Browsing "..Children"
Jun 30, 2010 - ..Children, Myths & Facts, Pets & Animals    1 Comment     13,821 views

Do hens lay golden eggs?

 

Image is retrieved from:

http://www.elegantgoldbuys.com/page/1202355

Most of us have heard of Aesop’s fable: The Hen That Laid The Golden Eggs (in some versions, it is a goose). In real life, there are no animals that can lay golden eggs. However, there are blue eggs!

According to Henerson’s Chicken Breed Chart:  
Eggs can come in different colors, such as shades of white, creamy white, brown and blue, depending on the breed of the hen. The most unique egg color will be blue. The hens of Ameraucana and Araucana breed lay blue eggs.

Reference:
Henerson’s Chicken Breed Chart (http://www.ithaca.edu/staff/jhenderson/chooks/chooks.html) Last accessed on 30 June 2010.

If you want to read more on the topic, here are books that you can check out at our libraries.

 
All Rights Reserved, Picture Window Books, c2004

The goose that laid the golden egg : a retelling of Aesop’s fable by LarocheMark White
Publisher: Minneapolis, Minn. : Picture Window Books, c2004.
Call No.: JP 398.2 WHI -[FOL]
Click here to check for item availability


All Rights Reserved, Children’s Press, 2009, c2008.

How an egg grows into a chicken by Tanya Kant
Publisher: New York : Children’s Press, 2009, c2008.
Call No.: JP 636.5 KAN
Click here to check for item availability

Book jacket
All Rights Reserved, Minn. : Millbrook Press, c2007.

Guess what is growing inside this egg by Mia Posada
Publisher: Minneapolis, Minn. : Millbrook Press, c2007.
Call No: J 591.4 POS
Click here to check for item availability

Here are websites for information on the topic:
Title: Egg
URL: http://animals.howstuffworks.com/animal-facts/egg-info.htm

All websites are last accessed on 30 June 2010. Please refer to the terms and conditions on the homepages for use.
For the availability of the above book titles, please check the library catalogue.

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Ms Chen Luojia
Associate Librarian, Children’s Services

Jun 21, 2010 - ..Children, Family & Parenting, Myths & Facts    No Comments    15,731 views

How Did Father’s Day Come About?

For those who celebrated Father’s Day a few days ago with your dads, you must be wondering how this special occassion started!

Well, some 4000 years ago, a young boy named Elmusu carved out a father’s day card on a clay tablet, wishing his father a long and healthy life. And in 1910, Miss Sonara Louise Smart Dodd, whose mother died at childbirth and was brought up by her father started the campaign to pay tribute to her father who brought up six children on his own. She succeeded in lobbying for this occassion to be celebrated and in 1966, President Lyndon Johnson signed a Presidential Proclamation to declare the third Sunday of June as Father’s Day and this was also reiterated by President Richard Nixon in 1972 who helped to establish Father’s Day as a national occassion.

Sources:
History of Father’s Day -www.enidnews.com
History of Father’s Day-www.lankanewspapers.com

For books on dads, you can check out these books!

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All Rights Reserved, New York, N.Y. : NorthSouth Books

Daddies by Lila Prap
Call Number: JP English PRA
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : NorthSouth Books
View item availability here

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All Rights Reserved, New York, N.Y. : G. P. Putnam’s Sons

Your Daddy Was Just Like You by Kelly Bennett
Call Number: JP English BEN
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : G. P. Putnam’s Sons
View item availability here

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All Rights Reserved, New York, N.Y. : HarperCollinsPublishers

It’s The Best Day Ever, Dad! by Brooke Shields
Call Number: JP English SHI
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : HarperCollinsPublishers
View item availability here

Posted By:
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Ms Chen Wanying
Children’s Librarian
Children’s Services

Jun 17, 2010 - ..Children, Recreation    No Comments    1,062 views

When was the first World Cup tournament?

The World Cup is soccer’s biggest event and it is held once every four years. The first World Cup was held in Uruguay in July 1930. Only thirteen teams from North America, South America and Europe participated in the event. Back then, the teams travelled by sea and some teams even travelled on the same ship to Uruguay. In the final match, the host nation defeated Argentina 4–2 in front of a crowd of 93000 people and became the first country to win the World Cup.

Today, 204 teams partipate in the tournament and 32 teams were shortlisted after gruelling matches in the qualifying rounds. Since 1930, the 16 tournaments have seen only seven different winners with Brazil leading the pack, having won the World Cup five times. The World Cup is now the most watched sporting event with millions of supporters from all over the world.

(Source: www.fifa.com/classicfootball/history/index.html
Last accessed: 17/6/2010)

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(All Rights Reserved, Haynes, 2010)

World Cup Football
by Jason Ludditch
Call Number: J English 796.334 LUD
Click here to check for item availability.

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(All Rights Reserved, Scholastic Children’s Books, 2010)

Wicked World Cup
by Michael Coleman
Call Number: J English 796.334 COL
Click here to check for item availability.

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(All Rights Reserved, Heinemann Library, 2010)

World of Football
by Michael Hurley
Call Number: J English 796.334 HUR
Click here to check for item availability.

Originally answered by Rosjihanah Mon
Associate Librarian, Children’s Services
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May 30, 2010 - ..Children, Anything & Everything, Environment, Singapore    4 Comments    21,559 views

Why are the flats in Singapore rectangular?

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Image is retrieved from:

http://taralazar.wordpress.com/2009/04/26/marsha-riti/

According to C. Chew’s article, ‘Public Housing in Singapore’ from Infopedia:
“In the past, the size and layout of flats were guided by standard design plans, with some degree of variation. Hence, most of them tend to be rectangular in design, in order to achieve the outcome of high-density, high-rise developments.

However, over the years, the standard design plans for new flats have been updated to cater to the changing expectations and preferences of buyers. For example, executive flats were launched in the 1980s in response to the desire for bigger flats. These changes reflect the broader shift in the focus of public housing programmes from quantity to quality.

Whereas the emphasis of the early building programmes was on meeting the population’s basic need for proper shelter, there is now an emphasis on quality that extends beyond the design of the flats to the surrounding living environment, as evidenced by efforts to improve the landscape architecture and enhance the visual identity of housing estates and to provide better amenities for the residents. Hence, the flats in Singapore are now likely to come in more designs and shapes.”

Reference:
Chew, C. (2009). Public Housing in Singapore. Retrieved May 18, 2010, from Infopedia, http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_1585_2009-10-26.html

If you want to read more on the topic, here are books that you can check out at our libraries.

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All Rights Reserved, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, c2009

What’s inside?: fascinating structures around the world by Laroche, Giles
Publisher: Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, c2009
Call No.: J 720 LAR
Click here to check for item availability
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All Rights Reserved, Raintree, 2010

Architecture by Bingham, Jane
Publisher: London : Raintree, 2010
Call No.: J 720 BIN
Click here to check for item availability

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All Rights Reserved, Gareth Stevens Pub., 2010

Architect by Cohn, Jessica
Publisher: Pleasantville, NY : Gareth Stevens Pub., 2010
Call No: J 720 COH
Click here to check for item availability

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All Rights Reserved, Charlesbridge, c1998

13 buildings children should know by Munich : Prestel
Publisher: Watertown, MA : Charlesbridge, c1998
Call No.: J 720 ROE
Click here to check for item availability

Here are websites for information on the topic:
Title: Architecture for kids: Lessons and activities
URL: http://www.kinderart.com/architecture/

Title: Roman architecture – History for Kids!
URL: http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/romans/
architecture/romarch.htm

All websites are last accessed on 20 May 2010. Please refer to the terms and conditions on the homepages for use.
For the availability of the above book titles, please check the library catalogue.

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Ms Isabel Tan
Librarian, Children’s Services

May 11, 2010 - ..Children, Myths & Facts, Pets & Animals    No Comments    7,609 views

Why Can’t Penguins Fly?

Isn’t it strange that penguins have wings yet they can’t fly? If you ever wonder why they choose to waddle around instead of flying high, well, penguins cannot fly because their wings are too small and stumpy to lift them into the air. However, the wings which look like flippers are very good for swimming. Penguins are excellent swimmers and they are the only flightless waterbird. Other waterbirds like albatrosses, puffins, pelicans and gulls can fly.

Sources:
1) 100 Things You Should Know About Penguins by Camilla de la Bedoyere
Publisher: Great Bardfield, Essex : Miles Kelly, c2007
Call Number: J English English 598.47 DEL
2) Waterbird Fact Sheet: http://www.fws.gov

For more information on penguins, do check out these books!

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All Rights Reserved, A & C Black, 2007.
Title: Penguins Of The World
Author: Wayne Lynch
Publisher: London : A & C Black, 2007
Call Number: English 598.47 LYN -[ANI]
Click here to view item availability

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All Rights Reserved, PowerKids Press, 2010
Title: Swimming With Penguins
Author: Miriam Coleman
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : PowerKids Press, 2010
Call Number: J English 598.47 COL
Click here to view item availability

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All Rights Reserved, Weigl Publishers, c2009
Title: Penguins
Author: David Whitfield
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Weigl Publishers, c2009
Call Number: JP English 598.74 WHI
Click here to view item availability

Posted By:
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Ms Chen Wanying
Children’s Librarian
Children’s Services

Apr 25, 2010 - ..Adults, ..Children, eResources, Science & Technology    No Comments    33,252 views

Why can we still see in the dark?

(What is there more of the less you see? ———————> Darkness! -[1] )

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Image is retrieved from: http://prosportsonline.net/2010/02/beneath-brown-bags-saints-had-loyal-fans/

According to Odyssey’s article, Night Vision: Why you can see in the dark?:
“Eyes work by converting light energy into nerve impulses. These nerve impulses are sent to the brain, where we “make sense” of them. A certain pattern of light is a “tree,” another pattern is “my dad,” and so on.

An eye functions a lot like a camera. Light passes through the pupil — the part of the eye that appears black, but is really an opening. It is then focused by a lens, before it lands on the light-sensitive retina -a delicate membrane lining the inner eyeball and connected by the optic nerve to the brain.

Two kinds of cells share space on the retina: short, wide “cones” (7 million of them) and long, narrow “rods” (120 million of these). Each kind has its special uses.
Cones require a lot of light to work. Each one is connected to its own nerve fiber, so they help us to see fine detail. They are also sensitive to small differences in light wavelengths, which we call colors.

Rods work well even in low light. They do not sense colors or fine detail — though they are very sensitive to movement! The retinas of true nocturnal animals are packed with many more rods than ours have.

When your eyes are adapting to low light, several things happen. First, your pupil opens wide to let in as much light as possible. Then the rod cells turn off — there is not enough light for them to work at all. So at night we don’t see colors or fine detail. But we are more sensitive to tiny movements, which makes us jump even when leaves are just moving in the wind. Because there are more rods on the edges of your retina than In the middle, you often see best at night “out of the corner of your eye.” You learn to look slightly to one side of what you see.

True night vision develops slowly — it takes about 30 minutes for It to peak. Over a period of time in low light, your rod cells develop a reddish pigment called rhodopsin. This pigment increases the rods’ sensitivity enormously! But you still see differently than you do during daylight. Seeing at night is a lot like looking at a black and white TV with poor reception instead of a color set with cable.

If your dark-adapted eyes are exposed to bright light, the rhodopsin will instantly bleach white and you will lose your night vision until it has time to develop again.”

The article was retrieved from EBSCOhost Kids Search.

In order to gain access to our eResources such as the one I have shared with you above, simply visit our eResources page and register: http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/index.aspx

Reference:
K-S, D., & , Initials. (2007). Night vision: why you can see in the dark?. Odyssey, 16(5), 11-11

[1] – Http://www.kidsjokes.co.uk/jokes/other/night_jokes_5.html. (1998). Retrieved from kidsjokes.co.uk: night jokes

If you want to read more on the topic, here are books that you can check out at our libraries.

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All Rights Reserved,  Picture Window Books, c2005.

Look! A Book About Sight by Dana Meachen Rau

Publisher: Minneapolis, Minn. : Picture Window Books, c2005.

Call No.: J 612.8 RAU

Click here to check for item availability

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All Rights Reserved, PowerKids Press, 2008.

Exploring Light by Carol Ballard

Publisher: New York : PowerKids Press, 2008.
Call No.: J 535 BAL

Click here to check for item availability

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All Rights Reserved, VT : Healing Arts Press, c2004.

How to improve your child’s eyesight naturally : a thoughtful parent’s guide by Janet Goodrich.
Publisher: Rochester, VT : Healing Arts Press, c2004.
Call No: English q617.70083 GOO -[HEA]

Click here to check for item availability

All websites are last accessed on 20 Mar 2010. Please refer to the terms and conditions on the homepages for use.
For the availability of the above book titles, please check the library catalogue.

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Ms Sharifah A. Latif
Assoc. Librarian, Children’s Services

Apr 8, 2010 - ..Adults, ..Children, ..Teens, Events and Outreach, Singapore    No Comments    28,869 views

When will Book Exchange be back?

ASK! about Events and Outreach

Thousands flocked to the first Book Exchange in 2009, and it’s back again this year!

Give your books a new lease of life – share them with other book lovers and get new reads in return. Give a book, and get a book.

10th April – 23 April 2010

Starting 10th April, make you way down to any Public Library to drop off your used books. While there, exchange one book for one Book Exchange Coupon.

24th April (Saturday) 8.30am – 6.00pm

Bring your coupons down to The Plaza, National Library Building to exchange for other used books.

And there’s more than just exchanging books!

On 24th April, don’t miss the exciting activities for children at the Central Public Library – listen to stories on Bob the Builder, meet Bob the Builder himself, and there will be opportunities to take a photo with him! Catch screenings of the National Geographic’s documentary “Shark Eden”.

More details in the poster and programme flyer.

Posted by Ang Mei Jun,Associate Librarian, Adult & Young People’s Services

Why Do We Hiccup?

Hiccupping is a sudden, unexpected intake of air that happens when the diaphragm spasms. The diaphragm may twinge when you eat too fast or there sould be some particles in the bloodstream that may irritate the organs near the diaphragm.

There are remedies for hiccups e.g., holding your breath, drinking water, etc. The reason that these remedies are thought to work is the view that carbon dioxide build-up in the blood will stop hiccups.

Also, people also believe that drinking water or pulling the tongue can stop hiccups becuase of the view that if the vagus nerve that runs from the brain to the stomach is stimulated, the spasms in the diaphragm can be stopped, thereby putting an end to hiccups. 

Sources:
[1] Title: World Book Encyclopedia
  Publisher: Chicago: Field Enterprises Educational Corp, 1917-
  Call no. R 031 WOR ( vol. 9)

2] Webpages on “Hiccups”
  http://www.emedicinehealth.com/
  http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/features/columns/?article=BN_Hiccups

For fun reads on hiccups, you can check out these books!
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All Rights Reserved, Grosset & Dunlap, 2010
Title: I Can’t Stop Hiccuping
Author: Lauren Child
Call Number: JP English CHI
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Grosset & Dunlap, 2010
Click here to check item availability

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All Rights Reserved, Raintree, 2010
Title: Twitches And Sneezes
Author: Angela Royston
Call Number: JP English 612.2 ROY
Publisher: London : Raintree, 2010
Click here to check item availability

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All Rights Reserved, Picture Window Books, c2009
Title: You blink twelve times a minute : and other freaky facts about the human body
Author: Barbara Seuling
Call Number: J English 612 SEU
Publisher: Minneapolis, Minn. : Picture Window Books, c2009
Click here to check item availability

Posted By:
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Ms Chen Wanying
Children’s Librarian
Children’s Services

Mar 15, 2010 - ..Adults, ..Children, ..Teens, Anything & Everything, Myths & Facts    No Comments    19,635 views

What is the most frequently sung English song?

ASK about Myths & Facts

Happy Birthday To You is the most frequently sung song in the English-speaking world. It was derived from the song, Good Morning to All, written in 1893 by sisters Mildred Hill (1859 -1916) and Patty Hill (1868 – 1946).

History of the song
Mildred and Patty Hill were both sisters who are known for their work on kindergarten education in Kentucky. In 1893, they composed a collection of songs called Song Stories for the Kindergarten. Good Morning to All was one of the songs.

A number of events, possibly birthday parties, followed which lead to the substitution of the phrase ‘happy birthday’ into the song. Historical accounts from Kentucky suggest that the first time ‘happy birthday’ was used was for a birthday party at the Little Loomhouse. A historical marker was erected here by the Kentucky Historical Society in 2009 to honour the origins of the song. See how it looks here.

According to news sources (see References), it was first copyrighted in 1936 by Summy Company, who published Good Morning to All. In 1988, Time-Warner Corporation bought over the rights. The current copyright expires in 2030.

References

Posted by Ang Mei Jun,Associate Librarian, Adult & Young People’s Services

Mar 4, 2010 - ..Children, ..Teens, Anything & Everything, Myths & Facts    2 Comments    27,128 views

Are toadstools or mushrooms poisonous?

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(Image courtesy of morel mushroom hunting)

Toadstool is a common term for fleshy and umbrella-shaped poisonous fungi. The word toadstool was thought to have originated from the German word “todes” which means death.

Mushroom is the term usually applied to edible species of fungi. Scientists who study fungi, however, make no such distinction between toadstools and mushrooms as most of them can be poisonous.

Many toadstools and mushrooms in the wild can be poisonous and most of the poisonous types belong to the family, Amanita. The commonly encountered poisonous fungi include the death cap, (a mushroom often adorned with one to several patches of thin white veil tissues and has a white pallid stalk), the destroying angel, (a totally white and tall mushroom), and the fly amanita, (a yellow-orange mushroom). Consuming these mushrooms will result in nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, liver damage and death.

It must be noted however that all mushrooms and toadstools in the wild have to be consumed only with professional advice.

Sources:
Toadstool. (2007). Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. Retrieved March 3, 2010, from Grolier Online http://gme.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0291140-0
American Mushrooms: http://americanmushrooms.com

Read more about mushrooms and toadstools!

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All Rights Reserved, London: Dorling Kindersley
Mushrooms by Thomas Laessoe
Publisher: London : Dorling Kindersley, 2000
Call No.: English 579.6 LAE

View item availability here

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All Rights Reserved, London: Dorling Kindersley
The Edible Mushroom Book by Anna Del Conte
Publisher: London : Dorling Kindersley, 2008
Call No.:English 641.358 EDI
View item availability here

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All Rights Reserved, Portland: Timber Press
Edible and poisonous mushrooms of the world by Ian R. Hall
Publisher: Portland : Timber Press, 2003
Call No.: English 579.6 EDI
View item availability here

Posted By:

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Ms Chen Wanying
Children’s Librarian
Children’s Services

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