Westmeade Elementary Library

Westmeade Elementary Library

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Westmeade Elementary Library, Elementary School, 6641 Clearbrook Drive, Nashville, TN.

Westmeade Elementary Library is for the purpose of publicizing the many programs the library produces and allowing discussion and questions from parents and community.

05/25/2023

This is so wrong headed I can't even begin to count the ways! 60% of 3rd graders "failed" this test. That should tell you something about the test, not the children. Also no account is given for children who are approaching proficiency --- Only 10% of kids graduating from TN high schools are poor readers --- lets stop twisting statistic so that we can destroy public education.

Here’s my sweet 9yr old Third Grader. He currently has a 92 / A in ELA with Aimsweb (benchmark) scores above the national average in reading. He’s in the 99% for math and has started doing Algebra and translating Japanese at home.

He did not pass TCAP ELA and is facing retention right now. We will not know until May 26th if he is “approaching” or “below”.

Im not sure what he’s supposedly approaching or below though all things considered.

Please contact me if your family is in a similar situation : [email protected]

Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature - Frist Art Museum 04/09/2023

If you have the opportunity visit this wonderful exhibit at the Frist. Potter was so much more than a children's author. She was one of a growing number of naturalists who appreciated the beauty of this planet we are blessed with. https://fristartmuseum.org/exhibition/beatrix-potter/?fbclid=IwAR1kY4B9zAi8eDDOkJIt92oiYJOKtDPsvd1uk9bqtN2SyCPF4cWe8gWWDag

Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature - Frist Art Museum This magical, family-friendly exhibition celebrates the creative and ecological achievements of the beloved English author and illustrator Beatrix Potter.

02/26/2023
She Heard the Birds: The Story of Florence Merriam Bailey 01/17/2023

When Florence Merriam Bailey was born in 1863, birds were more often seen ornamenting women's hats than they were in the wild! In fact, on one walk through Manhattan in 1886, she counted 40 different species, stuffed and mounted for fashion. The pioneering ornithologist wanted to stop this trend, which killed an estimated five million birds a year. Her solution was to encourage people to go out and admire living birds through bird watching. "We won’t say too much about the hats," she declared. "We’ll take the girls afield, and let them get acquainted with the birds. Then of inborn necessity, they will wear feathers never more."
Bailey developed an early interest in birds, but when she went to Smith College in 1882, she learned that most ornithologists had little interest in bird behavior. Instead, they studied birds which had been killed, skinned, and mounted for private or museum collections. Bailey proposed that naturalists should learn to observe living birds in their habitats. She recommended an opera glass to allow bird watchers to see details: "The student who goes afield armed with opera-glass," she declared, "will not only add more to our knowledge than he who goes armed with a gun, but will gain for himself a fund of enthusiasm and a lasting store of pleasant memories."
In 1889, at the age of 26, she published "Birds Through An Opera-Glass." It was the first modern bird watching field guide: an illustrated guide to recognizing 70 common species in the wild, written for hobbyists and young people. Her approach of watching birds through magnification formed the basis of modern bird watching, which still uses binoculars today. Her book was also unusual because it was published under her own name, an uncommon practice at the time. Bailey's independent and feminist streaks come out in her writing about her beloved birds too. "Like other ladies, the little feathered brides have to bear their husbands' names, however inappropriate," she lamented. "What injustice! Here an innocent creature with an olive-green back and yellowish breast has to go about all her days known as the black-throated blue warbler, just because that happens to describe the dress of her spouse!"
Bailey went on to write over 100 journal articles and ten books, including the "Handbook of Birds of the Western United States," which remained a standard text for over 50 years. Bailey was named the first woman associate member of the American Ornithologists' Union in 1885; in 1929, she became its first woman fellow and received its Brewster Medal, which recognizes authors of exceptional work about birds, in 1931. In a fitting tribute to this trailblazing advocate for birds, eminent American biologist Joseph Grinnell named a subspecies of mountain chickadee after her in 1908: with the scientific name of Parus gambeli baileyae and the common name of Mrs. Bailey's Chickadee.
Florence Merriam Bailey's inspiring story is told in the lovely picture book biography, "She Heard the Birds," for ages 5 to 9 at https://www.amightygirl.com/she-heard-the-birds
Her book "Birds: Through an Opera-Glass" is also still available in print at https://amzn.to/3vLOY7s
For several great kids' books about Mighty Girls who love birds, we highly recommend "Bird Count" for ages 4 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/bird-count
), "Who Gives a Hoot?" for ages 6 to 9 (https://www.amightygirl.com/who-gives-a-hoot
), and "Stand on the Sky" for ages 9 to 12 (https://www.amightygirl.com/stand-on-the-sky
)
To encourage children interested in birdwatching, we recommend the kid-friendly Kidwinz Binoculars for ages 3 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/binoculars
) and the Bird Log for Kids for ages 5 to 12 (https://www.amightygirl.com/bird-log-kids
)
Young birders will also love the "Beginning Birdwatcher's Book" for ages 7 and up (https://www.amightygirl.com/beginning-birdwatcher-s-book
) and the field guide "The Young Birder's Guide to Birds of North America" for ages 9 and up (https://amzn.to/3lTAV7Q
) -- and a colorful board book celebrating birds for toddlers at https://amzn.to/2VBv2oy
For more books, toys, gear, and clothing for kids who love birds, visit our blog post "Feathered Friends: Books, Toys, and Clothing for Mighty Girl Bird Lovers" at https://www.amightygirl.co

She Heard the Birds: The Story of Florence Merriam Bailey Florence Merriam Bailey loved birds: she adored spending time outside, watching and listening to her feathered friends. But when she grew up, she learned that most ornithologists of her day studied birds that had been stuffed and mounted, and never set foot outside their labs except to trap even mor...

01/16/2023

A youth book drive will be held on Monday, January 16, 2023, from 7:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the Jefferson Street Missionary Baptist Church. Books that are new or in good-used condition are being collected for middle and high school aged students focused on diversity and equity or the legacy of Dr. King.

10/18/2022

Remember this option this year!

09/17/2022

🤍🤍

09/11/2022

Photos from Westmeade Elementary Library's post 05/28/2022

Last week of school is over for 2022! Nature gave us parting gifts. Mama left Bambi by the 4th grade wing and we had an opportunity to learn about how nature provides for its babies. They found box turtles, and broad headed skunks and marvelled at the lettuce they picked with MS. Rebecca as well as the beautiful Carleen double poppies hybridized by a friend of one of the kids grandmothers! All opportunities to learn from the library!

05/24/2022

This

04/13/2022

Thanks to our neighbors in Westmeade, Hillwood, and Bellevue. Because of your kindness every child who wanted a book got to choose one PLUS a little bit of eye candy, too! AND I added your gifts to my regular donation back so that every teacher got to choose up to $30.00 worth of books for their classroom libraries! YOU ARE AWESOME!!

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Location

Address


6641 Clearbrook Drive
Nashville, TN
37205

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 3:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 3:30pm
Wednesday 8am - 3:30pm
Thursday 8am - 3:30pm
Friday 8am - 3:30pm