Posts Tagged Giveaways

The first annual STEM Tuesday CoSTEM contest!

STEM TUESDAY from the mixed up files

 

Greetings STEM Tuesday fans!! I know you’re all thinking…  this isn’t a Tuesday. You’re right.

We were SO EXCITED about our

ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY CONTEST,

that we had to take over a  Thursday post to announce it.

 

 

Q. What do you get when you cross a costume contest with STEM Tuesday?

A. The First Annual October CoSTEM contest!

 

Muwahahaha (Cue eerie, ghostly music)

 

As a way to celebrate one whole year of STEM Tuesday blogs, we thought we would do a mash-up of literacy and STEM costumes. So drag out your favorite books, take a good look at the theme, then create an amazing, one-of-a-kind, spectacular costume.

Contest Rules: 

  • This contest is open to all school-aged students, ages 5 and up. 
  • Submit a jpeg of yourself or  your class dressed as your favorite STEM book.
  • Be sure to let us know the title and the author of the book. 
  • The book must be for readers ages 8 and up. 
  • All submissions are due by midnight EST November 6th, 2018. (no exceptions!) 
  • Submissions MUST come from an adult who will grants us permission to post this image on the Mixed Up Files website. 
  • All images will be judged by the STEM Tuesday team. We will be looking for creativity, subject (how close you are to the theme of the book), and authentic (how exact is the STEM theme displayed)
  • Winners will be posted on the STEM Tuesday blog on November 8th, 2018. 
  • Send your images to the following email:  stemmuf@gmail.com

 

Need suggestions for how do create a CoSTEM? Take a look at some of our examples below:

 

                       

2 girls dressed in plastic                                    Book that inspired this

 

                                    

1 girl dressed as a black hole                   Book that inspired this

 

Are you starting to see a pattern?  Good!

I suppose you want to know about the prizes. Well, here they are:

1st Place —  Receives 5 autographed STEM Books from our STEM Tuesday team + $25 Barnes & Noble Gift card

2nd Place — Receives 3 autographed STEM Books from our STEM Tuesday team + $15 Barnes & Noble Gift card

3rd Place—   Receives 2 autographed STEM Books from our STEM Tuesday team  +$10 Barnes & Noble Gift card

 

Here are just a few of the books you could win:

      

   

Have questions? Direct them to the same email as above:  stemmuf@gmail.com

We hope you will ALL participate!  Let’s celebrate a STEM- Literacy MASH-UP, CoSTEM style!!

STEM Tuesday–Checking Your Health– Interview with Author Gail Jarrow

Welcome to STEM Tuesday: Author Interview & Book Giveaway, a repeating feature for the fourth Tuesday of every month. Go Science-Tech-Engineering-Math!

Today we’re interviewing Gail Jarrow about her Deadly Diseases Trilogy: Red Madness, Fatal Fever, and Bubonic Panic. Both Red Madness and Bubonic Panic are among this month’s featured health and medicine books. Gail is an author of nonfiction books for ages 8-18 about science and history (and the history of science). Her books have received many honors, including the YALSA Award Nomination for Excellence in Nonfiction, a Notable Social Studies Trade Book, Outstanding Science Trade Book, a NSTA Best STEM book, the Jefferson Cup Award, the Eureka! Gold Award, an Orbis Pictus Recommendation, as well as Kirkus Reviews and School Library Journal Best Books and VOYA Honor Book distinctions.

                

Mary Kay Carson: How did these books come about?

Gail Jarrow: It all started with a chance discovery in the Cornell University library stacks.  While researching scurvy for a magazine article, I spotted a shelved book on pellagra written by a Cornell professor I had met. Even though the book wasn’t about my topic, I took it home to read because I knew her. I was fascinated by this forgotten nutritional deficiency disease that had once affected millions of Americans, and I sensed it would make an interesting story for young readers. But pellagra turned out to be one of those ideas you file away until you can figure out how to approach the subject. I didn’t figure it out for a dozen years. After online databases made it easier to access old medical journals and hundreds of newspapers from the early twentieth century, I saw a way to write Red Madness as a medical mystery using the experiences of doctors and pellagra victims. As part of my pellagra research, I used U.S. Public Health Service reports from the early 1900s.  I came across many entries about typhoid fever and plague, two other epidemic diseases that the Public Health Service was trying to control then. That was how Fatal Fever and Bubonic Panic were born from Red Madness, completing the Deadly Diseases trilogy. It goes to show that new ideas can be hiding anywhere and it pays to be receptive to them.

MKC: I have to ask, which of three deadly diseases—plague, typhoid, or pellagra—would you least like to suffer from? 

Gail: These diseases all have nasty symptoms. But without question, I would NOT want to contract plague. It is the deadliest of the three. We have effective antibiotics for plague today, but the survival rate is decent only if you’re diagnosed early on. If you have pneumonic plague, your chances diminish drastically. Antibiotics work against typhoid, though scientists are seeing more antibiotic resistance. Yet even before we had those drugs, the majority of typhoid victims recovered. Pellagra is easily treated with diet change or niacin supplements.

MKC: These books were quite a journey through primary sources. Do you have a favorite finding?

Gail: Of all the intriguing information I uncovered, my favorite had to do with typhoid fever. I discovered that the epidemiologist who tracked down Typhoid Mary had—four years earlier—helped end a typhoid outbreak in Ithaca, New York, where I live. He determined that the likely source of that outbreak was a creek not far  from my house. Finding connections to your own life makes history and science come alive. When I write for young readers, I look for ways to connect the book’s content to their lives. For example, in Fatal Fever, I included specific details about the physical effects of typhoid on college students in Ithaca, some of whom died during the 1903 epidemic. I found these case studies among infirmary records and other local archival material. Because the victims were teens, I hoped this would help my readers relate to a disease they probably knew nothing about.

MKC: Any further reading recommendations for fans of the Deadly Diseases Trilogy?

Gail: To add a few to the STEM Tuesday Checking Your Health list: Suzanne Jurmain’s Secret of the Yellow Death deals with medical sleuthing. John Fleischman’s Phineas Gage: A Gruesome But True Story About Brain Science would grab young readers. I really enjoyed Poison by Sarah Albee and How They Croaked by Georgia Bragg, two books that use humor to explore medical topics.

Want to know more about Gail Jarrow and the Deadly Diseases Trilogy?

 

Win a FREE copy of BUBONIC PANIC: When Plague Invaded America!

Enter the giveaway by leaving a comment below. The randomly-chosen winner will be contacted via email and asked to provide a mailing address (within the U.S. only) to receive the book.

Good luck!

Your host this week is Mary Kay Carson, author of Mission to Pluto and other nonfiction books for kids. @marykaycarson

 

More MUF-i-versary… Let the giveaways continue!

Last week, the MUF blog officially celebrated its 8th MUF-i-versary with loads of giveaways for our readers.

So what’s better than a bunch of giveaways? . . . Even MORE giveaways!

Since this is the second giveaway for the blog’s 8th MUF-i-sversary, I started doing some thinking (and some math . . .).

8 years . . . 8 books

2nd giveaway . . . 2 winners

8 books x 2 winners = 16 books

Do you see where this is headed? If not, it’s pretty simple—I’ve dug into the batch of advanced reader copies (ARCs) and other new middle-grade books littering my bookshelf and gathered 16 of them. I’ll select 2 lucky winners who will each receive 8 free books.

Middle-grade books

*Major shout-out to Simon & Schuster and Scholastic for sending us copies of so many great books we can feature on MUF and use in giveaways!

It’s hard to believe that MUF has been around for 8 years (and I’ve been around for 6 of those, writing and rambling about all-things middle-grade . . .). It has been an adventure, and I’ve enjoyed every moment of it. It’s exciting to see where MUF has been and where it’s now headed. A new look. New features. But always the same middle-grade love.

So . . . want a chance to REALLY share in the middle-grade love? Leave a comment on this post for a chance to win a batch of new middle-grade books. You can even earn extra entries by sharing about our giveaway on Facebook and Twitter, following MUF on Instagram, etc. Giveaway entries will be accepted through Friday, June 15th, 2018.

NOTE: Due to shipping costs, this giveaway is only open to mailing addresses in the United States.

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