ALSC announces 2012 Notable Children’s Videos

For Immediate Release
Mon, 01/30/2012 - 16:44

Contact: Laura Schulte-Cooper
ALSC


CHICAGO - The Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC), a division of the American Library Association (ALA), has selected its 2012 list of Notable Children’s Videos.  The list includes videos for children 14 years of age and younger that exhibit especially commendable quality, show respect for children’s intelligence and imagination and reflect and encourage the interests of children in exemplary ways.

The selected videos are:

All the World.” Weston Woods

Eric Carle: Picture Writer: The Art of the Picture Book.” Eric Carle Studio

A Child’s Garden of Poetry.” Warner Home Video

Children Make Terrible Pets.” Weston Woods

Choosing to Be a GFF (Good Friend Forever).” Good Friend, Inc.

Coming Out: What Every Teen (Gay and Straight) Needs to Know.” Human Relations Media

The Day of the Dead.” Weston Woods

Don’t Let the Pigeon Stay Up Late!” Weston Woods

Kitten’s First Full Moon.” Weston Woods

Party Day. ( Laurie Berkner Band)” Two Tomatoes/Razor & Tie

Private Eyes/Les Yeux Noirs.” National Film Board of Canada

Robot Zot!” Weston Woods

Safety Smart Science with Bill Nye the Science Guy: Germs & Your Health.” Disney Educational Productions

Scaredy Squirrel.” Weston Woods

Stone Soup.” Weston Woods

Too Many Toys.” Weston Woods

For the annotated list of the above videos, including recommended age levels and running times, visit the ALSC website. More information about all of ALSC’s Children’s Notable Lists is available at www.ala.org/alsc, click on “Awards & Grants” and “Children’s Notable Lists.”

Members of the 2012 Carnegie Medal/Notable Children’s Videos Committee are: Chair Martha Seif Simpson, Stratford (Conn.) Library Association; Marilyn Ackerman, Brooklyn (N.Y.)  Public Library, Office of Materials Selection; Linda L. Ernst, King County Library System, Bellevue, Wash.; Linda A. Gann, University of North Carolina-Greensboro, School of Library and Information Studies; Suzanne Myers Harold, Multnomah County Library, Portland, Ore.; Lindsay D. Huth, Arlington Heights (Ill.) Memorial Library; Gwen M. Taylor, Lewis-Clark State College, Lewiston, Idaho; Emily Tichenor, Tulsa (Okla.) City-County Library; and Joanna Ward, County of Los Angeles Public Library, Temple City, Calif.