The Newbery Medal Challenge - 1922 to Present
I explain the Newbery Challenge in the following video:
Take a look at the Newbery Medal winners - 1922 - Present:
Click here to download a Newbery Challenge badge.
Colby Sharp is co-hosting this challenge. Thank you, Colby!
If you are participating in the Newbery Medal Challenge, you may link your Goodreads shelf or blog using the widget below:
Grateful for the "stress free" element! Thanks, Mr. Schu and Mr. Sharp!
ReplyDeleteYes, stress-free all the way! :)
ReplyDeleteWonderful idea! I'm there!
ReplyDeleteThank you.
This has always been a lifetime goal of mine. A fun idea, and your video made me very happy. Brought back many book memories.
ReplyDeleteLove the part about taking four years or more! We'll see how I do.
ReplyDeleteThis is going to be fun and stress-free. Thanks for organizing this.
ReplyDeleteI will participate. I may not be as motivated to read them in order as you, but I will read, tag, and post reviews of the ones I do read.
ReplyDeleteI am going to write a post on my blog about this ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC newbery challenge and then link it above!! :)
ReplyDeleteThis is going to be so much fun!!
I have a random question-your picture on your profile-where was that taken?
Shannon
http://extremereadingandwriting.wordpress.com/
I like a challenge self imposed and as a group...I plan on reading every one that I haven't read (and ones that I liked previously).
ReplyDeleteGreat idea! Love it!!! :)
ReplyDeleteI have decided this year to improve my reading of middle grade books mainly. So this challenge will give some incentive. Have read a few, Maniac Magee I have read a couple of times aloud to my class over the years. I am going to take the stress free number of years approach, and read in any order I like!
ReplyDeleteThis looks like a fun challenge and I LOVE that it is Stress Free!
ReplyDeleteSounds likes it will be fun and informative. Not too sure about the older titles - they may be hard to find but I am going to give it a shot. Would love to do this with my students too.
ReplyDeleteI'm in - can't wait to start.
ReplyDeleteI definitely like this idea, but to add to the "stress-free" aspect of it, perhaps you can be lenient on us and we can read them in any order as long as they still get read? :)
ReplyDeleteWow! I have read more winners than I realized. Loved the animoto. Excited to join in...just not sure how I will be doing it. Maybe I will start with present and work my way backwards. HaHa!
ReplyDeleteLike Alyson above, I think I want to go present to past or even alternate as was mentioned on twitter. Otherwise, I'm afraid I won't make it. Will use my abandoned after so many pages rule though and spread out over a number of years!
ReplyDeleteI have had this as a goal for the last two years - so it's about time I set an end date, 2012 it is! Not sure how many I've read (to myself or to my kids) so I'll have to let you know.
ReplyDeleteMy teenager wants to read "They Story of Mankind" also, so I am going to challenge him to put that on his list this year. Thanks for the incentive :)
John, thanks for organizing! I will be doing it at a tortoise's pace, but I'm happy to have a challenge to focus my reading. I think I will be reading backwards.
ReplyDeleteI love this challenge - especially the fact that we are encouraged to tailor it to our reading lives. In order to keep up with new books AND go for this challenge I am going to try to read all the Newberys that were written by women authors. If time permits I will read the the ones written by men.
ReplyDeleteI have taken KT Horning's online ALSC Newbery course twice. It's a six-week course in which all enrolled read one Newbery winner from each decade and share thoughts. I still have quite a few to read - more than 50!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the inspiration, and the stress-free atmosphere. I'm going for the 2 year plan!
ReplyDeleteLove this. Love it. I was looking through the list and realized that I want to re-read ones already read, also hoping my budget could handle buying them, maybe a couple each month. How cool it would be to have them in my personal library (the hubby's building it even as I type, yay!)...
ReplyDeleteAnyhow, enough yacking from me. Thanks for leading the stress free charge and Happy New Year and enjoy being at the announcement for this years winner!!
What a great idea! Thanks
ReplyDeleteI'm excited to go back to work and get my hands on Dr. Dolittle and getting The Story of Mandkind from the Carnegie. I'm amending my initial reading challenge - now I'm going to read ALL the Newbery books!
ReplyDeleteIt only took me all day and all my patience to get to this point with the blog. I should have it figured out by the 10th or 20th book! I'll begin with most recent... just got it in the mail yesterday and the 1922 book is slowing me down!
ReplyDeleteWonderful stress-free challenge. This is something that I have always wanted to do, and now I have a real excuse - not that I really needed one!
ReplyDeleteThank you for signing up for this challenge. I finished book #1, The Story of Mankind. :)
ReplyDeleteI am so excited to start this challenge. I just finished reading "The Book Whisperer" by Donalyn Miller. I thought I was reading enough throughout the year. Turns out I am not so I am ready to get started! I am not sure how I will read these. I might start with the ones that I already have in my classroom library.
ReplyDeleteThis will be a great kick start to my 2012 reading, and I appreciate the zero stress factor!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the challenge! It's just what I needed to amp up my reading which has been stilted by a lack of focus. My house looks like Hoarders - the Bibliophile. I'm so excited to get back and share my 2012 reading goals with my 7th graders. (Well, this might be a multi-year, as I have hundreds of other books here to read, but nonetheless!)
ReplyDeleteI have never participated in a reading challenge before and being rather competitive, I cannot wait to try this one. I am reading them in reverse order, however, starting with the newest ones first.
ReplyDeleteAwesome challenge! I'm going to take the STRESS FREE part to heart and challenge myself to read one Newbery winner from each decade this year. I've read lots from the more recent decades, but this will motivate me to check out the earlier ones. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI also love that this is a stress-free challenge. (Otherwise, I wouldn't have signed up for it!) Thanks for the inspiration.
ReplyDeleteI have THE STORY OF MANKIND right now. . .on my way. . .
ReplyDeleteMr. Hankins
I am very excited about this challenge. I, of course, have a difficult time doing things the same way as everyone else. So, I will be starting my #Nerdbery with Moon Over Manifest (2011) and then going back in time. I'll meet you all somewhere in the middle!
ReplyDeleteI've been working on this goal for some time. Hopefully this will give me the extra incentive to read some of the older winners.
ReplyDeleteSo glad to have this challenge to motivate me to check out some books I may not have chosen otherwise - and to revisit some old favorites!
ReplyDeleteMaybe this will get me inspired to finish the 9 or so I haven't read yet, and review them here: http://newberryproject.blogspot.com/search/label/Sandy%20D.%27s%20Posts
ReplyDeleteHi! We're also joining in this challenge. We are hosting our very own Award-Winning-Books Reading Challenge in our website, and we thought that it would most likely build a greater sense of kidlit love and community if we also join in this one. After all, the challenges do overlap. :) Good luck to us!
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if my earlier message went through. But let me rewrite, just in case it didn't. :) We'd love to join the challenge since it overlaps with our very own Award-Winning-Books Reading Challenge that we're hosting in our website. We feel that it'd foster a much lovelier sense of community among kidlit/YA enthusiasts to have all these reading challenges in the blogosphere. Best of luck to all of us.
ReplyDeleteI started reading Newberry's when my son was little, but we didn't get through them all. Now is the time!
ReplyDeleteI think I'll start this challenge on January 23rd when they announce the latest Newbery. I love reading challenges. I'm excited to have found this blog!
ReplyDeleteShamefacedly, I must say that the Newbery sticker usually causes me to put a book back on the shelf. I love checking things off a list (such a feeling of accomplishment!), so hopefully this will make me pick up those books and give them a chance.
ReplyDeleteI've been working on this for awhile so it's finally fun to have an official challenge to join!
ReplyDeleteHi! I just discovered the challenge today, so I will be playing catch-up for awhile. I am a reference librarian in our town's public library. I am excited to re-visit the Newbery books I loved growing up.
ReplyDeletefound your challenge yesterday. i'm going to join you. i'm not a school librarian (but my aunt is) ... just an unschooly mom of 8, and we love good books. i don't think i'll be re-reading (for time reasons), and i'm going to start with the newberrys on our own shelf, then go back and forth between oldest/youngest.
ReplyDeletethanks for hosting!
p.s. would you mind if i put your cover video in my sidebar ... although we are not supposed to judge a book that way, i think sometimes it inspires people to read when they actually 'see' the book.
What a great idea, I'm excited to get started! I also want to make a Newbery section in my K-6 Library Media Center, and one for the Caldecott.
ReplyDeleteI'm blogging my way through The Well-Educated Mind reading lists compiled by Susan Wise Bauer. This quest takes up a huge chunk of my reading time -- but since I have five children under age 9, and since I LOVE Newbery Award winners, I've decided to squeeze some in when I can.
ReplyDeleteI created a page on my blog for this challenge. I've already read 36.
I love challenges! This is a wonderful idea. I look forward to starting, thanks Mr. Schu
ReplyDeleteI started reading the medal and honor books years ago. It is so nice to not read them in a vacuum and see others' reactions. I'm reading the winners/honors as I find them. I admire those reading them chronologically.
ReplyDeleteThrilled to be starting my Newbery Challenge with my 10-year old son. Here's to good reading.
ReplyDeleteI love this! I have had it my personal goal to read all the Newberry winners and honor books for the past almost decade. Each year I get closer and closer to my goal. It's great to share this goal with other folks. :o)
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to this fun challenge!
ReplyDeleteI'm excited to get started!
ReplyDeleteWhat an amazing blog! I've linked my own, though my personal Newbery challenge isn't in any particular order.
ReplyDeleteI've already read a lot of these books, but will start posting about them on my Literature for Kids site. Thanks for the challenge...
ReplyDeleteI started a similar project in 2010, as a focal point for a year of reading. I'm ready to dive back in and read the ones I've missed -- and reread the great ones.
ReplyDeleteThis is something I have been wanting to do for some time; I just needed that extra little motivation! Happy Reading.
ReplyDeleteA little late to the party-- but I've been doing this in reverse. My hope is that by adding my name to the list, I'll actually read the ones that are more daunting.
ReplyDeleteBetter late than never!!!
ReplyDeleteWoo Hoo, as soon as I saw that I would be number 100... well, I just had to sign up... better late than never!
ReplyDeleteThanks to you Mr. Schu and Mr. Sharp... I just checked out 'The Story of Mankind' to one of my Chinese-American 4th graders... I'm sure that wouldn't have been on his radar without our love of award-winning literature.
Cheers from Shanghai, China
I recently joined the challenge. This has been something I've wanted to do for quite a while. Thank you for hosting.
ReplyDeleteI love this! What a fabulous idea!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your blog and the challenge. I've kinda been working on reading the Newbery winners off-and-on for several years, but it is nice to get formal about it and accept the challenge. I'll be augmenting my Newbery challenge list with some other classic children's literature that hasn't won that award, either because it is too old or it is British or it just got passed over for whatever reason.
ReplyDeleteI've been a member of the Newbery Project since maybe 2008. Glad to continue the challenge and start to keep track of what I've read -- and skip the ones not worth reading. Thanks for organizing!
ReplyDeleteI started reading the Newberry winners when I started working in a school library in 2007. I've taken a hiatus since starting an MLIS program, but still manage to read a few each year. Glad others are on the ride with me!
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