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This is A. Blob Readers' Theater

4/14/2020

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Readers’ Theater--What is it, and why is it important?

Readers’ Theater is a learning strategy that gained popularity in the classroom during the 1990s (though dramatizing stories has been around since long before then!). This strategy helps bring books to life while also developing reading fluency, public speaking skills, confidence, teamwork, and more. ​
Cara Bafile writes in a Reading Rockets article on the topic, “Its goal is to enhance students’ reading skills and confidence by having them practice reading with a purpose. Readers’ Theater gives students a real reason to read aloud.”
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Because it is read out loud, Readers’ Theater can help students cultivate a whole host of skills that will benefit them both in and out of the classroom. Performing a script connects the way a word is read on the page to the way it is pronounced--a skill that even some adults struggle with! As they perform the play, students practice reading with expression, attaching meaning to words and phrases, and they learn how to work with their classmates to bring the story to life.
An added benefit is the opportunity for imaginative play. Readers’ Theater scripts are just one interpretation of a story. Once they get the hang of performing written scripts, students can be challenged to try writing their own scripts! Not only does this further build creativity and important literacy skills, it aids educators in assessing students' reading comprehension and discovering what lessons stick out to them as important.
From a social-emotional perspective, Readers’ Theater can help students empathize with the characters in the story and pick up on more subtle character traits and emotions. ​


Starting Readers’ Theater

So how do you dive into Readers’ Theater? While you can certainly adapt books into scripts for your classroom yourself,  there are hundreds of free script adaptations of your favorite stories already available. Begin with a story your students are already familiar with and have a close connection to and search for a script that is at their reading level. ​
Allow plenty of practice time and assure students they do not need to memorize their scripts. In fact, they shouldn’t as reading is the primary goal of the exercise. In this Reading Rockets article, children's literature consultant, Judy Freeman, recommends performing the script at least twice.  "The first time, the children will be struggling with words and their meanings, and with making sense of the play. The second time, they'll be able to focus on enjoying the performance and their parts in it.”
Four 4th grade boys and girls in red and white Dr. Seuss top hats read a story off of music stands to a group of kindergarteners seated in a library.
Photo by: Senior Airman Christopher ToonReleased | VIRIN: 120305-F-GE400-054.JPG
Some groups find it easier to begin with props, others find that their students put more effort into their performance when the aid of a set and props are not available. 

And that's it! Readers' Theater is simple, effective, and easy to adapt for any age. 

​For more tips on starting your own Readers’ Theater, visit these resources:
  • We Are Teachers
  • Reading Rockets
  • Association for Library Service to Children


Try It!

To kick off your Readers’ Theater journey, we've created a script adapted from L.A. Kefalos’s picture book, This is A. Blob. Click below to download your free copy. ​
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Readers' Theater FREE Download

If you perform this readers’ theater, let us know in the comments. We’d love to see your interpretation!

*While this script is written for 5 students, it can easily be adapted for fewer numbers. The 2 narrators can be condensed to one and additional characters can be either condensed or multiple characters can be read by one student. 
​

For more reading strategies and in-class social-emotional activities, check out these blogs:
This is...Learning to Look Beyond Labels, blog cover
Beating the Summer Slide, blog cover
Beyond Bullying Prevention, blog cover

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover
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​A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 


Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!
This is A. Blob, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover
Before it was on a bus, A. Blob was on the playground. This first installment of The Blob Series follows the antics of A. Blob, as it wreaks havoc on the elementary school playground with its bullying ways. As the story progresses, however, readers learn that A. Blob may have more than meets the eye.

Along with its powerful illustrations and rhymed verse for early readers, this story invites children to put themselves in the shoes of another and encourages readers to consider why bullies behave the way they do – and start to consider what can be done to help.
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Melting A. Blob Book Extension Craft

2/18/2020

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Melting A. Blob Blog cover
Monday kicked off a big week with people from all over the Nation coming together to observe Random Acts of Kindness Week and Engineers Week. For the next 7 days, people will be leaving kind notes for one another, practicing their coding, paying for the person behind them in line, and building Rube Goldberg devices in celebration. ​
With one of our own authors, L.A. Kefalos, being both a full time engineer and writer of 2 picture books that champion kindness, we wanted to join in on the fun and bring you a new picture book extension craft that builds kindness while sparking interest in the S.T.E.A.M. (science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics) fields.
The inspiration for this activity comes from the blog, Engineering Emily, which is run by Emily, an engineer/stay-at-home-mom/blogger. Her site is chock-full of fun S.T.E.A.M. activities for children, life insights, and interviews with inspiring women engineers (including L.A. Kefalos!). Head over to her blog to view her original craft, which she used to celebrate Valentine’s Day!
This twist on Emily’s activity extends the lessons found in L.A.’s picture books. As children mix ingredients and observe the chemical reactions, they will learn that there is often more to someone than meets the eye and, with kindness and empathy, we can melt away a hard exterior to reveal (and help!) the true person underneath. ​
Read the instructions below to make your own Melting A. Blob craft!

What You’ll Need

  • This is A. Blob, by L.A. Kefalos
  • A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos
  • 1 cup baking soda
  • ¼ cup Water
  • Vinegar
  • Purple (or red and blue) food coloring (optional, but recommended)
  • Small toy (such as bouncy ball, penny, etc)
  • Small clear glass bowls
  • Safety glasses (optional)
  • Heavier stock paper
  • Pen
  • Cookie sheet or tray with edges
Vinegar, baking soda, red food coloring, and glass bowl


​To Create A. Blob

  1. Mix the water, baking soda, and food coloring together to form a soft dough.  If your dough begins to crumble, simply add more water.
  2. Make a small “pancake” with about 1.5 Tbs of dough.
  3. Write your message on a small strip of paper and roll into a small scroll (see lesson below for message ideas).
  4. Place the message onto the pancake of dough and mold the dough around your message.
  5. Add more dough and mold into the shape of A. Blob.
  6. Place your blobs on the cookie sheet and let sit until dry.

Red baking soda being mixed with water in a glass bowl.
2 small post-it notes. Once says friendly and funny. he other days family sometimes misses dinner.
Formed red baking soda pancake with rolled up note placed on top
Red baking soda paste formed into a blob/irregular ball shape and placed on a cookie sheet.
​*Note* These take about 8 hours to fully dry. If you plan to have your students make their own blobs, allow 2 days to complete the activity. If you plan to pre-make the blobs, do so the night before.

Please also note that the food coloring WILL slightly stain your hands when you form the blobs. If this is a problem, we suggest grabbing some plastic gloves and your hands will be stain free!
​

The Lesson​​

Begin by reading This is A. Blob, by L.A. Kefalos. Before starting, ask the students to make predictions about A. Blob. What do they think A. Blob will be like? Why? Ask this same question halfway through the story.
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After reading the book, ask the students what they learned about A. Blob. Were their assumptions correct? Explain that we can’t see inside people. We never know exactly what they are going through or experiencing. Go over some of the reasons why people bully others:

  • They want to feel powerful
  • Fear of rejection
  • They have been bullied themselves
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While these issues don’t make it ok to bully others, understanding them can help us find positive solutions to the bullying. For example, if A. Blob hurts others because it is afraid it will be rejected for looking different, being mean and hurtful in return will only make the situation worse.
A. Blob, a purple blob character, is punching towards the frame and scowling. A boy wearing a red hat and backpack in the background watched scared.
A. Blob takes a swing at children on the playground in "This is A. Blob".
A. Blob, a purple blob-like character, looks down sadly at a ball in the grass.
A. Blob finds itself alone in "This is A. Blob"
After this talk, pull out A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos and have students make new predictions:
  • How will A. Blob will behave on a bus?
  • Will its loneliness cause it to change its behaviors?
​​As you read, pause occasionally to define the terms “bystander”, “target”, and “upstander” in the story. After reading, ask students what it means to look through the eyes of another and define the term “empathy”.
Refer back to the first book when we were able to see what A. Blob was like in public and in private. How does it help to learn why someone behaves the way they do? What benefits come from viewing life through someone else's eyes? What happens in the story when the children choose to do this? Point out that it wasn’t until the other students stood up to A. Blob and ALSO exhibited empathy and kindness that A. Blob’s slimy exterior began to “melt”. ​
4 diverse children staring straight forward. A. Blob is reflected in their eyes.
The children face off with A. Blob in "A. Blob on a Bus".
A. Blob, a purple, blob like character, is beginning to melt while 4 diverse children look on in shock.
Something strange is happening to A. Blob in "A. Blob on a Bus"!
Ask the students to describe how they feel when someone is mean to them. Do they get tense? Maybe shaky? Do their thoughts begin to run around and make it hard to focus? Next, ask the students to remember something kind someone said or did for them. Choose one or two students to share their stories. ​
How did those kind words or actions make your students feel? Often, the answer is easy to see as a smile blooms across the students’ faces as they recall the memory. Just like A. Blob “melts” in the story after the students try to look through A. Blob’s eyes, we tend to soften and relax when someone is kind to us. That is the power of kindness!
Challenge students to search for what is underneath the exterior of their classmates. Encourage them to be friendly and kind and get to know one another. Soon, the kindness will melt hard exteriors and bring out the best in everyone!

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​The Activity

Explain to students that they will be doing an activity to help them better understand the lessons they just discussed.
Bring out your bowls of vinegar (placed on your tray) and your baking soda blobs. Explain that the blobs of baking soda represent A. Blob. The exterior is hard to represent A.Blob’s hard attitudes and mean behavior. The vinegar represents empathy and kindness.
Choose one student to place A. Blob in a bowl of kindness (vinegar). After the blob stops fizzing, ask students to see what was buried inside the blob.
Red baking soda blob beginning to fizz after vinegar has been poured on top.
Small post it note that reads 'family sometimes misses dinner' sits in a red puddle of vinegar and baking soda.
There are many options for what to hide inside A. Blob. In this activity, we decided to hide personality traits that can be brought out with kindness, such as friendliness or humor, along with some issues that sometimes contribute to a person acting like a bully, such as a difficult home life or abuse. Our goal is help children understand that we never know what someone is dealing with and that kindness can help us understand why someone behaves the way they do and even melt away a hard exterior to reveal a friend. 
If there is time, give each student their own A. Blob, plate, and cup of vinegar. After revealing the message inside, have them write a reflection on what the message says and why it is important. ​

​

​Extensions

An alternative way to utilize this activity is to let the students predict what they think is under the goo at the end of A. Blob on a Bus and hide their predictions inside their own blobs. Have students write a short explanation of their predictions.  Let blobs dry overnight. The next day, drop them in vinegar and have a few students share why they wrote their prediction.
Another way to extend the learning is to make bath bombs instead of baking soda/vinegar balls. Hide a kind message or a cute trinket inside and give the bath bombs away as a random act of kindness!

​

The Science

Finally, here is the science behind the fizzy blobs. The bubbles and fizz are actually the result of a chemical reaction called an acid-base reaction, the baking soda being the base and the vinegar being the acid. When the two ingredients are mixed,  hydrogen ions in the vinegar react with the sodium and bicarbonate ions in the baking soda. This forms sodium acetate, which is a salt, along with carbonic acid. This acid quickly decomposes into water and carbon dioxide, a gas. This gas rises to the top of the mixture, causing the fizzy bubbles kids just love!

The chemical reaction that occurs  is written as:

(sodium bicarbonate/baking soda) NaHCO3(s) + ( dilute acetic acid/vinegar) CH3COOH(l) -> (Sodium acetate) CH3COONa(aq) + (water) H2O(l) + (carbon dioxide) CO2(g)
***
We hope you enjoy this extension craft and that it inspires kindness and a deeper interest in the S.T.E.A.M. fields. Let us know in the comments how you are celebrating Random Acts of Kindness Week and Engineers Week!

If you enjoyed this craft, check out these other book extension crafts!
Turn over a good attitude, blog cover
My Upstander Handbook, blog cover
I can be an upstander, blog cover

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos cover. Purple blob like character stands on grass next to a school bus.


​A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 

Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!
This is A. Blob, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover. Purple blob like character throws purple slime at boy in foreground with spiky black hair.
​
​Before it was on a bus, A. Blob was on the playground. This first installment of The Blob Series follows the antics of A. Blob, as it wreaks havoc on the elementary school playground with its bullying ways. As the story progresses, however, readers learn that A. Blob may have more than meets the eye.

Along with its powerful illustrations and rhymed verse for early readers, this story invites children to put themselves in the shoes of another and encourages readers to consider why bullies behave the way they do – and start to consider what can be done to help.
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Turning Over a Good Attitude-A Companion Craft to A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos

9/25/2019

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​Fall is here and the leaves are beginning to, well, fall! What better time to turn over a new leaf or, as this craft will illustrate, a new attitude?

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When it comes to the issue of bullying, children often feel powerless, believing their actions don’t count. However, as we see in L.A. Kefalos’s picture book, A. Blob on a Bus, it only takes one person to create change--for better or worse!

​This fun A. Blob on a Bus companion craft helps children learn that their actions matter. As they work through the discussion questions with their parent, teacher, or leader, children will learn the importance of standing up for others and brainstorm safe, positive ways to be upstanders.



​The craft itself serves as a visual reminder of the impact that can be made by the actions of one.
​


TURNING OVER A GOOD ATTITUDE

Helping children learn that their actions can shape their community
A companion craft to A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos

​​You will need:
  • A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos 
  • Printed craft template
  • Printed craft glue sheet 
  • Scissors
  • Glue
  • Pencils
  • Colored pencils, crayons, or markers

​

​​
​Lesson

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Step 1: Read A. Blob on a Bus out loud

Step 2: Discuss how the bus changed when A.Blob boarded.
  • What caused the change?
  • If so many children were unhappy with the way A.Blob acted, why did it take so long for someone to stand up to A.Blob?
  • Do you think Alexandra was afraid when she stood up to A.Blob?
  • What are some reasons people are bystanders?
  • What are some ways to overcome these obstacles?
  • What are positive ways to stand up to bullying?​

​
Step 3: Make your transformation craft! Remind students that we all have the responsibility to work together to create a safe, enjoyable community and that they have the power to change their communities for the better! They can be upstanders!

​​
​Craft Instructions:

Step 1: Color the pictures on the craft template (you can also wait until everything is cut, glued and dried if students find it confusing to color the pictures while they are apart)
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Step 2: Cut out all 6 rectangles
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​

​Step 3: 
​Match the numbered rectangles to each other and glue them together with the pictures facing out (for example: glue 1A to 1B) 
​





​​

​Step 5: Once sides A and B are glues together, place glue on just the thin strip marked off by the dotted line. The glue should go on the side with the blank strip on the left
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​Step 6: Glue rectangle 1 onto the line labeled “1”. Once glued down, the side with the blank strip on the right should be facing up.


​Step 7:
 Follow steps 2 and 3 with your remaining rectangles and lines. The rectangles will overlap—this is ok!


​Step 8: Flip the rectangles to reveal what the bus is like with a bully on board, and what it is like with an upstander on board!
Top of paper says 'Which bus would you want to ride?' Bottom of paper says 'Be an upstander. In between are 3 rectangles forming a picture of A. Blob sliming the kids on the schoolbus.
Top of paper says 'Which bus would you want to ride?' Bottom of paper says 'Be an upstander. In between are 3 rectangles forming a picture of kids sitting happily on a schoolbus.
We hope you find this craft helpful and that your students feel empowered to make their community a safer, more positive place! For more fun connection crafts, check out the links below. 
Making an Impact A. Blob on a Bus companion craft blog cover and link
This is A. Blob treats blog cover and link
This is A. Blob Slime Craft book extension craft blog cover and link

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover and link
This is A. Blob, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover and link

​​A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 

Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!
​​Before it was on a bus, A. Blob was on the playground. This first installment of The Blob Series follows the antics of A. Blob, as it wreaks havoc on the elementary school playground with its bullying ways. As the story progresses, however, readers learn that A. Blob may have more than meets the eye.

Along with its powerful illustrations and rhymed verse for early readers, this story invites children to put themselves in the shoes of another and encourages readers to consider why bullies behave the way they do – and start to consider what can be done to help.
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A. Blob on a Tour Wrap Up

9/16/2019

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A. Blob standing with a brown suitcase covered in travel stickers.
The A. Blob on a Tour Blog Tour has officially pulled into the station and come to an end. If you missed one of the stops, don't worry--we'll make sure you reach your destination! Each of the stops on the tour to celebrate the launch of A. Blob on a Bus, the second book in L..A. Kefalos's picture book series, is linked below. 

If you would like to pick up your own copy of A. Blob on a Bus or the first book in The Blob Series, This is A. Blob, head over to the Laughing Leopard store! Each book comes with a FREE Material Discussion Guide for teachers, parents, and leaders that is filled with lesson plans, discussion questions, and connection crafts designed to help children end bullying and become upstanders.

Tour Stop 1- Laughing Leopard Blog: Guest Blog by A. Blob on a Bus Author, L.A. Kefalos

Tour Stop 2- Mom Read It Blog: Book Review

Tour Stop 3- Dream Reader Kids Instagram Giveaway and Review (giveaway is now closed)

Tour Stop 4- Library Lady's Kid Lit Blog: Interview with Author L.A. Kefalos and Book Review
A. Blob trailing purple slime and standing at the school bus stop
Alexandra the Great waving out the back window of a school bus illustration from A. Blob on a Bus by L.A. Kefalos

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover and link

​A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 

Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!
This is A. Blob, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover and link
​Before it was on a bus, A. Blob was on the playground. This first installment of The Blob Series follows the antics of A. Blob, as it wreaks havoc on the elementary school playground with its bullying ways. As the story progresses, however, readers learn that A. Blob may have more than meets the eye.

Along with its powerful illustrations and rhymed verse for early readers, this story invites children to put themselves in the shoes of another and encourages readers to consider why bullies behave the way they do – and start to consider what can be done to help.
0 Comments

Making an Impact: An A. Blob on a Bus Companion Craft

8/30/2019

1 Comment

 
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Making an impact. It’s something we all strive towards, especially when talking about bullying. Research states that 1 in 5 children experience bullying and making an impact on this statistic is something towards which teachers, parents, and leaders have been working for many years. Along with equipping students with tools to deal with conflict and emotion from a young age so that they do not become bullies, educators have striven to also provide tools to those adjacent to the bullying--the bystanders. ​
While studies show that 20% of children are bullied, it also reveals that nearly 71% of children witness bullying. The encouraging news is that 57% of the time, that bullying ends within 10 seconds of peer intervention. This means that a large population exists which can be leveraged as a force for good.
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But what happens when standing up to bullying (often referred to as being an upstander) goes wrong? Like fighting fire with fire, things can quickly go from bad to worse. While standing up to bullies is vital, doing so through the use of violence, mocking, or returning the bullying will only cause more trouble. So, as we teach children to be upstanders, it is just as important to teach them how to be upstanders. ​
In the picture book A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos, we once again meet A. Blob, the purple bully introduced in the 3-book series inaugural book, This is A. Blob. In this new tale, A. Blob is back to its bullying ways and, for a while, it seems like the children will never be able to ride the school bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl decides to take a stand. A. Blob on a Bus introduces the idea of being an upstander to young readers and opens the door for conversations on what to do when they see bullying occur. The companion craft below is designed to help leaders begin discussions about why it is important to stand up to bullying along with how to do this in a positive way.

The kids will love making their own "A. Blobs" and you will love the learning happening along the way!

***

MAKING AN IMPACT

​A companion craft for A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos
​You will need: cornstarch, water, mixing bowl, spatula or other stirring device, measuring cups, funnel, purple balloons, scissors, black permanent marker

​Basic Ratio
1 part water
2 parts cornstarch
*1 cup water to 2 cups cornstarch will make 2 balloon balls
Craft Instructions:·        
  • Mix cornstarch and water into a bowl until combined
  • Using your funnel, pour mixture into balloons
  • Draw the face of A. Blob on the filled balloon if desired
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​The Lesson:

​Step 1: Read A. Blob on Bus out loud
 
Step 2: Open a discussion about the story. How did A. Blob’s presence change the environment of the bus? If no one liked the way A. Blob was behaving, why did it take so long for anyone to stand up to it? What are some helpful ways to stand up to others? What are some not-so-helpful ways?
 
Step 3: Craft time! As you make the craft, continue the discussion on being an upstander.
Begin mixing your ingredients. As you mix, talk about some of the “ingredients” that create a bully. Why do some people bully others? Talk about what it means to have empathy and why it’s important to put ourselves in the shoes of others. Even though some people bully others because they have been bullied or hurt themselves, does that make their behavior ok?
Kids sitting happily on a school bus ilustration from A. Blob on a Bus by L.A. Kefalos
A. Blob walking down the aisle of a school bus sliming kids with purple slime. Illustration from A. Blob on A Bus, by L.A. Kefalos
The school bus before and after A. Blob's arrival. Which bus would you rather be on?
                                                                                      -Images from A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos, illustrated by Jeffrey Burns
​Using examples from the book, remind children that the way we treat one another has an impact on them and the situation. We have the power to change and so it is important to stand up against bullying, even when we aren’t the ones being bullied. We must be upstanders, not bystanders!
However, there are helpful ways to be upstanders, and not-so-helpful ways. When we react to bullying with more bullying, the problem only becomes worse. Show the students how when we hit the mixture, it becomes hard and resistant. However, when we treat it gently, it is soft and pliable. Discuss positive ways to stand up against bullying.
Purple balloon cornstarch stressball with eyes and mouth drawn on

​
​Using the funnel, fill up the balloons with the cornstarch mixture. As the kids play with their “A.Blob” balls, tell your students to remember that the way they treat one another has an impact. They have the power to affect change!


The “blob” also acts as a great stress ball!
***

​If you use this craft in your classroom or home, we’d love to see! Tag us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram and use the hashtag #ABlobCraft.

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover and link

​A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 

Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!
1 Comment

A. Blob on a Tour, Day 2: Mom Read It

8/20/2019

2 Comments

 
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Welcome to day 2 of the A. Blob on a Tour blog tour, celebrating the release of A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos! Today the bus stops at the Mom Read It blog! In addition to being a mom and blogger, Rosemary is also a children's librarian who shares her thoughts on a wide range of kid lit, covering everything from YA to picture books. 

Rosemary also loves comics and writes about comic books, pop culture, and books for adults on her second blog On Wednesdays, We Wear Capes. Keep up with her on her blogs or over on Twitter at @roesolo.

A big THANK YOU to Rosemary for joining the tour and helping us to share the message of A. Blob on a Bus! To read Rosemary's blog tour blog, head over to Mom Read It!

Don't miss the bus! The A. Blob on a Bus Blog Tour continues Friday on the Library Lady's Kid Lit Blog! Head over there to check it out, or check in here where we will be posting links to all the stops along the tour!

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover

​A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 


Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!
2 Comments

A. Blob on a Tour, Day 1-Featuring: L.A. Kefalos

8/18/2019

0 Comments

 
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My Book – A. Blob on a Bus

by L.A. Kefalos
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Why a Bus?

During the last year, you don’t know how many times I have been asked the question, “Why a bus?” The first time was a cold afternoon in January, when my friend Mark and I were boarding one in upper Manhattan to head downtown, and he complained, “Why a bus?  Can’t we take a cab?”  The second time happened this past spring when I went back home to Ohio and brought my nieces and nephews New York City school bus keychains as souvenirs.
They were adorable.  They were die cast metal, shaped as yellow school buses, with tiny rubber tires and “New York City Schools” inscribed in black bold letters across the side. When I handed the souvenir to my niece, my sister wondered out loud, “Why a bus?”  OK, so there have only been two times I have been asked that question, and, to answer my sister--just in case she is reading this--because EVERYONE gets a Statue of Liberty or an I Heart NY keychain.  Plus, these buses were so darn cute.  I really should have bought a key chain for myself.  I think I will go back and get one. 
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Not only is New York City my favorite city in the world, and that shade of yellow my favorite color (well, for coffee mugs and number two pencils) but my second book, A. Blob on a Bus, just happens to take place in a bus.  You might be thinking, “Why a bus?” to yourself.  Let’s just say you are.  Well, there is a reason behind it. 
​I was headed north up Hudson Drive when I spotted the giant yellow buggy in front of me.  I groaned at the sight of it because no one wants a school bus in front of them when time is of the essence. I was headed to the gym before work, so all I saw in front of me was a flabby stomach and flabby thighs on wheels. Certainly this bus was going to, at some point, lower its mighty arm, signaling, “Stop, you impatient woman, you won’t have time for sit ups today.”  
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And as sure as the day is long, it happened: first the brake lights appeared, followed by the slow, painstaking lowering of the blinking, red eight-sided sign emblazoned with white letters: “TOO BAD,” ordering me to stop and wait for a child to appear from the house and board the bus.  
​As, I settled into my seat, drinking my morning coffee, to wait for the emergence of Johnny-Come- Lately, I noticed HER, peering out the back window of the bus.  She was looking directly at me. She appeared to be around ten or eleven years old. She was expressionless--no smile, no frown, just an empty stare.  Maybe the expression was one of angst because it was the first day of school and, perhaps she had butterflies in her stomach. You know those pesky insects that show up to remind you that your future is uncertain.  For some reason, I still get them at the mere mention of the words, “first day of school.”  
​However, the little girl’s clothing--in contrast to her expression--was rather imaginative. She had a bright, royal blue blouse on underneath a cream-colored vest that appeared to have some shiny metallic strips woven into the fabric.  Thin blue and silver streamers dangled against her long brown hair. I thought the glitzy outfit was her attempt to be accepted by the rest of the herd. But then I noticed that she was standing all alone in the back while the rest of the pack were seated, paired up according to type inside the giant yellow ark. The outfit obviously wasn’t an attempt to blend in as the others were moderately dressed. She clearly stood out from the rest. “Why is she staring at me?” I thought, as I averted her gaze and looked down, pretending to have difficulty placing my coffee cup back in the holder.  I admired my nails as I placed the coffee in the cupholder.  I had just had them painted a sapphire blue with gel nail polish. The gel caused the nails to shine much more than the regular polish I normally wore. I marveled at the color of blue, realizing that it matched the stapler that I had sitting on my desk back at the office. The office that I was going to be late arriving to because I was still waiting on a child to board the bus.
PictureA. Blob wreaks havoc on the playground in L.A. Kefalos's first picture book, This is A. Blob.
When I looked up to see if there was any sign of life from the house, I saw that she was still staring out of the back window at me.  A bevy of questions flooded my mind: Why is she still looking at me? Why is she standing?  Isn’t that dangerous? Doesn’t this bus have seat belts?  Why aren’t all school buses required to have seat belts?  Why isn’t Noah paying attention to his passengers? Isn’t he concerned with their safety? Why isn’t she smiling? Is she being bullied?  I had already written my first picture book, This is A. Blob, about a bully who wreaks havoc on a playground tormenting other kids. In my research for the book, I had read that a school bus was a hot spot for bullying.  Besides the fact that the bully pretty much had a captive audience, there is very little adult supervision. Bullies tend to target their victims any place where adult supervision is low. Yes, there was the school bus driver, Noah, but there can be as many 70 kids on one bus for him to supervise and his focus obviously is on safe driving. ​

​I felt a little helpless sitting there.  I really couldn’t surmise anything from the situation. I knew it was up to the adults in the child’s life to notice the signs of bullying. The mood changes, the minor health complaints, the changes in their grades and sleeping habits. All I could do was sit and wonder about the one who wandered away from the herd and was standing there gazing intently at me. 
​I don’t know why I did it.  It may have been the fact that she was standing alone, looking like an outcast, in need of provision, or maybe it was the blue streamer gesturing me to show kinship.  Whatever the case, I decided to flash my freshly painted nails at her, one hand, five fingers, palm-side away from her, in some tribal “I feelyasister” greeting.   I don’t know what I expected to happen. Maybe she would give me a sign of the duress she was in. Most likely, I was being selfish and was hoping it would cause her to look away and end the awkwardness I was feeling being under the microscope. But she did something totally unexpected: instead of looking away, she returned the greeting in “I’ll see you and raise you” fashion and flashed back five nails decked out in blue and white zig-zags matching her vest and streamers.  Clearly her nails were far more stunning than mine.  The gesture caused me to spit out my coffee and laugh out loud.  Her expression-less face broke out in a huge smile as well.  
​In the meantime, I hadn’t noticed the brake lights on the bus were gone, as well as the flashing red stop sign. The bus began to move and make its way toward the unknown future.  The girl with the streamers had sat back down in her seat when the bus continued its journey.    I followed behind it for a way before I had to make a left-hand turn. When I put on my signal to turn--to my astonishment--the little girl’s head popped her head up over the backseat, smiled, and flashed me the five-fingered backward hand wave, good-bye.  I returned the smile and the wave, and she sat back down in her seat.
​I drove to the gym at a leisurely pace. I was no longer hurried or concerned about getting my full work out in. Instead, I was thrilled that I had the idea for the next book in the A. Blob series. My only worry –would having a tiny pink butterfly flying out the back window of the bus at the end of the story be too much?
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Don't miss the bus! The A. Blob on a Bus Blog Tour continues tomorrow over at the Mom Read It blog! Head over there to check it out, or check in here where we will be posting links to all the stops along the tour!

A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos picture book cover
A. Blob is back, and this time it's on a bus! As the slimy bully pokes and pesters the children of Lincoln Elementary School, it seems like they will never be able to ride the bus in peace. That is, until one brave girl takes stand. 

Can one act of bravery change everything--including A. Blob? Find out in this second installment of The Blob Series!

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Book Launch! A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos

7/22/2019

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Can one act of bravery change everything--including A.Blob?
It's official: A. Blob on a Bus, by L.A. Kefalos is now available for purchase! We are so pleased to bring this new resource to teachers, parents, and leaders who are looking to start conversations about bullying, empathy, and kindness.
​With its beautiful illustrations and rhymed verse, A.Blob on a Bus explores the issue of bullying from the perspective of the bystander, asking young readers "What would you do?" and empowering them to help make their community a better place.
Here are just a few of the things we LOVE about A. Blob on a Bus:
  • Rhymed verse and beautiful illustrations captivate early readers
  • Empowers children to take action and provides key steps to stand up to bullying
  • Readers learn that one person can start a movement
  • Children learn about multiple aspects of a bullying scenario (The bully, the victim, the bystander, and the upstander) and how each role contributes to the overall community
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Although studies reveal that 1 in 4 children faces bullying, research also shows that early interventions, such as reading topical books and holding discussions can help change that statistic for the better.  Through her writing, L.A. Kefalos hopes to be a part of that solution. “We are all in this together”, Kefalos shared, “children, parents, teachers--the whole community. My book can't end bullying alone. It is just one line in an enormous conversation.  But it can start the discussion.”
A. Blob on a Bus is now available for purchase on Amazon.com. With each purchase, you also receive a FREE download of the accompanying material discussion guide with lesson plans, craft, and discussion questions to guide conversations and help young readers learn to be upstanders.
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Before A. Blob was on a bus, it was wreaking havoc on the playground! In This is A.Blob, by L.A. Kefalos, the first installment of The Blob Series, we meet the purple, blob-like creature as it wreaks havoc with its bullying ways. As the story progresses, however, readers learn that there may be more to A.Blob than meets the eye.

This story invites children to put themselves in the shoes of another and encourages readers to think about why bullies behave the way they do – and start to consider what can be done to help.



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    About Laughing Leopard Press

    Hello! We are Laughing Leopard Press, an independent book publisher from Akron, Ohio. At Laughing Leopard Press, we’re interested in publishing works that contribute to our understanding of this wonderful world. Through this blog, we hope to add to that understanding with commentary on life, literature, and a few things in between. We hope you enjoy the blog and take some time to talk with us in the comments or on our social media sites. Happy reading! 

    For some more great reading, check out our latest release, This is A. Blob by L. A Kefalos. This is A. Blob  is a picture book that deals with the sticky issue of bullying through an unlikely character that is a bit sticky itself! As readers follow the antics of A. Blob, they learn to put themselves in the shoes of another and discover there may be more to this bully than meets the eye…

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    This is A. Blob by L. A Kefalos. $14.95


    $1.00 is donated to charity for each book sold on this site--half to St. Jude's and the other half to PetFix Northeast Ohio.

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