver Jeffers’s Once upon An Alphabet is a new take on the old formula; this picture book has “stories, made of words, made for all the letters.” The once familiar alphabet comes uncannily alive in the form of characters such as “Danger Delilah” (L) “who laughs in the face of Death and dances at the door of Disaster,” and the “Owl that rides on the back of the Octopus” (O) who together search for problems like the “puzzled parsnip” (P). Jeffers’s beautiful illustrated and endlessly clever book may be a challenge to describe but is also a joy to read, no matter your age (or grasp on your ABCs).

Crazy, Linda Vigen Phillips’s YA novel in verse, is a finely crafted fiction that deals with mental illness in a 1960s family. Laura, a 15 year old living with a bipolar mother, tells her story in free verse that takes inspiration from the narrative, lyrical, and imagist style. Phillips draws from her own personal experience dealing with the stigma historically attached to mental illness and, through her compelling book, hopes to be an advocate for teens facing similar situations today.

Karen Stanton’s Monday, Wednesday, and Every Other Weekend is a sympathetic and eclectically styled picture book that deals with a family break up and the adjustment of living in two homes. Henry and Pomegranate (Henry’s dog) move between Henry’s parents’ new homes on a daily basis; Henry notes the great things about each house but Pomegranate’s actions reveal a longing for their old home all together. Stanton’s book also captures the diversity of city living and different types of families, and would be a great addition to units on family and city life.

For youth with a flair for words and language is the delightful and heartfelt YA novel, Natalie Lloyd’s A Snicker of Magic. Felicity Pickle, our narrator, is fresh character who sees words everywhere but finds it hard to say them. Her experiences will be welcome to students who have a creative bent but find public speaking a challenge, or to anyone who has ever felt like the odd one out in a new classroom. The novel is peppered with fun visual touches that express handwritten notes or event posters and fans have noted that Lloyd’s wordplay and invention make this text a particularly fun one to read out loud.

Feel free to browse these titles and more in OISE library’s Juvenile Fiction section which is located on the third floor of the OISE library.

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Therapy Dog Visiting Tomorrow!

The OISE Library will be hosting a St. John Ambulance therapy dog tomorrow, on Wednesday, October 21st from noon until 1 p.m. The visit will take place on the ground floor in the journal nook. We hope you’ll take a break from your studies to meet with Amigo!  

Join us tomorrow and #taketimetopaws @OISELibrary!

take time to paws

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Write-on-Site

 

Beginning this week, the OISE Library will be hosting the CTL and CTLAS sponsored Write-On-Site program. Every Thursday from 2-6pm, anyone who wants to write quietly, in the company of others, is welcome to join. Participants will be meeting on the ground floor of the library, in the space adjacent to the current journals section. Feel free to drop by for all or part of the time, no signup is necessary.

 

 

 

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Featured Activity Kit: Hands-on Beginning Geometry Kit

Make learning geometry fun with the Hands-on Beginning Geometry Kit!  This kit uses everyday objects to help students identify and learn shapes based on items they are familiar with, such as a soup can to demonstrate a cylinder.

geometrykit

Activity cards found in the kit provide a hands-on approach to teaching students shapes. Students match the miniature objects with the corresponding shapes illustrated on the activity cards.

The kit features 6 wooden shapes including a cone, cube, cylinder, hemisphere and sphere. It also includes 12 miniatures, such as a cake, hat, ice cube, tangerine, and a building block, as well as 6 self-checking cards.

Stop by the OISE Library to take a look at the Hands-on Beginning Geometry Kit in person. It is located on the Ground Floor coffee table, adjacent to the Circulation Desk. You can also view this item as well as other hands-on learning resources in the OISE Library K-12 Manipulatives Database. 

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