

Students involved in The Flat Stanley Project read the story of Flat Stanley and are subsequently given black-and-white cut-outs of him for them to color. And that just seemed like a way of communicating that grade-three students might enjoy." Stanley's parents rolled him up, put him in an envelope and mailed him to his friend in California. In an interview with CNN in 2005, Hubert explained: "In the book, by Jeff Brown, Stanley gets squashed flat by a falling bulletin board. Written in 1964 by American author Jeff Brown, the book centers around the life of character Stanley Lambchop, a boy who is accidentally flattened. The project's name comes from the eponymous character of the children's book Flat Stanley. History Flat Stanley on a boat as part of the Flat Stanley Projectĭale Hubert first introduced The Flat Stanley Project to his students at Wilfrid Jury Public School in 1995.

In 2001 Hubert was presented the Prime Minister's Awards for Teaching Excellence, an annual award issued by the Prime Minister of Canada to honour outstanding and innovative elementary and secondary school teachers. The project was designed to facilitate the improvement of the reading and writing skills of elementary school students, while also promoting an interest in learning about different people and places.

The project features paper cut-outs based on the title character of the 1964 children's book Flat Stanley. The Flat Stanley Project is an educational project that was started in 1995 by Dale Hubert, a third grade schoolteacher in London, Ontario, Canada. Flat Stanley braving the weather in Miami Beach
