Hear Stories, Tell Stories, Learn how to Create Stories – This Sunday at 7 pm!

Some words. Maybe it’s just one, such as: Love. Hope. Fire. Fear. Music. Tears. That’s all you need to tell a story. Some words you speak. Some words your write. Some words that come to your mind and end up as a picture. You know the saying: a picture is worth a thousand words, and a thousand words is plenty enough for a story.

This Sunday, as a follow up to last week’s discussion of The Higher Way, and my new release of 8 Ways to Engage Children Without a Computer, we’re going to talk about stories.  It’s Way #1 on the download. We’re going to tell you some stories, ask you to tell us some stories (in one minute or less!), and we’re going to talk about how you can support children to create and publish their stories and how you can do the same.

We’re going to have a good time with good old-fashioned StoryTime. You know, once upon a time, or Back in the day, or Honey, let me tell you kinds of stories. And music! We Love stories with instrumental music. So, come along, bring family, friends – all ages are welcome!

We’re going to have a story good time!

Sunday, April 19 – 7 -8 p.m. via Freeconferencecall.com Video or Phone.

Email caroline@carolinebrewer.com to receive the link!

8 Ways to Engage Children Without A Computer

8 Ways to Engage Children Without a Computer
and support their intellectual growth and development

I love being offline much more than being online and I know how important it is for children to spend time growing and developing without devices. That’s why 8 Ways to Engage Children – mentally, physically, and intellectually  — without computers. This list could have included 80 Ways, or even 800. But I think this list of 8 is pretty substantial, so take a look, try some out some of these ways and let us know what you think.

And, of course, have fun!

Email caroline@carolinebrewerbooks.com with your stories and thoughts. And join us tomorrow at 7 p.m. to learn more about how to have fun with the 8 Ways.

How to Keep Children from Plucking Your Last Nerve during #Covid-19 Times or Any Time

How to Keep Children from Plucking Your Last Nerve during #Covid-19
Home-Schooling, Distance Learning, & Literacy Engagement

Home-schooling and distance learning offer new opportunities to bond with our children and students – and also for us to snap on one another.

As an 18-year veteran of teaching and learning in classrooms, through literacy activism, and as an author, I have come to understand that the best way to succeed with children — at any time — is by adhering to The Higher Way.

The Higher Way means responding in a way that allows children to easily get back on track without feeling pressured, chastised, or humiliated. Importantly, it means responding in a way that gives them a say in how to proceed.

For instance, When Jared is not paying attention, drumming his fingers on the table, or tapping his feet; when Kayla is twisting her hair or making sucking sounds instead of focusing; this is the time to let your love and patience wrap around their sweet little souls like cotton candy on a paper stick.

Responses to nerve-plucking behavior could include: “How can I help you? You can do this. Would you like me to read today, and you just listen?  It seems as if something is bothering you. Would you like to talk about it?  Thank you for trusting me to help you. You’re doing great.”

Please understand how much power there is in your words and actions designed to open the door to a Higher Way.  Without preaching, condemning, and often without even mentioning the challenging behavior on display, I have stopped elementary, middle-school and high-school students from cursing like sailors, from fighting every day, and from throwing tantrums using The Higher Way. Using The Higher Way, I’ve seen children go from refusing to read or write to reading and writing, and declaring their love for it.

Working lovingly and patiently with children means that we seek, always, to understand the child. We put ourselves in the child’s shoes. Empathize. Learning to read or write for children who have not yet grasped how is often painful. Understand that they are suffering almost every moment they sit with you and the work before them. Your extraordinary display of love and patience will ease that suffering, bit by bit, and slowly turn it to joy – which is critical to children’s success, the development of confidence, and their trust in you and themselves.

If we create children or students who do work but are miserable,  we have failed. Because failure is not an option, we must stay on the love and patience track. Swallow our tongues. Sit on our hands. Breathe. And smile – smile a lot. Whatever it takes to let love and patience pour forth like the morning sun when inside we are a bit rattled, irritated, concerned, even annoyed.

We have everything to gain if, when they seem to go low, we go high.

 

 

 

FREE BOOKS and Author Visit for a DC Public School

FREE BOOKS & Author Visit: Are you a teacher or librarian at a DC public school with students in grades 3-5?
Thanks to the generosity of some dear friends in D.C., I have 40 copies of Darius Daniels: Game On! to donate to a school, along with an author visit. I need you to work with your students to submit via email written, illustrated, audio or video responses to three questions:

Why would you like a set of Darius Daniels: Game On! books for your classroom or school library?
How have you used other classroom sets of books in your classroom or school library?
List three ways you would use a set of Darius Daniels: Game On! books in your classroom/school library.

Submit entries by midnight Thursday, March 12. I will select up to two classrooms and/or school libraries and we will arrange a visit for up to 300 students in your school. News media and photographers will be invited to help us celebrate your winning project.

I’m looking forward to interesting and creative ideas!
Listen to my interview with Gravity Bread to learn more about the book.
Learn more about activities you can do with the book here: https://carolinebrewerbooks.com/ddgo-activity-set/
Use the Contact Me page to submit your application or Email: caroline@carolinebrewerbooks.com

Have fun!

Fort Wayne Born Author offers “Book Tastings” of Book She Calls a ‘Handheld Revolution’

Fort Wayne Born Author offers “Book Tastings” of Book She Calls a ‘Handheld Revolution’

Pontiac Library| 2215 S Hanna Street| Fort Wayne, IN 46803
Saturday, March 7, 2020 * 3:30 – 4:30 PM
REGISTER at this LINK

Wunderkammer Company| 3402 Fairfield Avenue| Fort Wayne, IN 46807
Wednesday, March 11, 2020 * 6:30 – 8:00 PM
REGISTER at this LINK

I love books like kids love candy.
I love books like beaches love sandy.
I love books like corn loves to pop.
I love books like hip loves to hop
!

Fort Wayne, IN – On a cool winter afternoon March 7, and on an evening March 11, two institutions in Fort Wayne will come alive with the sounds of music and love for language.  Two women, bodies outfitted in black from head to toe, will lead the singing, rapping, and reciting of songs and texts from a new children’s novel, Darius Daniels: Game On! They will also talk about a revolution as part of the Let’s Talk About It!: Hueman Stories project initiated by Ketu and Rasamen Oladuwa.

The musical rendering of the new novel is part of what the author calls a “book tasting,” and it’s central to a growing movement they are pushing to help change the literacy game for children they call “hungry readers and writers.”

Fort Wayne native Caroline Brewer, author of Darius Daniels: Game On!, has been quietly leading the movement since becoming a children’s author in late 2001, after leaving her job as a newspaper columnist at The Record of Bergen County, New Jersey the previous summer.

The other woman and partner in word artistry, Karen Wilson-Ama’Echefu, is a Harlem-born singer, storyteller, and cultural historian who has studied the poetry flow of African Americans shaped by the language legacy of 400 years of living in the United States.

The book tastings (samplings of the story through readings, reciting of poetry and rhymes, raps and songs) are centered around Darius Daniels: Game On!, a 256-page verse novel about an 11-year-old boy who gets sucked into a video game and is told he can’t get out until he hurts somebody. While the premise is tantalizing to children – and adults — what makes the book especially compelling is that it’s chockful of rhythm, rhyme, rap, and more than 10 forms of poetry, plus history and cultural touchstones, which make it ripe for “tasting.” 

I Love Books is one of the featured raps. The story is set in a fictional town based on Fort Wayne and is meant to inspire a revolution that frees children from literacy failure, so they are more likely to escape the mass incarceration trap that the Hueman Stories project is determined to destroy.

Brewer says the fact that the book is “a handheld revolution,” is what inspired the gatherings, which are part of a book tour across the United States. “I challenge anyone to read this book and remain unchanged. It is within and of itself a revolution. I’m getting reports from teachers already that children are being changed because of this book,” says Brewer, the author of 11 other books, a literacy activist and former teacher. “Every child I’ve ever met has been hungry to be a more capable reader or writer. And yet, for more than 30 years, the majority of American children have entered and exited school reading below grade level. This tour will give children and adults the information, ideas, and inspiration they need to tap into cultural legacies that will allow them to feed their literary appetites and imaginations, overthrow decades of failure, and free them from the snare of incarceration.”

Wilson-Ama’Echefu, an inter-disciplinary scholar who has written on cultural and intellectual history in the 19th and 20th centuries, has just released her first solo book, Christmas Was Just Breakin’, a black Twas the Night Before Christmas.  She notes, “Esteemed scholars, such as Lorenzo Turner, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Geneva Smitherman, who wrote Talkin’ and Testifyin’ 40 years ago, long ago established that African American communities develop linguistic skills that are formidable in both style and substance. Their work and my scholarship document the fact that our people (African-descended people) are natural poets whose facility with language and depth of intellect make them some of the world’s finest thinkers and readers.”

The authors contend in a society where reading and young people are constantly under attack, there is, instead, much to celebrate. “We’re talking about paying homage to children’s brilliance,“ said Brewer. “Whether they come from low-income or no-income homes, whether they have one parent, or are forced to be their own parent, we’re saying pay homage to every child’s ability to thrive. Let that be the foundation for the ways in which we connect with them. Let’s be prepared to leverage their assets for their beautiful, productive, and fantastic futures.”

Brewer cited a few cases of revolutionary experiences with students and literacy:

  • A Virginia teacher said the rhymes in Darius Daniels: Game On! have given her new ways to assess students’ growth in real time; she said students designated for Special Education services, including a boy diagnosed with autism, are demonstrating – just from her readings of the one copy she has– the ability to analyze language in ways that she was told they didn’t possess.
  • A boy entered 3rd grade still learning the alphabet. By January, his school in Prince George’s County, MD had become the third he had attended that year. His teacher helped him learn the alphabet and also taught him and the entire class all the Language Arts state standards using a rhyming book written by Brewer as the textbook. In three months, the boy tested at 3rd grade level and the top of the class. A number of other students had moved up at least one grade level or more in just a few months.
  • Brewer’s 4th grade student in an independent school struggled to read on a first grade level. She preferred picture books and was reluctant to participate in class. She also regularly argued with other students and had difficulty staying in her seat. After Ms. Brewer introduced an early version of Darius Daniels: Game On! and offered exciting ways to engage with poetry and rhymes, the student began to open up, participate, and push herself to complete assignments. She took Darius Daniels home and, on her own, began reading deeper into the book. In a matter of weeks, she surprised Ms. Brewer one day and asked if she could read some of the book to her. She read Darius Daniels fluently, confidently, and with understanding. It was a huge triumph that underscores the truth about every student’s potential and hunger to achieve. The student also transitioned socially and emotionally and became a leading peacemaker in the class.

Excerpt and EARLY PRAISE for Darius Daniels: Game On!

“This is a masterpiece!”

  • Michelle Ajebon, Age 10, 4th grade

“I would tell other kids to read this book because, “Who wouldn’t love going into a video game?”

  • Joshua Ajebon, Age 11, 5th grade

Darius Daniels: Game On! is a unique, beautiful blend of prose and poetry.

The book will not only entertain children, but educate them as well.”

  • Glenn Brewer, Teacher and Award-winning Artist, Illustrator,

  Author and Comic Book Publisher

“Caroline Brewer has written a book that provides the tools that our children need in the language that they can encompass now. Ms. Brewer’s work captures poetic language in all of its rich array of poetic possibilities…not only the rap, but the Pulitzer Prize-winning form. It celebrates haikus, limericks, sonnets, blues, and spirituals, the acrobatics of language rhythm and movement that we showcase in our communities every day. Darius Daniels: Game On! should be in every classroom. I look forward to that day.”

  • Karen Wilson-Ama’Echefu, PhD, Storyteller, Teaching Artist and Singer

“Caroline is a master storyteller; her voice and style are a breath of fresh air! You are going to love Darius and the rest of his crew (including his little sister, Ashanti!) and laugh out loud at all the fun, silly jokes here. Yay for Caroline! Game on, indeed!”

  • Amy Tipton, Former NYT Bestselling Agent, Editor of Feral Girl Books

“Caroline Brewer’s Darius Daniels: Game On! is definitely the power-up that re-energizes the idiom, ‘Life is a game.’ Which it is for Darius, who takes on the pixelated world of his imagination to battle monsters both on screen and internally. This easy-to-read series moves quick. The language is playful and sure to get young people excited about reading.”  – Alan King, author of POINT BLANK and DRIFT

“I don’t usually read books without pictures. But I wanna read this book! I think it’s gonna be very good.” – Zion, 1st grader, who confidently read a page of the 4th grade level book out loud.

“The book was really good and entertaining and I loved it!” – John, 8th grader, who said earlier in the day that he didn’t really like to read.

 

For the Book Lover in You! Reading, Reciting, and Rhythm

Happy Valentine’s Day to all the book lovers out there! Help us celebrate by enjoying this reading of “Harlem” from Darius Daniels: Game On! with a musical segment performed during the Black Authors Breakfast Party and African American Read-In, held at the City Center Branch of Signal Financial Federal Credit Union. Karen Wilson Ama’Echefu and Al McCray join me in this rhythmic rendition. The entire program will be broadcast on C-SPAN’s BookTV, so stay tuned!

Black Authors “Invite Godfather of Soul James Brown” to Close Out 2020 Breakfast Party

We invited Godfather of Soul James Brown to the Black Authors Breakfast Party and National Council of Teachers of English African American Read-In yesterday – Because Darius Daniels: Game On! is a musical book featuring the likes of James Brown, Nina Simone, Michael Jackson and so many other legends – and closed it out “feeling good!” – Click highlighted link to see brief video. Many thanks to Filmmaker Extraordinaire Monda Raquel Webb for sharing the extended clip below! Stay until the last word, now!

https://twitter.com/i/status/1225779348810149888

Black Authors Breakfast Party and African American Read-In is on for 2020!

Photos from 2019 Black Authors and AARI

The Black Authors Breakfast Party and
African American Read-In is on for 2020!

Admission is FREE * Experience=Priceless

Event: Black Authors Breakfast Party and African American Read-In
Date: Friday, February 7, 2020 – 7:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m.
Location: Signal Financial Federal Credit Union (Community Space)
1101 New York Avenue Northwest Entrance on I Street, 12th St NW, Washington, DC 20005
(Parking at Nation Parking, LLC, 1101 New York Ave NW, P100, Washington, DC 20005, between K Street and I Street on the West side – Updated Cost $19)

Goal: Share, discuss, and celebrate the works of African American authors in the DC metropolitan area during the 30th Anniversary of the African American Read-In.
Features:
Long-established, award-winning, and rising authors, poets, historians, children’s authors, and academics​, plus a continental breakfast and book-signing afterwards! D.C.’s Legendary Poet E. Ethelbert Miller will be a featured speaker. Caroline Brewer, author of the debut verse novel, Darius Daniels: Game On! will offer a “book-tasting” of the story with the accompaniment of creative, innovative and provocative vocalists and musicians.
Organizers and Partners: DC Author and Literacy Activist Caroline Brewer, Signal Financial Federal Credit Union, Black Caucus of the National Council of Teachers of English
Contact: Signal Financial301-933-9100 x 280, etsegenet.zamuel@sfonline.org, Caroline Brewer, caroline@carolinebrewerbooks.com

BACKGROUND
The African-American Read-In is an international celebration sponsored by the Black Caucus of the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and was started by Dr. Jerrie Cobb Scott of NCTE’s Black Caucus. Brewer is a member of NCTE and the Caucus. 2020 marks the the 30th Anniversary of the Read-In. It was founded in 1990 as a one-day event in February to bring books by black authors to students attending America’s schools and universities. People of all backgrounds, including parents, grandparents, principals, government officials and authors were invited to come into schools to read favorite works by black authors. The celebration has expanded to include outreach to the general public, including prison inmates, for the entire month of February, has reached more than six million people and now includes recognition of African American poets, playwrights, composers, and storytellers.

COMPLETE LINE-UP of FEATURED AUTHORS and THEIR WORKS

  1. E. Ethelbert Miller, Fathering Words: The Making of an African American Writer, The Collected Poems of E Ethelbert Miller
  2. Tracy Chiles McGhee, Melting the Blues
  3. Alan King,  Point Blank and Drift
  4. Natalie Hopkinson, A Mouth is Always Muffled and Go-Go Live: The Musical Life and Death of a Chocolate City
  5. Markette Sheppard, Where is the Light?
  6. Marjuan Canady, Callaloo: A Jazz Folktale
  7. Caroline Brewer, Darius Daniels: Game On!, Kara Finds Sunshine on a Rainy Day
    and Barack Obama: A Hip Hop Tale
  8. Karen Wilson Ama’Echefu, Christmas Was Just Breakin’
  9. Diana Veiga, D.C. Public Library Civic Engagement Coordinator and Short Story Author
  10. Lois Cooper, Mama Said
  11. Deborah Barfield Berry, USA Today Washington Correspondent, 1619: The Long Road Home: Were Wanda Tucker’s ancestors America’s first slaves?
  12. Nichelle Smith, Coordinating Editor of USA Today’s Investigations Team, Black History Month 2020 Special Edition: The Search for Answers

        *Sharon Lucas, Plan It! (The Complete Resource Guide for Authors, Book Clubs, & Literary Event Planners)– Two copies will be offered as a free gift to lucky guests!

See video from the 2019 Black Authors Breakfast Party here and C-SPAN BookTV’s coverage.

Caroline Brewer is a children’s author and literacy activist, a reading coach, former classroom teacher and Pulitzer Prize jurist and nominated journalist.

The inaugural BABP/AARI was held in the community space of Signal Financial Federal Credit Union at 1101 New York Avenue NW DC on Friday, February 1, 2019 and was aired in its entirety later in the month by C-SPAN’s BookTV.

 

Darius Daniels Game On! Book Tasting Party Saturday, February 1

 

You asked for it and here it is! The DC Darius Daniels: Game On! Book Tasting Party, featuring the Music and Poetry of a One-of-a-Kind Novel, Saturday, February 1.

Features: Inter-active singing, dancing, rapping, clapping, and toe-tapping to songs and raps straight out of the novel; Reading from the book and background on chosen excerpts; Q and A, with brief discussion about how the book is one-of-a-kind (more than 10 forms of poetry) and a handheld revolution, plus a trivia game; Hors d’ourves and dessert-tasting of food from and inspired by the novel!

Purchase Books & Have them Autographed
Vocalist Karen Wilson-Ama’Echefu & Drummer Angel Bethea will get the party started.

NOTE: Two programs on this day (Choose One)
12 noon – 1:00 p.m. and 2:30 – 3:30 p.m.
RSVPs a must * Seating is limited! * Email me from the Contact Me page for an invitation and to learn how you can bring a Book Tasting Party to your school, library, or community. This party kicks off our international tour! We’d love for you to be a part of it!

D.C. Author Launches Musical Children’s Novel

D.C. Author Launches Musical Children’s Novel

Darius Daniels: Game On! promotes literacy through music and poetry

For Immediate Release – Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Washington, D.C. – Veteran Children’s Author and Literacy Activist Caroline Brewer will launch a musical children’s novel on Friday, November 1 at www.carolinebrewerbooks.com. Free downloads with activities, games, and chances to win free books will be featured. Book “tasting” parties are scheduled later this month and year. Ms. Brewer is open to media appearances and interviews that will showcase the musical, poetic, and instructional elements of the book.

Darius Daniels: Game On! is a 35,000-word middle grade adventure novel about an 11-year-old boy, a video game, and a great and scary adventure the boy cannot escape – until he hurts somebody. Travel to the game world Washington, D.C. is part of the game. The book also represents a new genre, the rhythmic novel, where the plot pulses with musical rhythms and songs.

“Based on national assessments, for more than 30 years, about two-thirds of American children have entered and exited school reading below grade level. This book was written to Change the Game for them. Every child I have ever met is hungry to learn to read, eager to improve as a reader, and ready to devour more books. This book will feed their appetites,” said Brewer, a D.C.-based author who has given reading and education presentations to more than 25,000 teachers, children, parents, and librarians across the U.S and in Ghana.

Darius Daniels: Game On! is a Wizard of Oz-like virtual urban fantasy sprinkled with rhythm, rhyme, rap, riddles, and more than 10 forms of poetry (which research and experience show accelerate reading progress and deepen engagement). It comes in a 256-page Complete Volume edition or as three individual books (Book 1, Book 2, and Book 3 for children who want to read the story in smaller chunks). Available at bookstores everywhere now!

Caroline Brewer is the author now of 12 books, editor of five books written by students, a former teacher, and wildly successful reading coach of children. She’s coached hundreds of children, personally and professionally, to bridge the literacy gap by as many as nine grade levels. She lives in Washington D.C. Click bar above to hear our featured demo of the rap WOKE, contact Caroline for excerpts from the book, a copy of the book, or additional information.