Water cooler: LeVar Burton, other celebrities read to homebound kids
Celebrities everywhere have begun reading books on various social media platforms to kids who are stuck at home because of quarantine, but it’s hard to compete with probably the most famous reader of children’s books there is, LeVar Burton.
The public television run for “Reading Rainbow” ended in 2006, but Burton is back, this time on Twitter. He reads books for children 9 a.m. Mondays, for young adults 3 p.m. Wednesdays and for adults 6 p.m. Fridays. Catch in on Twitter @levarburton.
The Spokesman-Review’s Northwest Passages Book Club has taken a similar direction, creating videos of local community members reading some of their favorite children’s books. Readers featured have included Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, astronaut Anne McClain, editor-in-chief Rob Curley, comedian and actor Eric Edelstein, Jennifer Davis of The Scoop, and Ben Goldfarb, author of “Eager Beaver.” Watch them all at spokesman.com/sections/story-time/.
Country superstar Dolly Parton has a series called “Goodnight with Dolly” that releases new episodes 4 p.m. Thursdays on the Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library channel.
Save With Stories, available on Instagram or Facebook @savewithstories, has partnered with Save the Children and No Kid Hungry to offer readings from celebrities, artists and writers and to bring awareness to children who may be experiencing food insecurity during quarantine and school closures. Guests have included Steve Carrell, Olivia Wilde, America Ferrera, Sugar Ray Leonard, Glenn Close, James Marsden, J.J. Abrams, Jeff Goldblum, Demi Lovato, Pink and Al Yankovic.
Storyline Online is a children’s literacy program created by the Screen Actors Guild Foundation. Their videos feature animations of the illustrations, unique scores and readings from some of the most well-loved actors, including Betty White, Chris Pine, Wanda Sykes, the late Ernest Borgnine and Elijah Wood. This program has been around for a few years, so there are plenty of books to choose. Find their videos at Storylineonline.com or on their YouTube channel.
Social circle
Brain train
Test your knowledge with today’s trivia question
How many episodes of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” were made?
- 1,214
- 874
- 711
- 912
Tuesday’s answer: “A King in New York”
Soapy songs
If your little ones still need reminders to wash their hands, here is a playlist of songs that harness the power of melody to get it stuck in their brains, and probably yours, too.
‘App’lied learning
Tools on your phone or tablet to help with at-home teaching.
ABCmouse.com: This app uses story-based videos to teach various subjects. For ages 2-8.
Epic!: An e-book library with over 35,000 books with a read-to-me feature for those still learning to read. For ages 2-12.
Duolingo: Practice learning Spanish, French, German, Chinese and more with quizzes and activities that slowly build in difficulty. For ages 10 and older.
Lightbot – Code House: Kids can learn basic concepts of coding without having to know how to write it. Instead it shows kids the functions and concepts commonly found in code. For ages 8 and older.
Also: Stack the States 2 and Quick Math Jr.