September 15-ish is International Dot Day.
The goal of International Dot Day is to inspire people of all ages to embrace the power of personal creativity, to make their mark on the world, making it a better place.
Creativity is important to me. I love being creative. I love inspiring creativity in children, and I acknowledge that it is only through creativity that we can innovate, advance and improve our world. For this reason, I am posting a day early to ensure you all know about International Dot Day in time to celebrate. However, any day is a good day to celebrate and promote creativity.
The Dot — the book
The Dot, written and illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds and published by Walker Books in 2003, tells of an art teacher who encouraged a young artist, who didn’t believe she could, to make her mark on a piece of paper. Although the story features an art teacher, Reynolds dedicated the book to his 7th grade math teacher who, he said, ‘dared me to “make my mark”.’
Like Reynolds, I believe there is a spark of creativity in everyone and that a dot is as good a place as any to start. What I really love about this book, is the way the teacher encourages the student Vashti, who then goes on to encourage others in a similar way. The ripples of a ‘you can do it’ philosophy spread. Who know where they will reach? Hopefully everywhere.
How International Dot Day began
(from the website)
International Dot Day began when Iowa teacher Terry Shay introduced his classroom to Reynolds’ book, and noticed the original publishing date of The Dot was Sept. 15, 2003. Shay and his students decided to celebrate the book’s birthday – and, little did they know, launched what would become a worldwide celebration of creativity and courage to “make your mark.”
“The Dot, is an invitation to students to be creative, and experience a breakthrough in confidence and courage, igniting a journey of self-discovery and sharing, said Shay, a public school teacher for over two decades “Every great teacher works for those transformational moments.”
Exploring the themes of creativity, bravery and self-expression, The Dot is a story of a perceptive and caring teacher who reaches a reluctant student who thinks she can’t draw by encouraging her to be brave enough to “just make a mark and see where it takes you.” The Dot has been translated into many languages (including Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Hebrew, Spanish and even Braille) and the animated film of The Dot (produced by Reynolds’ multimedia design and development firm FableVision Studios and co-producer Scholastic) earned the Carnegie Medal of Excellence.
Continue reading: Inspire Creativity with International Dot Day – Readilearn
Sounds great! Looking forward to the musical! 🙂
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I think so too. I wonder if it will come to Brisbane.
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Here I am in Massachusetts, an hour away from Peter Reynold’s book store, reading about him and his fabulous book, all the way from Australia. Isn’t that wonderful? Thank you for this post, Norah. His books are outstanding.
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It’s a small world after all. 💖 I agree. His books are outstanding. I’m sure he has positively impacted a myriad of lives.
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I am sure he has!
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💖
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This is great! I had no idea something like this existed. Thanks Norah for sharing this.
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You are welcome, Esther. It is a great celebration.
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So happy to see your post. Last time I looked it was nearing 26 million participants from 197 countries. I have been publicizing this special day since 2012 and this is the first year I didn’t. So, I’m happy to see you let your Australian readers know. So cool that the launch was from the Metropolitan Museum of Art today — they premiered a short musical.
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It is a wonderful celebration. I’m sorry you didn’t get to post this year. I’d love to see the musical. It sounds fabulous!
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Missed this one, Norah, but it’s definitely worth celebrating. Thanks!
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It is a good one. Thanks, Jacqui.
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What a fabulous celebration
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It is! Thanks, Anne.
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I love this book, all Peter Reynolds books, and love the idea of dot day!
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I agree, Beth. He has written some wonderful books, and anything that promotes creativity is great in my books.
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It sounds like it’s a global initiative, but I can’t say I’ve ever heard of it.
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The author of The Dot is from Canada and the teacher who started the Dot Day initiative is from Iowa, US, so I guess it is international. The day launched in 2009. Sadly, I wasn’t aware of it when I was still in the classroom.
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