8 Multicultural Children’s Books Featuring Blind Children on the CKCBH Linky
Welcome to the Creative Kids Culture Blog Hop!
Creative Kids Culture Blog Hop is a place for you to share your creative kids culture posts. It’s very easy, and simple to participate!
Just follow these simple guidelines:
Created by Frances of Discovering the World through My Son’s Eyes, the blog hop has now found a new home at Multicultural Kid Blogs.
This month our co-hosts are:
Discovering the World through My Son’s Eyes on Multicultural Kid Blogs
Bringing Up the Parks
Castle View Academy
Witty Hoots
Biracial Bookworms
Creative Kids Culture Blog Hop is a place for you to share your creative kids culture posts. It’s very easy, and simple to participate!
Just follow these simple guidelines:
- Pinterest, Google+, Twitter, or Facebook. Please let us know you’re following us, and we will be sure to follow you back.
- Link up any creative kids culture posts, such as language, culture, books, travel, food, crafts, playdates, activities, heritage, and holidays, etc. Please, link directly to your specific post, and no giveaways, shops, stores, etc.
- Please grab the button code above and put it on your blog or the post you’re linking up. You can also add a text link back to this hop on your blog post. Note: By sharing your link up on this blog hop you are giving us permission to feature your blog post with pictures, and to pin your link up in our Creative Kids Culture Feature board on Pinterest.
- Don’t be a stranger, and share some comment love! Visit the other links, and comment. Everyone loves comments!
- The Creative Kids Culture Blog Hop will go live on the 3rd Sunday of the month. It will run for three weeks. The following blog hop we will feature a previous link up post, and if you’re featured, don’t forget to grab the button below:
Here’s my favorite from last time:
8 Multicultural Children’s Books Featuring Blind Children
Summer has been filled with reading many wonderful books. As I teach my students as well as my own kids how to read, I want to pick quality literature. Equally as important is using books with characters that create a culturally sensitive environment for learning. By reading diverse and multicultural books, we can teach children to read, but also to read the world.
This month on Colours of Us, this wonderful article caught my attention.
Connecting to the world
These 8 multicultural children’s books featuring blind children will give the children in your life the opportunity to see a girls and boys with a disability as friends, humanitarians, dreamers, champions, and more. These books do not highlight the disability, rather, they highlight milestones that all children can relate.
These are perfect books to start the conversations that are crucial to discuss as well as celebrate the unique differences of children. Lessons on resiliency and empathy are never too early to begin!
Thank you for linking-up, and we can’t wait to see what you’ve been up to!
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Join us as we raise and teach children to be readers, activists, and leaders!