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Shadow Forest Authors

Christine Jones


Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 49
Sign: Pisces

State: Tasmania
Country: AU
Signup Date: 12/12/2008

Blog Archive
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July 29, 2009 - Wednesday 

Current mood:  busy
Los Angeles Times

Deborah Netburn
....July 28, 2009
....
For some people the Harry Potter books made for good beach reading, but for others they have inspired a call to social activism. Andrew Slack, the director of the non-profit Harry Potter Alliance, sits firmly in the second camp.
Slack, 29, is a self-declared ‘‘Harry Potter rabbi’’ who quotes from the series as a clergyman might quote scripture, and his organisation uses parallels from the Potter books to educate and mobilise Potter fans around such issues as workers’ rights and combating genocide.

Slack started the group in 2005 and has used his online connections to reach millions of Potter fans. His group’s accomplishments include collecting more than 13,000 donated books to give to community centres and a youth centre in Rwanda, and raising $US15,000 ($18,200) for the Genocide Intervention Network’s civilian protection program for displaced Darfuris and Burmese.

Slack relates all sorts of social issues back to themes in the Harry Potter books. Using the opinions of Harry’s mentor Albus Dumbledore as a moral compass, Slack suggests Potter fans should fight prison torture because Dumbledore was against Dementors, and that they should support fair trade because Dumbledore agreed on giving rights to house elves.

‘‘We always connect everything back to the books,’’ Slack says. ‘‘It’s very Talmudic.’’
Emerson Spartz, the founder of website MuggleNet, says fans have embraced the Harry Potter Alliance because it helps them channel their outrage at injustices in the book into outrage at injustices in the real world. ‘‘As readers we get very emotional when werewolves and house elves are being discriminated against. The Harry Potter Alliance shows how those feelings can relate to real problems that we can solve.’’
In 2007 Slack’s organisation received a benediction from J.K. Rowling herself, who spoke of the group’s work on fighting genocide in Darfur to a Time reporter. ‘‘What did my books preach against throughout? Bigotry, violence, struggles for power, no matter what. All of these things are happening in Darfur. So they really couldn’t have chosen a better cause.’’

Soon afterward, she selected the Harry Potter Alliance’s web site as fan site of the month on her web page, and it has stayed there for the past two years.
Slack is working on his own book and inviting Potter fans to assist in its writing. It is called What Would Dumbledore Do? and he envisions it as a self-help guide to living in the world according to the tenets of Albus Dumbledore. He has asked fans to share what they’ve learnt from Dumbledore on an open blog at WhatWouldDumbledoreDo.org.

Dumbledore ‘‘is the wizard who always made Harry feel safe’’, he says. ‘‘What does it mean to be like him? And how does that affect our view of public policy? That’s where things get really interesting.’’
July 13, 2009 - Monday 

Current mood:  busy
Category: Writing and Poetry
Dear Ms. Jones,

It was Christmastime here at My One School Bookstore today! After two months of not checking our P.O. Box due to our scrambling for our grand opening – gifts of books from Shadow Forrest Authors made it all the worthwhile.

WOW! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! What an awesome day! We are truly honored.

Just to let you know we had a wonderful grand opening. We also presented the check to Child Literacy (In partnership) for our first school, for three-hundred-children in Uttar Pradesh India. Construction is set to begin toward the end of the year.

Currently, we will be hosting a back pack drive for our local community, providing backpacks for those in need, filled with school supplies. In addition, we are planning to take another school project, in another region in India, as well as build a library for these wonderful children.

So, yeah – all this with the use of the book donations. Isn’t it awesome what a book can do? From the very beginning our motto has been: “One book, one child, one school at a time!”

If you would please inform that the authors that send me the autographed copies of their books will be added to our special “autographed collection,” a collection we are saving for an auction in the near future for the funding of one of our schools.

Also, I had a difficulty finding two authors specifically: L.A. Starks and Emoni Hydes online or and email address. I wanted to send them personal thanks. Please do so for me and give them our love. I am touched.

Thank you for all that you do. Here at My One School you have made all the difference.

With all my love,
Besa Kosova
Founder & Director of Operations
www.myoneschool.org

MY ONE SCHOOL BOOKSTORE
180 South Ronald Reagan
Longwood, FL 32750
321.972.6047
May 16, 2009 - Saturday 

Current mood:  busy
Category: Writing and Poetry

Grim Illiteracy Statistics

According to the Literacy Report released by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

About one in 20 adults in the U.S. is not literate in English
11 million Americans lack the skills to handle many everyday tasks
30 million adults may not be able to make sense of a simple pamphlet
Adults with ability to perform challenging and complex reading tasks made an average yearly salary of $50,700 in 2003. That is $28,000 more than those who lacked basic skills.

Literacy statistics and juvenile court
85 percent of all juveniles who interface with the juvenile court system are functionally illiterate.

More than 60 percent of all prison inmates are functionally illiterate.

Penal institution records show that inmates have a 16% chance of returning to prison if they receive literacy help, as opposed to 70% who receive no help. This equates to taxpayer costs of $25,000 per year per inmate and nearly double that amount for juvenile offenders.

Illiteracy and crime are closely related. The Department of Justice states, "The link between academic failure and delinquency, violence, and crime is welded to reading failure." Over 70% of inmates in America's prisons cannot read above a fourth grade level.

Many of the USA ills are directly related to illiteracy. Just a few statistics:
Literacy is learned. Illiteracy is passed along by parents who cannot read or write.

One child in four grows up not knowing how to read.

43% of adults at Level 1 literacy skills live in poverty compared to only 4% of those at Level 5

3 out of 4 food stamp recipients perform in the lowest 2 literacy levels

90% of welfare recipients are high school dropouts

16 to 19 year old girls at the poverty level and below, with below average skills, are 6 times more likely to have out-of-wedlock children than their reading counterparts.

Low literary costs $73 million per year in terms of direct health care costs. A recent study by Pfizer put the cost much higher.

U.S.A Illiterate people are missing out on 237 billion dollars total each year in money that they could be earning if they knew how to read.

- The total amount of money being spent on illiteracy by the federal government is at more than ten billion dollars each year, which grows steadily.

Source:
Education Portal (September 2007)

Literacy and basic education levels of South Africans aged 15 and over Level of education 2001
Full general education (Grade 9 and more)
14. 3 million (54%) 13.1 million (50%) 15.8 million (52%)
Less than full general education (less than Grade 9)
12.2 million (46%) 13.2 million (50%) 14.6 million (48%)
Less than grade 7 7.4 million (28%) 8.5 million (32%) 9.6 million (32%)
No schooling 2.9 million (11%) 4.2 million (16%) 4.7 million (16%)

Source: Centre for Adult Education University of KwaZulu-Natal

French National Statistics Institute
The IVQ survey conducted by INSEE1 in 2004-2005
focused on the population between 18 and 65
living in metropolitan France, which amounts to roughly 40 million people. See the results.

Illiteracy: a word that we would prefer to no longer use, yet… 860 million men and women in the world are deprived of the most basic skills, and must deal with the inability to read and write. Industrialized countries with mandatory schooling are not spared.
To refer to this situation, affecting every age group, and to distinguish it from that of people who
never attended school, France has chosen the term «illiteracy». A harsh word that provokes shock and
indignation but that is still necessary today so that those who face it are not neglected, since they tend
to hide this condition so often associated with failure.
Illiteracy is a glaring problem that remains invisible.

Source:
PDF from the French National Statistics Institute

Illiteracy has direct impact on human health, says UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s in message for International Literacy Day as he calls for more investment to boost reading skills
14/August/2008

One in five adults -- some 774 million -- is illiterate, and thus lives with no access to the vast global store of written communication. Seventy-five million children are not in school and millions more young people leave school without a level of literacy adequate for productive and active participation in society. These would be devastating numbers at any time, for individuals and societies alike; that they occur in the context of today’s information society should drive home the urgency of efforts to promote literacy throughout the world.

The theme of this year’s observance of International Literacy Day, “Literacy and Health”, is meant to draw more attention to the links between the two. Illiteracy has a direct impact on human health. It prevents people from being able to read the instructions on a medicine bottle. It means that people are less likely to know facts about AIDS, malaria and other infectious diseases. And because two thirds of those who are illiterate are women and girls, who often bear the burden of caring for sick members of their families, it means that they will be less likely to know about prevention and support services, and how to use life-saving medicines and other treatments.

To increase literacy skills, well-defined policies and increased investment will be essential. Literacy is indispensable for achieving the Millennium Development Goals targeting maternal health and combating HIV and malaria, and for addressing some of the world’s most important public health challenges. On this International Literacy Day, let us all -- Governments, the United Nations family, donors and civil society -- translate this commitment into more vigorous action. Literacy for all will benefit us all.

Source: UN news

April 28, 2009 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  busy
Category: Writing and Poetry

The Literacy Center Education Network is currently conducting research at
our website www.literacycenter.net

If you know of any parents or teachers who have been using the
LiteracyCenter.Net, please ask them to fill out our survey. (It is long but
it will provide very important and useful data on using technology with
preschool age emergent readers.

If you Google the word "Literacy"  you will notice that out of 45,100,000
links our website is number 4.

(Number 1 is Wikipedia, Number 2 is the National Institute of Literacy,
Number 3 is this very Google Literacy initiative.) Our site is the only one
that provides free lessons in more than one language!!

The LiteracyCenter.Net is a trusted partner in education. Last year our
non-profit organization had more than 30 million page views from children in
220 countries. We are currently adding Chinese and will soon add Arabic
because of the large number of users from these areas.

Please help us with our research study!!

March 2, 2009 - Monday 

Current mood:  working
Category: Writing and Poetry

World Public Library has set up a special page for SFA e-books, giving a great write up for our site and those donating e-books. Take a look, you to could get this free publicity by donating a copy of your title or titles in PDF to WPL
Click on the writen link to see our page.
http://worldlibrary.net/ShadowForestAuthors.htm


Click on their banner to go to their home page

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February 27, 2009 - Friday 

Current mood:  working
Category: Writing and Poetry

Shadow Forest Authors welcomes new Beneficiaries.

SFA would firstly like to thank those authors donating books and supporting worthy charities. Our numbers are climbing and our aim is to list over a million authors within 6 months, so please help us achieve this.

New Beneficiaries -

Read Between the Bars - Tuson's books for prisoners program
http://www.readbetweenthebars.org/index.ph

The
Women's Prison Book Project - USA
http://www.wpbp.org/


Mission Australia
http://www.missionaustralia.com.au/


We also have other beneficiaries listing with us, which should be up on the SFA website next week, so stop by and take a look.

http://www.shadowforestauthors.com


Get listed now on SFA


Be part of the goal to stop illiteracy worldwide.
Lets be a million strong by the 30th of June 2009.

February 13, 2009 - Friday 

Current mood:  working
Category: Writing and Poetry

UP DATE - Shadow Forest Authors welcomes a new SFA beneficiary.
ARAS - Adult Reading Assistance Scheme - is located in New Zealand. Their primary function at ARAS is to assist self-motivated adults with reading, writing, numeracy and other essential learning; in order to empower them, so that they are able to achieve independent growth and development, to reach their own goals and to fulfill their own potentials.

UP DATE - I am in contact with a couple of celebrities, which I will not name at this time, who are interested in being a voice for our cause and other ideas associated with SFA, such as World Literacy Day. Keep praying that this will all come about and that we can all make a huge impact on this worldwide problem.


Keep spreading the word and help make SFA successful, now and in the future.

February 3, 2009 - Tuesday 

Current mood:  working
Category: Writing and Poetry

The Australian Literacy & Numeracy Foundation not only accepts new and used books, but also welcomes CD’s. Sole artists and bands, here is your chance to donate a CD to a worthy cause and help make a difference to illiteracy and poverty programs.

SFA will soon incorporate Shadow Forest Artists, for CD donations, so keep coming back for more details or visit the SFA official website for updates.

January 30, 2009 - Friday 

Current mood:  working
Category: Writing and Poetry

SFA is looking for volunteers in the following areas.

I: To help spread the word to authors and readers via emails and web searching.

2: A web designer to improve the SFA official website.

If you think you can help in anyway, send me a message through myspace or email me at

cj.books@bigpond.com

 

Don't be shy, you can make a difference.

January 24, 2009 - Saturday 

Current mood:  working
Category: Writing and Poetry
Typoglycemia

Believe it or not, you can read this.

I cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg The phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan mnid Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer inwaht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. Amzanig huh? yaeh and I awlyas thought slpeling was ipmorantt.

Make a comment on how you did with Typoglycemia