Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Make A Difference Day Awards: Books Spur Kids To Action

(from usatoday.com
by Nancy Dunham)



This article is part of a series on USA WEEKEND's Make A Difference Day Award winners.

It's one thing for children's book authors to write stories about good deeds, but it's quite another to actually spur the young readers into action.

Nick Katsoris, 47, author of the Loukoumi series of children's books, used Make A Difference Day to motivate more than 20,000 kids to take on projects from making rainbow loom bracelets for patients at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital to collecting canned goods for homeless shelters.

"The Loukoumi books are all about teaching kids lessons in life so that they can make a difference in their lives and the lives of others," says Katsoris, who has participated in Make A Difference Day since 2009. Two of his books "are dedicated to a sweet woman named Daisy who was a cleaning woman in an office I worked at almost 20 years ago. Daisy gave me a pair of gold cuff links simply because I said 'good morning' to her. It taught me that even the smallest good deed could make a big difference in someone's life."

Katsoris is based in Eastchester, N.Y., but he made his effort nationwide through partnerships with the charitable organizations National Philoptochos Society and Kiwanis International and the anti-bullying organization PACER, all of which reached out to schools, libraries and other child-focused organizations. Adults read the Loukoumi books to kids and had them sign "I will Make A Difference by…" pledges. The kids then performed the good deeds on Oct. 26.

Katsoris' own son, 9-year-old Dean, pledged to make and sell bracelets to raise funds for an animal rescue charity.

"These acts of kindness are values that kids are learning now that will follow them throughout their lives," says Katsoris, "and teach them the importance of helping others,."

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