Tag Archives: Resources

Grant Opportunity

From eSN“Tools for Schools” for 6/24/08:

Fri, Jun 13, 2008
Richard Riley Award
$10,000 for schools that are community learning centers

 Primary Topic Channel: Grants

Sometimes referred to as “community learning centers,” schools that serve as centers of community provide a rich array of social, civic, recreational and artistic opportunities to the broader community, often clustering educational and municipal buildings together. These additional services and opportunities often improve student achievement and help maximize local tax dollars. The winning school will be a center of community that demonstrates innovative design ideas and helps promote student achievement.

Contact Information

Contact Website: http://www.nationalschoolsearc…

 NOTE:  Applications accepted through July 25, 2008


Grant Opportunity

From eSN“Tools for Schools” for 6/11/08:

Thu, May 29, 2008
2008 Technology Grants for Rural Schools program
Technology grants for schools in rural areas

The Technology Grants for Rural Schools program was created to help meet the growing need for innovative technology in the classroom. The grants are funded by a donation from the Rural Telephone Finance Cooperative (RTFC) and strive to help public schools in rural areas served by OPASTCO members bring modern computers to every classroom, connect schools to the information superhighway and make sure that effective and engaging software and online resources are an integral part of the school curriculum.

Contact Information

Contact Website: http://www.fred.org/tech.html

From the website: Applications are due into the FRED officeon or before September 13, 2008

Eligibility Requirements

1.     Must be a public k-12 school

2.     Must be in the service area of an OPASTCO telephone company

OPASTCO is an association for small independent telephone companies throughout the United States and Canada.

To find out if you are in the service area of an OPASTCO member contact your local telephone company.

MN Book Award Winners!

From: The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library [mailto:mnbookawards@thefriends.org]
Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2008 10:13 PM
To: Post, Patricia A.
Subject: Minnesota Book Award Winners Announced!

 

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.

The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library

 

The Minnesota Book Awards is a Capital City project, led by The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library, in consortium with the Saint Paul Public Library and the Mayor’s Office of the City of Saint Paul.

 

Sponsors

Marquette Financial Companies

Meyer, Scherer and Rockcastle, Ltd.

Minnesota Department of Education—State Library Services

Pioneer Press

Saint Paul Cultural STAR

Wellington Management, Inc.

Xcel Energy

 

Supporters

Anonymous Donor

The Harlan Boss Foundation for the Arts

Huss Foundation

The Katherine B. Andersen Fund of The Saint Paul Foundation

Sit Investment Associates

Media Sponsors

Minnesota Public Radio

The Rake

Saint Paul Neighborhood Network

TPT-MN Channel

Partners

Barnes & Noble Booksellers

Library Networks for Literature – A Project of the Public Programs Office of the American Library Association

Metropolitan Library Service Agency

Minnesota Center for Book Arts

Minnesota Educational Media Organization

Minnesota Library Association

Minnesota Library Foundation

Red Balloon Bookshop

Minnesota Book Awards presented tonight – winners announced here first!

The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library is pleased to announce the winners of the 20th annual Minnesota Book Awards. In addition to winners in eight categories, the Book Awards presented the Readers’ Choice Award, which was selected by over 7,000 voters from across Minnesota. More than 700 people attended the gala award ceremony on Saturday, April 12, hosted by Cathy Wurzer of Minnesota Public Radio and TPT. Announced at the gala, the winners of the 2008 Minnesota Book Awards are:

Award for Children’s Literature
Sponsored by Xcel Energy:

Lynne Jonell – Emmy and the Incredible Shrinking Rat
Published by Henry Holt and Company

When Emmy discovers that she and her parents are being drugged with rat potions by her horrid nanny, Miss Barmy, she and her animal friends must foil the dastardly plot. Readers will enjoy the clashes between Emmy and the mischievous rat in this whimsical adventure.


 

Award for General Nonfiction
Sponsored by Meyer, Scherer & Rockcastle, Ltd.:

Charles Baxter – The Art of Subtext: Beyond Plot
Published by Graywolf Press*

Acclaimed writer and essayist Charles Baxter explores the hidden overtones and undertones in fictional work. As the author explains, “A novel is not a summary of its plot but a collection of instances, of luminous specific details that take us in the direction of the unsaid and the unseen.” Baxter teaches at the University of Minnesota.


Award for Genre Fiction:
William Kent Krueger – Thunder Bay
Published by Atria Books/Simon & Schuster

The seventh book in the Cork O’Connor series takes the protagonist into Canada where he attempts to locate the son his friend, the Ojibwe healer Henry Meloux, fathered several years ago. Reuniting the two proves more dangerous than anyone predicted. William Kent Krueger, winner of last year’s Genre Fiction Award, lives in St. Paul.


Award for Memoir & Creative Nonfiction
Sponsored by Wellington Management, Inc.:
Patricia Hampl – The Florist’s Daughter
Published by Harcourt

In her most personal book to date, St. Paul author Patricia Hampl revisits her childhood as she experiences her mother’s death. Daughter of a Czech father whose floral work gave him entrée to high society, and a distrustful Irishwoman with an uncanny ability to tell a tale, Hampl paints a picture of herself as someone who remained a devoted daughter well into adulthood.


Award for Minnesota
Sponsored by Marquette Financial Companies:
Doug Hoverson – Land of Amber Waters:

The History of Brewing in Minnesota
Published by the University of Minnesota Press*

Starting with Minnesota’s first brewery in 1849, Doug Hoverson, a certified beer judge and award-winning homebrewer, tells the story of the state’s beer industry from small-town breweries to larger companies such as Schell’s and Grain Belt. The book also highlights the vibrant beer culture of today including a new wave of breweries and brewpubs.


Award for Novel & Short Story:
Wang Ping – The Last Communist Virgin
Published by Coffee House Press*

From the restaurants of New York’s Chinatown to the retail emporium of Bergdorf Goodman, and from remote Chinese military outposts to the streets of Beijing, Wang Ping’s stories open a window into the rapid transformations of an ancient culture. Born in Shanghai, the author currently teaches at Macalester College.


 

Award for Poetry:
Deborah Keenan – Willow Room, Green Door
Published by Milkweed Editions*

Written over the course of three decades, this collection presents a body of work addressing themes of love and rage; vulnerability and authority; and distraction and focus. In this collection, the reader gets a sense of inhabiting the world with the poet, of walking through time, both historical and personal.


 

Award for Young Adult Literature:
Will Weaver – Defect
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

David was born with different features than other people. Some are apparent to others, such as his hearing aids and misshapen face. Others are secret, terrifying to some and magical to others. Will Weaver has written many notable young adult novels as well as the short story on which the movie Sweet Land was based.


The Readers’ Choice Award
Sponsored by Pioneer Press and TwinCities.com:
Jill Kalz – Farmer Cap
Published by Picture Window Books*

Eccentric Farmer Cap plants crops like spaghetti and popsicles. The other farmers laugh at him, but a spectacular harvest causes them to rethink their traditional views. This is the fourth book in Jill Kalz’s Pfeffernut County series. The author has written nearly 50 children’s books and lives in New Ulm.

* Indicates a Minnesota-based publisher


At the Book Awards gala on April 12, Don Leeper also received the previously announced Kay Sexton Award, for his lifelong contributions to Minnesota’s literary community. Founder and president of BookMobile (formerly Stanton Publications Services), Leeper has fostered the literary community for over 25 years with his design and production service, visionary capability and relationships with local and national publishers. The Award is sponsored by Barnes & Noble Booksellers.


Also presented was the first annual Book Artist Award, co-sponsored by Minnesota Center for Book Arts (MCBA). The award, presented to Jody Williams, recognizes a Minnesota book artist for excellence throughout a body of work, as well as significant contributions to Minnesota’s book arts community. Williams’ work is currently being shown at St. Paul’s Central Library, 90 W. 4th St., through April 20.


Books written by a Minnesotan and first published in 2007 were eligible for the 20th annual Minnesota Book Awards. 250 books were nominated for awards this year, and 32 books were selected as finalists. The winners were chosen by panels of judges from the list of finalists. Nominations for next year’s Awards will open in early fall, 2008. For more information on the Book Awards process, and a complete list of finalists and winners since 1988, visit The Friends website, www.thefriends.org, and click on the Minnesota Book Awards icon.

The Book Awards gala will be broadcast on the TPT-MN Channel in late May or early June. Check your local listings for the channel, date and time of broadcast.

You are receiving this email because of your past interest in the Minnesota Book Awards.Unsubscribe papost@stcloudstate.edu from this list.

Our mailing address is:
The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library
325 Cedar Street, Suite 555
Saint Paul, MN 55101-1055

Our telephone:
651-222-3242

Copyright (C) 2008 The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library All rights reserved.

Forward this email to a friend

 

 

Email Marketing Powered by MailChimp

 

Round 3 of MN Reflections

Help us add collections to Minnesota Reflections

The Minnesota Digital Library will accept applications for digitization projects until March 28, 2008. You may submit your applications anytime before then. Projects are to digitize original photos, negatives, artwork, letters, journals, documents and maps.We spend our grant dollars to do the digitization work. Contributing organizations choose the projects and complete applications. Once our digitization work is complete, the contributors then fill in an Excel spreadsheet with information on each item (metadata work).Any organization that holds historic objects and is interested in doing a project should contact Marian Rengel, Minnesota Digital Library outreach coordinator, very soon to talk over the details. (mrrengel@stcloudstate.edu; 320-308-5625)In Rounds 1 and 2, conducted since August, the MDL committed to digitizing 1,690 photos, 18,770 document pages, and 1,009 maps. These projects, along with transcriptions for many of the documents, will spend 80 percent of our grant dollars. We still have ample funding for large and small projects.Our call for project proposals, which describes what we are looking for this year and which contains the application, is available at
http://www.mndigital.org/news_events/news_events.htm#phase4proposals

Marian Rengel
Outreach Coordinator
Minnesota Digital Library Coalition
St. Cloud State University
Office (320) 308-5625
Fax (320) 308-4778 (shared)
Visit the Minnesota Digital Library’s collection site at http://reflections.mndigital.org/ and our home at http://www.mndigital.org/