
Library Lady’s K-12 Edition is a mostly weekly newsletter for K-12 school librarians. Today’s topic is — the Apollo 11 Moon Landing
Library Lady’s K-12 Edition will only be published every other week during the summer. We will be back to our regular schedule in mid-August.
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I am what libraries and librarians have made me. Heraclitus
Tips from Library Lady
🌕 One Small Step…A Giant Opportunity for Your Library
July is the perfect time to celebrate one of the most remarkable achievements in human history—the Apollo 11 Moon Landing.
On July 20, 1969, millions of people around the world watched as humans first stepped onto the surface of the Moon. It was a moment that inspired generations of scientists, engineers, pilots, inventors, teachers, and dreamers. Even today, more than fifty years later, the mission reminds us what can happen when curiosity, perseverance, and teamwork come together.
For many of us, it’s also a personal memory. We remember gathering around a television with family, watching grainy black-and-white images, and hearing words that would become part of history. Today’s students weren’t there, but libraries can help them experience the excitement and understand why that moment continues to matter.
Library Programming Ideas
🚀 Create a Moon Landing Book Display
Feature biographies of astronauts, books about the Apollo missions, space exploration, and the science of the Moon. Include both fiction and nonfiction for a variety of reading levels.
🌙 Host a “Mission to the Moon” Scavenger Hunt
Hide astronaut helmets, rockets, moon rocks, planets, and stars throughout the library. Students can search for the items while learning fun facts along the way.
📖 Read Across Space
Challenge students to read books about astronauts, planets, engineering, flight, and famous explorers. Encourage them to compare the adventures of historical explorers with those of space explorers.
🎨 Design a Mission Patch
Invite students to create their own space mission patch. Ask them to include symbols that represent teamwork, discovery, courage, or science.
📝 Write Like an Astronaut
What would you write in your journal after spending a day on the Moon? Encourage students to imagine the sights, sounds (or silence!), and emotions of standing on another world.
🔭 Explore Primary Sources
Introduce students to photographs, mission recordings, newspaper front pages, and other historical materials from the Apollo era. It’s a wonderful opportunity to discuss how historians use primary sources to understand the past.
Why It Still Matters
The Moon landing wasn’t simply about reaching the Moon—it demonstrated the power of curiosity, careful planning, problem-solving, and perseverance. Those same qualities are at the heart of every library and every great reader.
Whether students dream of becoming scientists, artists, engineers, writers, or explorers, the Apollo story reminds them that big dreams often begin with one question:
“What if?”
Libraries are the perfect place to start asking.
One small suggestion: because this topic means so much to you, I would add a sidebar or “Did You Know?” box in your newsletter.
🌕 Did You Know?
- More than 600 million people watched the Apollo 11 Moon landing on television (I was one of them), making it one of the largest live audiences in history.
- The astronauts spent about 2½ hours exploring the Moon’s surface during their first moonwalk.
- They collected 47.5 pounds (21.5 kilograms) of Moon rocks and soil, which scientists continue to study today.
- The Apollo program inspired advances in computing, materials science, communications, and engineering that still influence our lives.
- The famous footprints left in the Moon’s dust remain there because the Moon has virtually no wind or rain to erase them.
July Celebrations
Bulletin Board Ideas: Adventure Through Books
Fourth of July Book List
National Ice Cream Month Book List
Books About Frida Kahlo
Teddy Bear Picnic Day Book List
Books By and About E B White
World Snake Day Book List
This coming week, look for these posts
Moth Week Book List
Apollo 11 Moon Landing Book List
Apollo 11 Moon Landing Bulletin Board ideas
| Need to raise funds for your library? Here are some posts on my blog that describe my fundraising camps. |
July Birthdays
| Date | Person | Why They’re Worth Featuring |
| July 1 | George Sand (1804) | French novelist; discussion of pen names |
| July 2 | Hermann Hesse (1877) | Author of Siddhartha and Steppenwolf |
| July 4 | Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804) | Classic American literature |
| July 6 | Frida Kahlo (1907) | Picture books, biographies, art activities |
| July 7 | Marc Chagall (1887) | Art appreciation and creativity |
| July 8 | Jean de La Fontaine (1621) | Famous fables |
| July 10 | Alice Munro (1931) | Nobel Prize-winning author |
| July 10 | John Calvin (1509) | Historical figure |
| July 11 | E. B. White (1899) | Charlotte’s Web, Stuart Little, The Trumpet of the Swan |
| July 12 | Henry David Thoreau (1817) | Nature writing and transcendentalism |
| July 15 | Rembrandt (1606) | Art history |
| July 16 | Beatrix Potter (1866) | Beloved children’s books |
| July 18 | Nelson Mandela (1918) | Biography and leadership |
| July 18 | Richard Branson (1950) | Entrepreneurship |
| July 21 | Ernest Hemingway (1899) | American literature |
| July 22 | Edward Hopper (1882) | Art and visual literacy |
| July 24 | Alexandre Dumas (1802) | The Three Musketeers, The Count of Monte Cristo |
| July 24 | Amelia Earhart (1897) | Biography, aviation, perseverance |
| July 25 | Thomas Eakins (1844) | American art |
| July 26 | George Bernard Shaw (1856) | Drama and literature |
| July 28 | Beatrix Potter (Death anniversary—1943) | Good remembrance feature if you prefer anniversaries |
| July 31 | Primo Levi (1919) | Memoir and history |
Recent Adult Book Reviews
Adult Review – Mail-Order Viscountess
Recent YA Book Reviews
YA Review – For This Very Purpose – young adult Biblical Fiction
YA Spotlight – Quest of Fire: The Unending Light – young adult fantasy
Recent MS Book Reviews
MS Spotlight – Thalia in Exile – mid-grade fantasy
Recent Kid Book Reviews
Kid Review – The Unwinding Path – picture book
Items in my Shop
Cute animals with books – stickers, shirts and more in my Redbubble Shop
What I’m Checking Out
20 Back to School Library Bulletin Board Ideas
Back to School Library Displays
Some things that might interest you
📚 Tools for School Librarians 📚
As librarians, we’re always looking for creative ways to engage students and enhance programming. These tools are easy to use. Explore them today and see how they might fit into your toolkit.
If you have a little time this summer to learn a new skill and are interested in GPTs, I recommend this “How to Build Your Own GPT” workshop.
Or, if you’d like a GPT to help you create worksheets for your students, I suggest this custom GPT – Imagination Station: New GPTs Create Kids Activity Sheets
Authors and librarians, would you like to have a post on this blog?
I’d like to add a couple of features to my blog in the coming months and would appreciate your help. I am looking for school librarians interested in being interviewed on the blog. I am also looking for librarians and children’s or young adult authors to do guest posts on the blog. Click on the links below to fill out a survey.
Is there a way I can help you? Drop a note in the comments or shoot me an email. I’d love to help.
See you next week.
Jane (Library Lady)
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