Who'd have one Christmas tree when more will do??
Reading the Christmas issues of Australian magazines such as Inside Out (their Christmas issue this year was brilliant!) and Home Beautiful, I came across this idea:
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...and I got to thinking. It's got potential, but a I need a blank wall.
In the library entrance.
Where we've painted a word wall, and I ain't stickin' anything on that...
but
I don't have to, do I?
Because if you turn around our ever-useful bookcase...
...you have a blank wall. Yay!
And then if you buy a length of wide creamy white quilt wadding, and use a couple of bulldog clips, you have a background (if you're really indulgent, and squint, you might think, very vaguely, of snow. Not that there's any of that around here, we've been having hot hot days over 30degC, a warm start to summer).
Christmas cards? Meh. What is one of the things ornamenting the library?
Our beautiful students, of course! I took a bunch of photos of kids in the library, got them printed as 4in x 6in photos (less than 20c each) and just used white ball-head pins to attach them to the wadding.
Here's the result:
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We outlined it in a simple ball-garland, added a couple of decorations and some low-voltage fairy lights under the wadding at the base of the tree, and there you are.
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The kids love to see themselves and their friends; it's also a message to them that we value them (another bit of library PR - there are so many ways to welcome and encourage kids, and thus get them in the door and using the library, discovering the library, being happy in the library. If you're happy somewhere, you're more likely to come back...). Any of our 'decorating' is never just pretty-pretty - it's for educational reasons, and judging by the library usage, they're working as we intend. I've had some commentary from a couple of presentations I've done recently where people have said they 'don't have time for this decorating stuff', which is why I make this point. How many libraries do you know that are stale and old and boring (not to mention school blocks, school classrooms...); do you like walking into stale and old and boring places? Do you want to? Do you want to stay, or explore them? Why would kids be any different?
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(In case you wondered, most of the commentary after those presentations has been overwhelmingly positive, which is great! - it's been fun to share our journey and ideas with other teacher librarians.)
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The Christmas banners are made from Snoa fabric from Ikea's Christmas 2009 range ($9.99 per metre). While the heart is a great graphic image, our two pillars are actually different heights. Making each banner with a single heart and a co-ordinating fabric below means that you can't tell (as you could if we had used all the heart fabric and had a big half-heart on a banner - and who wants to be half-hearted?!).
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I've shown you a number of our banners on Skerricks this year - use that search box up on the left to find them (they're also under the library display tag). The first blog entry about banners, which included sewing instructions, is here. We've done a few, and will use them again through next year.
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At the end of term, we'll fold away these Christmas banners and wadding; next year, take more photos, and be able to put up banners and the new edition of the tree of kids (our only cost being the photos), easy-peasy!
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I'll take photos of our other trees and blog them before the end of term.
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We'd love to read your comments...
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Cheers
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Ruth
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* GIFSL = good ideas for school libraries
2 comments:
Ruth, Thanks for your great ideas. They helped inspire our Robbie idea http://readingpower.edublogs.org/2009/11/23/making-life-size-posters/
which was a great hit with both students and staff posing for photos. We are planning more life size posters for next year.
Merry Christmas, Anne Weaver
Love the Chrissie tree made of photos of the students. Fabulous way of giving the library a celebratory feel and I agree - it makes the students know that they are loved. I hope you have a wonderful Christmas break :)
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