Bushey Meads Carnegie Choice
Before half term our ‘eager readers’ met to vote for their favourites from the eight books they’ve been reading for the Carnegie Award. To mark the occasion, the library was...
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Before half term our ‘eager readers’ met to vote for their favourites from the eight books they’ve been reading for the Carnegie Award. To mark the occasion, the library was...
Posted by Teresa Turton
In addition to the Carnegie award, the Kate Greenaway medal is awarded for an outstanding book in terms of illustration for children and young people. In library studies we often...
Posted by Teresa Turton
Once again, our team of student librarians are proving invaluable in the LRC. Owen and Nathan have taken on the shared role of Senior Head Librarians, arranging the rota of desk...
Posted by Teresa Turton
It was impressive to see and hear Sophie in Year 8 speaking confidently to all her peers in last week’s literacy focused reading lesson in the school’s Learning Resource Centre or...
Posted by Jeremy Turner
It was so lovely to see how keen the Year 7 students were in their reading lesson in the LRC with Mrs Turton our outstanding LRC Manager on Wednesday of this week. Many of them...
Posted by Jeremy Turner
Our LRC has a slightly new look and feel this year with new COVID measures in place. As in classrooms, students sanitise their hands and clean their workspaces before use. When...
Posted by Teresa Turton
As part of the celebrations for World Book Day students were invited to put their baking skills to the test and create book-themed cakes for a competition. The cakes were...
Posted by Teresa Turton
Our new Scholastic Book Club is up and running! Go to http://schools.scholastic.co.uk/bushey-meads to browse the latest books and order online. For every £1 you spend on this...
Posted by Teresa Turton
For the next two week the LRC is running a big Book Amnesty. Did you know that we have over 270 books that are over 900 days overdue from the library? That’s approximately...
Posted by Danielle Bowe
We are delighted to welcome Ms Turton our new Learning Resource Centre Manager to Bushey Meads School and are really pleased with the impact she has had already. Building on the...
Posted by Jeremy Turner
Before half term our ‘eager readers’ met to vote for their favourites from the eight books they’ve been reading for the Carnegie Award. To mark the occasion, the library was decorated with themed bunting, while a specially-baked cake and biscuits added to the party atmosphere. We were privileged to be joined by Mrs Ellen Krajewski, Chair of the CILIP judging panel who chatted with our students about the books, their likes and dislikes and answered their questions about the judging process. We will be seeing Mrs Krajewski in a Q&A session when we watch the streamed Award ceremony. Ellen has been involved in shadowing for many years but she made a point of telling me how impressed she was with the maturity and interest shown by our young people – they were a credit to themselves, me and the school.
I was really pleased to hear the students asking “Please can we do this again next year?” and making comments like “I loved being part of this group”, “It made me read books I wouldn’t normally have read”, “I loved discussing books with other shadowers”, “The group is warm and welcoming” . Between them they have read 62 books since March, with Emily Williams and Jhanavi Tiwari managing to read them all!
After a very close vote, we had to take the scoring to decimal places, the Bushey Meads Choice was Run Rebel – a book tackling issues like abusive relationships and arranged marriage, written in verse – with a score of 8.9/10. This was closely followed by Echo Mountain, a more traditional story scoring 8.6/10. This year the voting has been changed so, as well as group vote, each student who took part in shadowing could submit their own vote which will count towards the ‘Shadowers’ Choice’ to be announced alongside the Award winner on 16th June. So, the voice of Bushey Meads students really will be part of the story.
I, too have thoroughly enjoyed working with this amazing group and am very proud of the commitment they have shown. Well done and thank you for making this a great experience!
This week we held our first non-fiction D.E.A.R event. Non-fiction texts being seen as those about existing things and as informative. Described in a TED talk as ‘healing...
On Thursday 17th October I had the absolute pleasure of taking the newly recruited reading mentors team through their initial training prior to meeting their reading buddies. We...