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To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used: {{Children's Book of the Year Award: Picture Book | state = collapsed}} will show the template collapsed, i.e. hidden apart from its title bar. {{Children's Book of the Year Award: Picture Book | state = expanded}} will show the template expanded, i.e ...
This page lists templates used commonly by Wikiproject Children's Literature and gives advice on their use. Many templates are used by articles in this project. Some of the most common are listed below, but a more complete list can be found in Category:Template-Class children and young adult literature articles.
A storyboard template. Storyboards for films are created in a multiple-step process. They can be created by hand drawing or digitally on a computer. The main characteristics of a storyboard are: Visualize the storytelling. Focus the story and the timing in several key frames (very important in animation).
Storybook Weaver is a 1990 educational game originally released on floppy disk for the Apple IIGS, aimed at children aged 6–12.An updated version, Storybook Weaver Deluxe, was released for Windows and Mac computers and featured much more content than the original.
Picture books are aimed at young children. Many are written with vocabulary a child can understand but not necessarily read. For this reason, picture books tend to have two functions in the lives of children: they are first read to young children by adults, and then children read them themselves once they begin learning to read.
Finders Keepers (Will and Nicholas children's book) Fish in the Air; Flanimals of the Deep; Flora's Very Windy Day; Flute's Journey; Fly High, Fly Low; Flying Jake; The Foot Book; The Forest Pool; Four and Twenty Blackbirds (picture book) The Fox Went out on a Chilly Night: An Old Song; Frankenslime; Frederick (book) Frederick Douglass: The ...
Little Toot is a 1939 children's picture book written and illustrated by Hardie Gramatky. It features Little Toot, a small young tugboat in New York Harbor who does not want to tug. Instead, he would rather play, making figure eights in the harbor and thus being a nuisance to all the other tugboats.