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Showing posts with label Somerset County New Jersey Events for Children and Families. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Somerset County New Jersey Events for Children and Families. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

March is Bursting with Activities -- Join the March for Kids Lives, Maker’s Day weekend, St. Patrick’s Day Parade, NJ Stages Festival, Planetarium fun, Bedtime Math, great booklists for kids on the spectrum, STEM, and more…

I just returned from Arizona to discover that March in NJ is definitely giving us a last blast of Old Man Winter!

Once you dig out, here are a bunch of things to do this weekend.

And while you are stuck inside, scroll down for a fascinating math problem about flying cars (true!) and some great book suggestions for STEM
and for kids on the spectrum.

If you like this post or want to share an event or comment on something you see here, drop me a line – cslevin59 (at) gmail.com 

Stay warm and safe! Carol Simon Levin



 

Bridgewater-Raritan Parents To March Sunday March 11th For Their Kids Lives

Parents created a "Not In Our Town" group for a safer school environment for their children following the Parkland shooting.

Bridgewater-Raritan Parents To March Sunday For Their Kids Lives

By Alexis Tarrazi, Patch Staff  (Image via Neha Limaye)

Bridgewater-Raritan parents and grandparents will be marching on Sunday to create a safer school environment for their children in the district.

The march will be held Sunday at 9 a.m. at the Bridgewater-Raritan High School Basilone Field parking lot, 700 Garretson Road, in Bridgewater.

"We are doing this march with a different purpose," said Neha Limaye, co-chair of the Student Empowerment Committee in the Not In Our Town group. "It's not just limited to gun violence, it's about mental health, student support and security."

The Limaye and co-chair Komal Sheth are working with the police department to come up with a route. All of the community is invited to join the march and bring signs or whatever they like. Limaye asks participants to leave backpacks and big bags at home for security reasons.

The "Not In Our Town" group was started by Niki Dawson and her neighbor Adrienne Sorensen two days after the shooting. Dawson and Sorenson both have children in the school system.

"We were overwhelmed by it all and didn't know what to do or how to act," Dawson said. "When I went back to work I thought about the helplessness of it all. I realized we have to act or we will be the ones facing the same tragedy."

"Our major focus right now is to work with the school administration to help with social isolation in kids. The next potential school shooter is that kid sitting alone at lunch," Dawson said. "We need to empower kids to reach out to those kids and try to befriend them. And see if can get resources to them and make sure they don't grow up to be an angry, frustrated teen who might have access to a gun."

To learn more about the parents march check out Facebook event page here. To join or for more information on the "Not In Our Town" group click here.

 



Join us on Sunday, March 11 from 1 to 4 pm for NJ Makers Day!

 

NJ MAKERS DAY!

NJ Makers Day is a celebration of maker culture across New Jersey. This all-ages event connects individuals with libraries, schools, businesses, and independent makerspaces that support making, tinkering, crafting, manufacturing, and STEM-based learning.


Join us for a fun day of science, engineering, and crafting. We'll have materials to make your own instruments, a Nerdy Derby of DIY mini-sleds, computers to explore coding, electronics and circuits, and much, much more!

CALL FOR MAKERS! Do you have a hobby, craft or technology project you'd like to share? This is your chance! Contact us to share your work at NJ Makers Day!

Families can arrive and leave at any time. Parents and/or caregivers are expected to stay with children during the museum visit. Please use discretion in bringing very young children, as the museum is NOT baby-proof (some craft items are small and could present a choking hazard). This program, IN PARTICULAR, has a lot of small items, and we STRONGLY Recommend that small children with any propensity to place things in their mouth not attend.

Location: The PeopleCare Center, 120 Finderne Avenue, Bridgewater, NJ 08807 (parking and entrance are in the rear of the building).
Cost: A $3/ per child donation is suggested for those who can afford it.

For more information, somersetcminfo@gmail.com or call at 908-725-4677.



NJ Makers Day logo
Check out Somerset County Library System Maker events here:
https://sclsnj.org/be-an-sclsnj-maker/

There are many other Maker’s Day weekend events all over our area – see all the events here:  http://njmakersday.org/index.php/sitelocations/



Yet another event this Sunday!

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St. Patrick's Day Parade 
Somerville Sunday March 11th

1 Division Street 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm 
WEBSITE

The Somerville Saint Patrick's Parade is now in it's lucky 27th year of continuous existence.This year, the parade celebrates Grand Marshal Finbarr Kirby!



Looking for more things to do this week? check out Bridgewater Hulafrog

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THE 2018 STAGE FESTIVAL INTERACTIVE CALENDAR IS UP AND RUNNING!Visit stagesfestival.org to search 90+ performances, readings, workshops, camp samplers, and special theatre events all over New Jersey throughout the month of March. 85% of them are FREE, and the rest run from $2 to $20.

Every March, The Stages Festival offers free and discounted performances, workshops, play readings, and behind-the-scenes events for all ages. Make sure you're the first to learn about Stages Festival events by signing up for our mailing list. The Stages Festival is in its 21st year of bringing free and low-cost theatre to comunities across New Jersey.

Events are presented by professional Equity theatres; some take place at their theatres, and some take place in libraries, community centers, performing arts houses, senior centers and more.

Bring your family and your friends, to experience the quality, inspiration and richness that New Jersey's professional theatres have to offer. Find a Stages event near you.



 


Astronomy Programs

Perfect Little Planet 

Saturdays, March 10, 17 at 3 pm

A family from another star system is seeking the perfect vacation spot.  Which of our planets will they choose? (for ages 6-12)

 

 

From Earth to the Universe 

Saturdays, March 10, 17, 24 at 7 pm

Philosophers and scientists from the Greeks to Galileo began to unravel some of the mysteries of the Universe. Telescopes have expanded our knowledge. Fly by the planets and beyond to learn more about our place in space.  The program also includes a brief tour of the current night sky in our digital planetarium. (Recommended for ages 10 to adult)

Admission: $8 per person for one show, $14 per person for two shows on the same day.

Check our website for the full schedule.

 

 

Laser Concerts

Laser Pop Rock

Saturdays, March 3, 10, 17 at 4 pm

Lasers dance across the dome while music is played.  Songs include "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" by The Tokens, "Campfire Song Song" by Spongebob Squarepants, and "Shake It Off" by Taylor Swift. (for ages 6-12)

Visit our website

 

 

Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon laser concert

Saturdays, March 3 & 10, 8 pm

Enjoy songs from Pink Floyd hit album.  Songs include "Time," "Eclipse," and "Money."  (Recommended for ages 10-adult)

Laser Led Zeppelin

Saturdays, March 17 & 24, 8 pm

Sit back and relax, listening to "Battle of Evermore," "Stairway to Heaven," and "Houses of the Holy."

 

Visit our website

Programs for Young Visitors 

Our youngest visitors can enjoy age-appropriate programs on the last Saturday of the Month.  *We are closed on March 31, so shows are on March 24.

Rockin' Rocket Ride

Saturday, March 24 at 3:00 pm 

Put on your space suit and blast off into outer space to visit the Moon, Sun, and planets.  A lively experience for young people with music from the CD "Journey into Space" by Jane Murphy.  Recommended for ages 3-8.

SkyLights

Saturday, March 24 at 4:00 pm

Sing along with songs by mr. RAY (Family Ride, Kalien the Alien) and Jane Murphy (Moon Rock Rock, The Planet Song) as well as fun tunes like "Purple People Eater," "Let It Go," and "ABC-123" by the Jackson Five.  Some songs are illustrated with lasers while others feature video images.  Recommended for ages 3-8.

 

Observatory 

Weather permitting, the 3M Observatory will be open to the public on Saturdays from 7:00 p.m. to about 10:00 p.m.   

Please note, we will not open if it is too cold. 

What's up in the Sky?

Mercury and Venus are low on the western horizon at sunset this month.  Mercury moves closer to the Sun after mid-month, disappearing from our view, yet again.  Venus continues to slowly climb higher in the evening twilight.

Before sunrise, Saturn, Mars, and Jupiter are the planets to look for.  Mars is moving closer to the ringed planet and farther from Jupiter.

There are two full moons this month, so the second is referred to as a "blue moon."  The last blue moon was in January.  The next won't be until October 2020.

The Vernal Equinox is on March 20 at 12:15 pm EDT.

Time to Spring Ahead!  Daylight Savings Time begins on Sunday, March 11.

 

Planetarium at Raritan Valley Community College | 908-231-8805 | planet@raritanval.edu | www.raritanval.edu/planetarium

RVCC Planetarium, 118 Lamington Road, North Branch, NJ 08876



 

Melissa Taylor at Imagination Soup has created some wonderful booklists I am eager to share with you.

CHARACTERS ON THE AUTISM SPECTRUM

Recently, I previewed an excellent soon-to-be-published book called Differently Wired. It shared that 1 in 5 school-age kids is neurological diverse (if you include all the labels of atypical brains such as giftedness, learning disorders, autism, ADHD, anxiety, etc.). The author points out that this 20% of kids is still struggling to fit in schools for a variety of reasons, one being that their way of thinking is not always accepted or understood. It reminded me that we must be sharing books with our children that include neurodiversity. (For the neurodiverse kids to know they're not alone and for other kids to develop empathy.)

To that end, I created this list of 23 best picture and chapter books that have characters on the autism spectrum. Similarly, you might want to read: Learning Differences in Children's Books and Books About Characters Who Have Physical Disabilities.

Great Books to Encourage Kids & STEM

Do your kids love STEM topics? Check out these STEM picture books about engineering and invention -- with some standout new titles just published. Older readers will want to try one of these STEM chapter books about science, technology, engineering, and math. Who knows, maybe these books will light a fire about a particular STEM subject.

TIPS TO GET KIDS TO READ MORE

Kaye Newton spent a year trying to find ways to get her screen-loving kids to read more. She gives us four helpful tips here.

WRITING A STORY

Want picture books that show the authors journey, plotting, and finding good story ideas? Here are 20 titles to use at home, in your homeschool, or in a writing workshop. (With a printable list.)

ADDITION CARD GAME

We've found a new math and bluffing game to add to our family game night -- Check the Fridge! It got us laughing and using addition skills so it's win-win in my book. (And I imagine yours, too. Read more about it here.)

GROWTH MINDSET

Remember the Big Life Journal? I'm so excited about their Growth Mindset 5-Day Challenge! The challenge kit is filled with 27 pages of interactive and engaging activities for kids to do with a buddy. Want to do this? GET IT HERE.

Don't miss this list of 14 growth mindset picture books to help your child learn to see mistakes as wonderful potential. (Includes a printable list.)



Try some daily fun math from Bedtimemath.org:

When you're a grown-up and can drive a car, it's exciting to zoom down the road really fast. But what if that car could fly? As crazy as that idea sounds, flying cars are almost here. The TF-X, being built by Terrafugia, will have fold-up wings that can tuck away so it just looks like a car. But those wings will also pop out to open up little helicopter rotors, which will lift the car high into the air. You can drive, then just drive right up into the sky! The inventors at Terrafugia hope to finish the first car, or "prototype," next year. It will be so exciting when we're stuck in traffic to pop out those wings and fly over everyone -- but then we're going to have a lot of traffic in the air!

Wee ones: The TF-X flying car will hold 4 people. If you're 1 of them, how many people can drive and fly with you?

Little kids: Which is faster, a car driving 62 miles an hour or a car flying 200 miles an hour?  Bonus: If you could fly this car to school in just 40 seconds, how would you count up the seconds in 10s? Try it!

Big kids: If you drive your flying car for 15 minutes, then take off and soar for 13 minutes, then land again and drive 5 minutes before stopping, how long is your whole trip?  Bonus: If the TF-X really can cruise at 200 miles an hour, how far will it travel in 2 1/2 hours?

Answers:

Wee ones: 3 other people.

Little kids: The car flying 200 miles an hour.  Bonus: 10, 20, 30, 40.

Big kids: 33 minutes.  Bonus: 500 miles.

And now: did you ever wonder what a dinosaur weighs? Find out tomorrow on Bedtime Math!

© 2016-18 Bedtime Math Foundation. All rights reserved.

BEDTIME MATH and the BEDTIME MATH logo are registered trademarks of Bedtime Math Foundation and may not be used without permission. The names of other companies, products, and services are the property of their respective owners.



Hope everyone is digging out safely from the storm! 

All the best,

Carol Simon Levin

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Thanks to everyone who came to my Retirement Party, Caldecott & Newbery Winners Announced, Meet “Peter Pan” “Thomas Jefferson” & “Cinderella” plus indoor play spaces for cold days.

I want to thank everyone who came to my retirement party on Sunday 2/11/18. It was so gratifying to be able to see people and say goodbye. I tried to send “thank you’s” individually but realized I didn’t have emails, addresses or phone numbers for Benjamin & Annika and Billy’s families. Please contact me at cslevin59 (at) gmail.com and know your cards, gifts, flowers, bookmarks, and (last but definitely not least!) kind words were so appreciated! 



2018 Caldecott winner and honor books2018 Newbery Award Winner and Honor Books

Caldecott & Newbery Winners were announced this week -- Read more: http://www.ala.org/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/caldecottmedal/caldecottmedal
http://www.ala.org/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/newberymedal/newberymedal


Upcoming activities:

Hulafrog | Local things for kids to do.
Hula Hot List: Indoor Play Places When It's Cold Outside Near Bridgewater!

 

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When it's just too cold for outdoor fun but the kids are bouncing off the walls from being cooped up all day, let them get some energy out at one of these  indoor places to play! Bonus: Some have added perks like Wifi or coffee for the parents! Check out the list here: https://hulafrog.com/bridgewater-nj/hula-hot-list-indoor-play-places-when-it-s-cold-outside-near-bridgewater-489012

 

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It's officially the week of love! Kick it off with some fabulous, family fun. Check out Hulafrog's "The Week Ahead" for a list of the events that you should not miss this week!


PODCAST * BLOG * NEWS * CALENDAR * MEMBERSHIP

DID YOU KNOW? While Frederick Douglass’ exact date of birth is unknown, the abolitionist and African-American icon picked February 14 as the date to celebrate his birthday. Happy African American History Month! Celebrate with some great books http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2014/03/school-age-storytimes-black-history.html

 

 

Presidents Day Weekend February 17-19, 2018 Free Admission on Presidents Day

This Presidents Day Weekend, visitors can participate in a presidential festival while learning about the role of the president and what it takes to be commander in chief. On Presidents Day, Monday, February 19, families can also participate in our Presidential Costume Contest and join us for a Kids Town Hall to meet some very special guests: Presidents Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Roosevelt!

LEARN MORE



Last weekend for Peter Pan Play at Villagers Theater in Somerset:
Peter and the Starcatcher


Performance Times: Fridays/Saturdays 8:00pm  Sundays 2:00pm

Buy Tickets
Reservation Request


Tony-winning Peter and the Starcatcher upends the century-old story of how a miserable orphan comes to be The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up (a.k.a. Peter Pan). A wildly theatrical adaptation of Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson’s best-selling novels, the play was conceived for the stage by directors, Roger Rees and Alex Timbers, and written by Rick Elice, with music by Wayne Barker. From marauding pirates and jungle tyrants to unwilling comrades and unlikely heroes, Peter and the Starcatcher playfully explores the depths of greed and despair… and the bonds of friendship, duty and love.

A young orphan and his mates are shipped off from Victorian England to a distant island ruled by the evil King Zarboff. They know nothing of the mysterious trunk in the captain’s cabin, which contains a precious, otherworldly cargo. At sea, the boys are discovered by a precocious young girl named Molly, a Starcatcher-in-training who realizes that the trunk’s precious cargo is starstuff, a celestial substance so powerful that it must never fall into the wrong hands. When the ship is taken over by pirates – led by the fearsome Black Stache, a villain determined to claim the trunk and its treasure for his own – the journey quickly becomes a thrilling adventure.


Monday, February 19 --  Presidents’ Day for Kids

imageMontclair, NJ – Monday, February 19 from 10 am to 12 pm. Presidents' Day should be about more than just a good sale. At the Crane House and Historic YWCA, your child will discover how our past presidents (and their wives and children) lived through crafts and other activities at this drop-off program. Activities include a Symbols of our Country scavenger hunt, making a log cabin, play-acting George Washington’s Rules of Civility by the hearth fire, historic selfies, and signing the Declaration of Independence with a quill pen.

110 Orange Road, Montclair. Admission is $10/child. Registration required to mail@montclairhistorical.org or 973-744-1796 to reserve a place by Wednesday, February 14. Appropriate for children ages 6 to 10, children under 6 cannot be left unattended. www.montclairhistory.org.

If you are not a member, you may join prior to the event or at the event for admission by contacting the Montclair History Center at 973-744-1796, at www.montclairhistory.org, or sending a note to mail@montclairhistorical.org.



 

Monday, February 19 – Morris County  Abraham Lincoln Remembered

image10:00-11:30 am; 1:00-2:30 pm; 3:30-5:00 pm

Explore Lincoln's whistle-stop train ride from Springfield, Illinois to Washington, D.C. to take the presidential oath of office in 1861. Using a large floor map, follow his journey with "travel cards" marking significant events. Design a booklet using images and famous quotes.

$8 general admission, $6 members, adults free.

Pre-registration requested with Cynthia Winslow at cwinslow@maccullochhall.org or (973) 538-2404, ext. 16.

 



February 25th -- Make History Come Alive -- Meet Thomas Jefferson

The American Historical Theatre presents Steven Edenbo as Thomas Jefferson

Meet Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, the first Secretary of State, the second Vice President and the third President of the United States.

Sunday, February 25, 2018   1pm & 3pm Sessions

East Jersey Old Town Village  1050 River Road  Piscataway, NJ  Directions

Funded by: New Jersey Historical Commission, a Division of the Department of State

FREE EVENT AND PARKING

NO REGISTRATION - LIMITED SEATING

Text CULTURE to 56512 for more details

www.middlesexcountynj.gov



Then Make a Wish Come True with Cinderella! in March


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https://shsdrama.ticketleap.com/cinderella/


When cavemen invented the wheel thousands of years ago, it was probably wood or rock. It probably wasn't a rubber tire full of air, and they probably didn't use it to go sledding. That's called inner tubing: you sit or lie down on a giant donut-shaped balloon, someone gives you a push, and you slide down the snowy, slippery hill. It's called an "inner" tube because it's from inside an even bigger circle: a truck tire. Humans first started snow tubing in 1820 in Switzerland, a long time after the cavemen -- but a long time before cars and trucks, so where did they get their tubes? More importantly, what happens when you spin as you slide? Lots of math, as you'll see here!

Wee ones: If your inner tube spins once to the left, then once to the right, then once to the left, then once to the right...which way do you spin next?

Little kids: If you, 3 friends, and 2 snow-loving dogs all pile onto an inner tube, how many riders are there?  Bonus: You can also ride tubes on waterslides. If you go 10 miles an hour on snow but twice as fast in water, how fast do you tube on the water?

Big kids: If you start sliding facing downhill, with the hill's right side on your right, and as you slide you spin 1/2 turn to your left, then 1/4 of a turn to your right, then 3/4 turn to the left, which way are you facing now?  Bonus: If 1/2 the tubes are double tubes (seating 2 people) and the other 1/2 are single tubes, how many tubes are there if they hold 18 people total?

The sky's the limit: If your tube spins once around every 2 seconds, your friend spins once every 3 seconds, another friend spins once every 4 seconds, and the last friend spins once every 5 seconds, what's the soonest you'll all face forward at the same time if you all started facing forward?

Find more Bedtime Math here.

Why should people have all the fun – see a dog and a crow sledding by clicking on their hotlinks!

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Wrap up the summer with Fairy Tale Theater at Farmstead Arts in Basking Ridge, Carnival & Eclipse Programs at Bridgewater Library, and Fun Math and Book websites

FAIRY TALE FAMILY THEATER @ FARMSTEAD ARTS THIS SUNDAY

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TELLING TALES

WHEN: Sunday, August 13th, at 2:00 pm
WHERE:
the English Barn, Farmstead Arts, 450 King George Road in Basking Ridge
TICKETS: $15 for adults and $10 for children under 18.
Tickets are available at www.farmsteadarts.eventbrite.com.

The show is appropriate for the whole family.

For information, please call Kathy Harris, Operations Manager, at 908-636-7576 or send an email to admin@farmsteadarts.org.

Farmstead Arts is pleased to present a Fairy Tale Family Theater production of Telling Tales for young audiences in the English Barn. Telling Tales features the exciting adventures of Grimm’s Fairy Tale characters Henny Penny, The Bremen Town Musicians, The Golden Goose and more! This is an interactive story-teller theatre performance perfect for audiences of all ages. Telling Tales promises to be an afternoon of laughter and fun for the whole family as they follow these characters on their adventures through some of Grimm’s most beloved fables and stories.

This is an interactive story-teller theatre performance perfect for the young people in your life! Bring the whole family and enjoy an afternoon of laughter and fun as we follow these characters on their adventures through some of our most beloved fables and stories.

The barn is wheelchair accessible.  Anyone anticipating the need for additional accessibility services is requested to make a request by sending an e-mail in advance to admin@farmsteadarts.org.

Funds for these events have been made possible in part by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, through the State/County Partnership Local Arts Program Grant administered by The Somerset County Cultural & Heritage Commission.



Many library branches have solar eclipse programs this month.  Search for “eclipse” in the library calendar ( http://sclsnj.libnet.info/events) for details. The Bridgewater Library and the RVCC planetarium (https://www.raritanval.edu/general-information/newsroom/rvcc-planetarium-gears-up-viewing-total-solar-eclipse) will be set up for viewing from 1-4 p.m. on August 21st.  You can also get a head start this Tuesday at Bridgewater library.

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WRAP UP SUMMER READING WITH THE ANNUAL CARNIVAL. NOTE SUMMER READING ENDS AUGUST 19TH.

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Encourage Math Fun Everyday with Bedtime Math – Bedtime Math books are also available at Bridgewater Library.

One of the coolest, juiciest summer treats is watermelon. This giant fruit grows out of a flower on a plant, so it's actually a berry. You may have tried watermelon, but we bet you've never tried to make one explode. Crazy Russian Hacker and his brother strapped lots and lots of rubber bands around a watermelon. Eventually the rubber bands squeezed the watermelon so tightly that they crushed it. This video shows the guys nervously strapping the rubber bands onto the waiting watermelon. Watch to see the explosion in slow motion -- and the cool rubber band ball it makes at the end!

Wee ones: Find 3 green things in your room, and line them up from smallest to biggest.

Little kids: If your watermelon slice has 7 seeds and your friend's slice has 9 seeds, whose has more seeds?  Bonus: If you've just strapped the 12th rubber band onto your watermelon, what number rubber band comes next?  

Big kids: If the guys just strapped on the 60th rubber band, what number band came 3 bands before that one?  Bonus: The world's record-breaking watermelon weighed 350 pounds. How much more than you does it weigh?

Answers:

Wee ones: Items might include clothes, leaves or blades of grass, crayons or Lego. Try lining them up! 

Little kids: Your friend's slice.  Bonus: The 13th band.

Big kids: The 57th band.  Bonus: Different for everyone...subtract your weight in pounds from 350!

More Ways to Get Bedtime Math!

The bestselling Bedtime Math books: A trilogy of the same fun, offbeat math, plus a new fourth book for older kids!


The app:
A whole archive of math problems, with colorful animations and cool sound effects.  Check it out here at the App Store for iPhone and iPad, Google Play for Android!

The website: Find all your favorite bedtime math problems (BMPs) at www.bedtimemath.org.

Facebook: One more way to get your daily BMP fix.


Looking for some fun book related websites? check out these favorites!

clip_image002 The Roald Dahl Literary Estate presents things to read, watch make, and play -- the online Twits game is simple, fun and funny.

clip_image003 The Ezra Jack Keats Foundation website includes online read-alouds, video, craft ideas and lesson plans, and a great “video game” helping Peter sled down the hill without running into any trees.

clip_image005 Seussville has dozens of interactive games and activities for both the familiar and less well-known tales.

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Pigeon Presents. Mo Willems fans will love helping Pigeon with hot dog toppings, covering up that naked mole rat, or having a dance party with Elephant and Piggie and read, listen, color and play with these kooky creatures!



Looking for pictures from this summer's Fairy Tale Engineering series? You can see them here.

Friday, May 5, 2017

Innovative Theater for Teens & Adults this Weekend, Babies & Toddlers & Kids Next at RVCC, Hooray for May Art Day at Somerset Art Association & Birding at the Greenway. May Programs at the Bridgewater Library…plus Summer Camp Fun

Bend

artist site Bend     Kimi Maeda
Saturday, May 6 at 7PM Tickets: $20
Sunday, May 7 at 3PM Tickets: $15 (Special Matinee Pricing)

Bend tells the true story of two men interned in a Japanese American internment camp during World War II: Maeda’s father, an Asian Art historian who suffered from dementia at the end of his life, and the subject of his research, the renowned artist Isamu Noguchi. Using shadow and projection, theatre artist Kimi Maeda retells the story of her father and Noguchi, both of whom were incarcerated in a camp in Poston, Arizona. Referencing the landscape of the camp’s desert, she uses sand to create live highly detailed drawings inspired by these images. Both compelling and moving, this intimate visual performance examines the effects of losing one’s home, one’s cultural identity and one’s memory, and poses important questions about how the Japanese American internment camps will be remembered.

Pulse

Theatre for Babies NPR artist site Pulse  Teatro al Vacio
Sunday, May 14, 2017 at 10AM & 2:30PM
Monday, May 15, 2017 at 9 & 10:30AM
Age 0+ • ALL TICKETS: $10

Carefully designed for the youngest of theatergoers, Pulse uses soft textures and lively games to invite infants and toddlers into a safe, positive, and friendly environment that will stimulate their sense of creativity. Actors create an extraordinary space ready for exploration, connecting with simple materials to transform their surroundings into a world of play.

Brochure | Tickets | Subscribe | Up | Home

The Way Back Home

Oliver Jeffers’ book jumps off the page and into space in this beautiful stage adaptation.  -- IRISH TIMES  artist site

The Way Back Home    Teater Refleksion
Thursday, May 25, 2017 at 10AM & 12:30PM
Friday, May 26, 2017 at 10AM, 12:30PM & 4PM
Saturday May 27, 2017 at 1 & 3:30PM
Age 4+ • ALL TICKETS: $10

When a boy discovers an airplane in his closet, he does what any young adventurer would do: He flies into outer space! Miles from earth, the plane runs out of gas and the boy makes a landing on the moon. Will he manage to get home again? Is he really all alone up there? Based on the book by Oliver Jeffers, The Way Back Home uses puppets to tell a simple yet profound tale about friendship in a world where what makes us different isn’t nearly as important as what makes us the same.

SHOW STARTER - Technically speaking, this event isn’t a show starter, it’s a show “ender”— but whatever name we give it, it’s fun! After the show, kids can assemble their own paper airplane and watch it soar through the theatre!


The Top Ten Events in Somerset County, NJ This Weekend

May 5-7, 2017

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Make it a weekend with these great Somerset County Events!

1. World Series of Birding, Scherman-Hoffman Wildlife Sanctuary
2. Spring Rummage Sale, Far Hills Fairgrounds
3. 34th Annual Family Fun Day, Lord Stirling Stable
4. Rent, State Theatre New Jersey
5. StarStruck Dance Challenge, Garden State Exhibit Center
6. Sounds Around Town, Artwalk and Reception, Bernardsville
7. Bucky Pizzarelli and Ed Laub, Watchung Arts Center
8. The Happening: Bee Inspired, The Ross Farm
9. Fireside Chat: Marconi and Franklin Township, Wyckoff-Garretson House

10. Watercolorists Unlimited, Blackwells Mills Canal House

Check out our full calendar of events!

Looking for more fun things to do & places to go? Check outEvents -- Free Family Fun NJ and other events listings under “useful links for families” at bwlibys.blogspot.com


May Programs at the Bridgewater Library:

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More Community Happenings:


BRING THE FAMILY TO EXPLORE BIRDS & NATURE WITH AUTHOR/ILLUSTRATOR KIM KURKI

Kim Kurki Cover

Explore Birds and Nature with Author Kim Kurki

WHEN: Saturday, May 13, 1-3 pm; Exploring Birds and Nature as a Treasure Hunt will be held rain or shine. Books will be available for purchase. Light refreshments will be served.
WHERE:
The barn at St. Michaels Farm Preserve, HopewelL. The driveway to the barn will be marked with a large sign and balloons. Information about St. Michaels Farm Preserve: www.drgreenway.org.
rsvp@drgreenway.org or 609-924-4646.

National Wildlife Federation’s World of Birds author and illustrator Kim Kurki will present an interactive program showing how nature is full of treasures to be discovered, especially birds that can be seen and heard. She will share her collection of natural artifacts, such as nests, eggs, feathers and surprises. There will be a fun craft activity and a hike around the preserve, where 85 species of birds have been counted. Exploring Birds and Nature as a Treasure Hunt is suitable for families with pre-school to elementary school-age children.

Kim Kurki Book Signing with Fine Artist Joy Kreves looking on November 2014 DR Greenway Jody KenKim Kurki (far right, signing books) has been fascinated by nature since childhood. Working as an artist for more than 30 years, she has focused on the natural world, including illustrations for Yankee Publishing’s The Old Farmer’s Almanac. For nearly a decade, she wrote and illustrated a monthly column for National Wildlife Federation’s Your Big Backyard magazine.

In World of Birds, Kurki explores amazing facts about more than 100 birds, including which is the fastest flier, which lays the biggest egg and which spends years of its life in the water, never touching land. Produced in conjunction with the National Wildlife Federation the book introduces birds that would rather swim than walk, some that would rather walk than fly, and some birds that run very fast. Kurki lives in Penns Park, Pennsylvania, where she is lulled to sleep at night by hooting owls.


Dreamcatcher Jr. is a 3-week summer theatre camp at Oakes Centre in Summit, NJ.

WHEN: July 10 to 28, Monday - Friday, 9am to 3 pm

We have combined the best of our conservatory, where students build skills and study with theatre professionals in a variety of subjects, with our beloved Dreamcatcher Junior program, where the students create and perform their own play.  Read more

"The Dreamcatcher program continues to be one of the most positive experiences she engages in. She feels fully herself when she is there and the life skills she has learned in the program continually enhance her interactions out in the world."—Barbara Powers

WHERE: Dreamcatcher Repertory Theatre, Oakes Center,  120 Morris Avenue,  Summit, NJ 07901
Tickets: 800-838-3006 | Info: 908-514-9654
www.dreamcatcherrep.org


Saturday, May 13  1 - 4 p.m.

We invite the entire community to our free family art day which will take place at The Center rain or shine. Hands-on, art activities for kids and parents alike will take place in The Center's three art studios and the Pluckemin Park outdoor pavilion. 

The event will include a variety of creative projects to keep or give on Mother's Day, such as wavy weaving, bubble wands, superball painting, dot pots, and printmaking cards along with along with guided gallery tours of The Center's four spring exhibitions. 

Young attendees will be treated to story time with children's book illustrator and The Center's instructor Lena Shiffman, whose book illustrations are currently on view in our faculty exhibition. Members of the community will also have the opportunity use their artistic talents to help complete two large art installations. More information can be found on our website.

5 Reasons to Register

for Summer Art Camps

  • It's a chance for your child to express their creativity, and quite simply -- IT'S FUN!

  • Your child will have the opportunity to learn and explore the arts through painting, drawing, ceramics, sculpture, mixed media, and more.

  • Our camps are led by professional teaching artists, tailored to a specific age group.

  • According to a report by Americans for the Arts, art education strengthens problem-solving and critical thinking skills.
  • Students of the arts are 29% more likely to earn a 4-year college degree than students who don't take any art classes.

June 26 through September 1 Each camp runs for one week We offer summer art camps for kids of all ages from 5 through teens. You have the flexibility to register your child for weekly half-day, or if you prefer, full-day, art camps with a supervised lunch period. Visit our website for more information and to register online today.

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This program is made possible in part by funds from the NJ State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts.


The Center for Contemporary Art is committed to enabling all visitors to experience its classes and workshops, exhibitions and public programs. If you require an accommodation or service, please contact The Center at least two weeks prior to your scheduled visit.

The Center for Contemporary Art, 2020 Burnt Mills Road, Bedminster, NJ 07921