My new favorite nonfiction book for young children is CLOSE TO YOU: HOW ANIMALS BOND by Kimiko Kajikawa. I love great nonfiction books with predictable text. This new book is a great one for new readers. Each page follows a pattern about an animal and its baby. "Polar Bears cuddle in a den of snow." and "Ducklings line up in a single row." There are photos to accompany each animal's fact.
This is also a great book for older readers because of the huge amount of info at the end of the book. One two page spread goes on to explain each of the photos that is in the book. Another addition at the end of the book is a chart with lots of animal info (number of babies, weight at birth, weight at maturity, age of Independence).
A great book --especially for young readers!
Monday, April 14, 2008
Friday, April 11, 2008
Poetry Friday -- Original Haiku
Each week this month, in celebration of National Poetry Month, my students are trying out a different short form of poetry. Last week they wrote 15 Words or Less poems. (I added a few more now that more permissions are in. Check it out!)
This week they tried haiku. All of the poems in this week's post were written by my fourth graders.
First, a haiku about haiku:
Look at the haiku
with the 5-7-5 pattern
on the white paper.
The next few were inspired by these photos I called "Faces in the Trees:"
The hawk is hunting
The squirrel is hiding
Tree is cowering
Hawks can hide from you
Hawks can hide from you
and me
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxDay and night we'll wait
A hawk is hunting
A hawk hunts animals in
Forest and city
Magical forest
That is where a squirrel lives
Hiding in the tree
I am an old tree,
the vines tickling my nose,
in an old forest.
Your bark-made face, rough,
mysterious, nice and tough,
special and unique.
These were inspired by a set of photos I called "Buds and Blooms:"
It's spring! Let's play!
The garden has some flowers.
Let's give them to mom!
Flowers, Flowers, Hi!
Flowers, Flowers over there.
Good bye Flowers, bye!
flowers are blooming
in a garden full of plants
where they are growing
Sunny side up egg.
It's a beautiful flower.
It's yellow and white.
Look at the flowers
With the sun shining on them
And the petals bright
This week's round up is at a wrung sponge.
This week they tried haiku. All of the poems in this week's post were written by my fourth graders.
First, a haiku about haiku:
Look at the haiku
with the 5-7-5 pattern
on the white paper.
The next few were inspired by these photos I called "Faces in the Trees:"
The hawk is hunting
The squirrel is hiding
Tree is cowering
Hawks can hide from you
Hawks can hide from you
and me
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxDay and night we'll wait
A hawk is hunting
A hawk hunts animals in
Forest and city
Magical forest
That is where a squirrel lives
Hiding in the tree
I am an old tree,
the vines tickling my nose,
in an old forest.
Your bark-made face, rough,
mysterious, nice and tough,
special and unique.
These were inspired by a set of photos I called "Buds and Blooms:"
It's spring! Let's play!
The garden has some flowers.
Let's give them to mom!
Flowers, Flowers, Hi!
Flowers, Flowers over there.
Good bye Flowers, bye!
flowers are blooming
in a garden full of plants
where they are growing
Sunny side up egg.
It's a beautiful flower.
It's yellow and white.
Look at the flowers
With the sun shining on them
And the petals bright
This week's round up is at a wrung sponge.
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Pleasant Surprises, Part Two
Penny and the Punctuation Bee
by Moira Rose Donohue
illustrated by Jenny Law
Albert Whitman & Company, 2008
review copy compliments of the publisher
You might pass this book up if you're not careful. The illustrations don't look very sophisticated and you might think the book will be a preachy diatribe about using correct punctuation.
Give it a chance. You'll be pleasantly surprised.
Meet friends Penny the period who is on safety patrol (she's good at stopping), Connie the comma, and Quentin the question. The three sign up for the Punctuation Bee in Mr. Dash's room. Elsie, the bouncy enthusiastic cheerleader (an exclamation point) also signs up, and the three friends get busy practicing for the bee so they can beat Elsie. Each Punctuation Bee participant is given a word that he/she must use in a sentence that is correctly punctuated with his/her punctuation mark. The competition is close -- it's won on a technicality -- and you're going to have to read the book to find out who wins!
Read carefully so that you don't miss any of the puns: the hyphen that dashes by, the asterisk named Stella, and more.
Donohue is smart: she doesn't overdo the characterization of the marks by trying to be clever with them all. She focuses on the period, comma, question mark and exclamation point. That means her story doesn't get away from her (or from the reader). And the illustrations? They grow on you. Give this book a chance. I'm betting you wind up adding it to your collection.
by Moira Rose Donohue
illustrated by Jenny Law
Albert Whitman & Company, 2008
review copy compliments of the publisher
You might pass this book up if you're not careful. The illustrations don't look very sophisticated and you might think the book will be a preachy diatribe about using correct punctuation.
Give it a chance. You'll be pleasantly surprised.
Meet friends Penny the period who is on safety patrol (she's good at stopping), Connie the comma, and Quentin the question. The three sign up for the Punctuation Bee in Mr. Dash's room. Elsie, the bouncy enthusiastic cheerleader (an exclamation point) also signs up, and the three friends get busy practicing for the bee so they can beat Elsie. Each Punctuation Bee participant is given a word that he/she must use in a sentence that is correctly punctuated with his/her punctuation mark. The competition is close -- it's won on a technicality -- and you're going to have to read the book to find out who wins!
Read carefully so that you don't miss any of the puns: the hyphen that dashes by, the asterisk named Stella, and more.
Donohue is smart: she doesn't overdo the characterization of the marks by trying to be clever with them all. She focuses on the period, comma, question mark and exclamation point. That means her story doesn't get away from her (or from the reader). And the illustrations? They grow on you. Give this book a chance. I'm betting you wind up adding it to your collection.
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Check It Out
The March-April issue of The Edge of the Forest is up at Big A little a. Lots of great articles and features for your perusal. Get thee over there and peruse!
Monday, April 07, 2008
Clementine's Letter: The Good News and The Bad News
I just finished CLEMENTINE'S LETTER by Sara Pennypacker. I picked it up Tuesday--on the day it came out. I must say, driving to the bookstore felt a bit like driving to the airport to pick up an old friend who was coming into town for a visit. I was thrilled that Clementine was back!
I must say that I was a little worried at first--how could I possibly love this 3rd book about Clementine as much as I had loved the first two? I figured it was really nearly impossible.
The GOOD NEWS is that I did! I just now closed the cover and must say that this may be my very favorite Clementine book. I loved, loved, loved it. Clementine is as lovable and clever as ever and the story was as good as ever.
Bill at Literate Lives listed his 10 Reasons for Loving Clementine. I agree with each and every one of them! And I think I could probably add 10 more. Maybe 100.
One of my favorite thing about Clementine is the way that she understands school and teachers. In my review of THE TALENTED CLEMENTINE, I reviewed all of the very smart things she said about teachers. Quite the insightful girl! But in this book, we see that Clementine really does have school and teachers figured out. She is an independent girl who needs things to make sense. And she has lots of strategies for doing this.
This book is a refreshing read during testing time. Sara Pennypacker understands the things that make a good school and a good classroom. Her adult characters are all respectful of children. And, school in her books, is the happy place that it should be. She somehow creates characters like Mrs. Rice (the principal) who is a bit stern, but clearly cares for Clementine. She creates characters like Mrs. Nagel who learns from Clementine. And she creates Mr. D'Matz who understands Clementine. The relationships that Clementine has with the adults in her school are so fun to read about. The teachers in the book focus on what is important--the kids.
I must say that I have not given Marla Frazee enough credit for Clementine. But, I can't imagine that this author/illustrator combo could be any more perfect in their creation of this character. The illustrations are so critical to getting to know Clementine. And, I must say, my very favorite page in the book may be the very last illustration, following the end of the text. The picture of Clementine is precious.
I don't need to talk about plot here because the plot is always secondary to the characters-even though the plot is quite good. What makes these books amazing is the characters that we have come to love in such a short time.
So, the BAD NEWS--there is no sign of a 4th Clementine book anytime soon. If anyone has news on when the next one will be out, please share! I think it is time for dolls, t-shirts, and coffee mugs.....Clementine is definitely a character that will be around forever. Write faster, Sarah!
I must say that I was a little worried at first--how could I possibly love this 3rd book about Clementine as much as I had loved the first two? I figured it was really nearly impossible.
The GOOD NEWS is that I did! I just now closed the cover and must say that this may be my very favorite Clementine book. I loved, loved, loved it. Clementine is as lovable and clever as ever and the story was as good as ever.
Bill at Literate Lives listed his 10 Reasons for Loving Clementine. I agree with each and every one of them! And I think I could probably add 10 more. Maybe 100.
One of my favorite thing about Clementine is the way that she understands school and teachers. In my review of THE TALENTED CLEMENTINE, I reviewed all of the very smart things she said about teachers. Quite the insightful girl! But in this book, we see that Clementine really does have school and teachers figured out. She is an independent girl who needs things to make sense. And she has lots of strategies for doing this.
This book is a refreshing read during testing time. Sara Pennypacker understands the things that make a good school and a good classroom. Her adult characters are all respectful of children. And, school in her books, is the happy place that it should be. She somehow creates characters like Mrs. Rice (the principal) who is a bit stern, but clearly cares for Clementine. She creates characters like Mrs. Nagel who learns from Clementine. And she creates Mr. D'Matz who understands Clementine. The relationships that Clementine has with the adults in her school are so fun to read about. The teachers in the book focus on what is important--the kids.
I must say that I have not given Marla Frazee enough credit for Clementine. But, I can't imagine that this author/illustrator combo could be any more perfect in their creation of this character. The illustrations are so critical to getting to know Clementine. And, I must say, my very favorite page in the book may be the very last illustration, following the end of the text. The picture of Clementine is precious.
I don't need to talk about plot here because the plot is always secondary to the characters-even though the plot is quite good. What makes these books amazing is the characters that we have come to love in such a short time.
So, the BAD NEWS--there is no sign of a 4th Clementine book anytime soon. If anyone has news on when the next one will be out, please share! I think it is time for dolls, t-shirts, and coffee mugs.....Clementine is definitely a character that will be around forever. Write faster, Sarah!
Meme: A Blog Retrospective
Way back in March we were tagged by Two Writing Teachers for the Blog Retrospective Meme. If you want to play, you go back through your archives and find five posts you really love. Here are ours:
5 of Franki's favorite posts:
1. Tracking the word KIDLITOSPHERE -- authentic word study.
2. Mom's Overture (Teachers' Overture, too) because they make her laugh every time.
3. Interview with Peggy Gifford, author of Moxy Maxwell Does Not Love Stuart Little.
4. Teachers According to Clementine.
5. Our first birthday post.
5 of Mary Lee's favorite posts:
1. One of the best book reviews I've ever written. It was easy. It was a great book.
2. One of my favorite Poetry Friday posts.
3. Our Robert's Snow illustrator features, Matt Phelan and Jeff Newman.
4. My review of Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. Summer reading really will come back, won't it?
5. The post in which we highlight a great new blog -- Two Writing Teachers!
Edited to add:
Becky at Becky's Book Reviews is playing. Go check out her retrospective!
5 of Franki's favorite posts:
1. Tracking the word KIDLITOSPHERE -- authentic word study.
2. Mom's Overture (Teachers' Overture, too) because they make her laugh every time.
3. Interview with Peggy Gifford, author of Moxy Maxwell Does Not Love Stuart Little.
4. Teachers According to Clementine.
5. Our first birthday post.
5 of Mary Lee's favorite posts:
1. One of the best book reviews I've ever written. It was easy. It was a great book.
2. One of my favorite Poetry Friday posts.
3. Our Robert's Snow illustrator features, Matt Phelan and Jeff Newman.
4. My review of Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. Summer reading really will come back, won't it?
5. The post in which we highlight a great new blog -- Two Writing Teachers!
Edited to add:
Becky at Becky's Book Reviews is playing. Go check out her retrospective!
Nonfiction Monday -- Nonfiction Poetry
The World's Greatest: Poems
by J. Patrick Lewis
illustrated by Keith Graves
Chronicle Books, 2008
review copy purchased at my favorite independent seller of children's books, Cover to Cover
Monumental Verses
by J. Patrick Lewis
published by the National Geographic Society, 2005
review copy purchased at my favorite independent seller of children's books, Cover to Cover
Here are two of my new favorite poetry books. They are also two of my new favorite nonfiction books!
Kids love the Guinness Book of World Records. In The World's Greatest: Poems, J. Patrick Lewis has picked 25 world records as the topics of poems as widely varied as the styles of the poems: from the dumbest dinosaur to the most live scorpions eaten by a human, and from acrostics to limericks (aptly enough, the limerick is for the poem about the biggest potato). I dedicate the poem "The Most Plates Spinning" (Dave Spathaky, London, England, 108 plates, November 23, 1992) to kindergarten and first grade teachers everywhere.
Monumental Verses is a trip around the world to see (in gorgeous, full-color, National Geographic photographs) thirteen of the world's greatest human-made landmarks. They are as ancient as Stonehenge and Easter Island and Machu Picchu, and as modern as the Golden Gate Bridge and the Empire State Building. Again, J. Patrick Lewis treats the reader to a variety of poetic forms including three that match the monument -- a large T-shaped slab of prose poetry for Stonehenge, a pyramid of poetry for The Great Pyramid of Cheops, and a twisting S of poetry for the Great Wall of China.
Here are some bonus extras:
The official J. Patrick Lewis website.
World's Greatest: Poems reviewed at 7-Imp.
Integrating science and social studies with J. Patrick Lewis' A World of Wonders: Geographic Travels in Verse and Rhyme at Miss Rumphius.
Elaine's Wild Rose Reader interview with J. Patrick Lewis.
The Nonfiction Monday Round Up is at Picture Book of the Day.
by J. Patrick Lewis
illustrated by Keith Graves
Chronicle Books, 2008
review copy purchased at my favorite independent seller of children's books, Cover to Cover
Monumental Verses
by J. Patrick Lewis
published by the National Geographic Society, 2005
review copy purchased at my favorite independent seller of children's books, Cover to Cover
Here are two of my new favorite poetry books. They are also two of my new favorite nonfiction books!
Kids love the Guinness Book of World Records. In The World's Greatest: Poems, J. Patrick Lewis has picked 25 world records as the topics of poems as widely varied as the styles of the poems: from the dumbest dinosaur to the most live scorpions eaten by a human, and from acrostics to limericks (aptly enough, the limerick is for the poem about the biggest potato). I dedicate the poem "The Most Plates Spinning" (Dave Spathaky, London, England, 108 plates, November 23, 1992) to kindergarten and first grade teachers everywhere.
Monumental Verses is a trip around the world to see (in gorgeous, full-color, National Geographic photographs) thirteen of the world's greatest human-made landmarks. They are as ancient as Stonehenge and Easter Island and Machu Picchu, and as modern as the Golden Gate Bridge and the Empire State Building. Again, J. Patrick Lewis treats the reader to a variety of poetic forms including three that match the monument -- a large T-shaped slab of prose poetry for Stonehenge, a pyramid of poetry for The Great Pyramid of Cheops, and a twisting S of poetry for the Great Wall of China.
Here are some bonus extras:
The official J. Patrick Lewis website.
World's Greatest: Poems reviewed at 7-Imp.
Integrating science and social studies with J. Patrick Lewis' A World of Wonders: Geographic Travels in Verse and Rhyme at Miss Rumphius.
Elaine's Wild Rose Reader interview with J. Patrick Lewis.
The Nonfiction Monday Round Up is at Picture Book of the Day.
Sunday, April 06, 2008
Squirrel Sightings!
Scaredy Squirrel is on tour next week! Check it out:
Monday, 4/7
Big A, Little a
Featured Topic: An Interview with Scaredy Squirrel
Tuesday, 4/8
Book Buds
Featured Topic: Scaredy Squirrel past, present and future
Wednesday, 4/9
Jen Robinson's Book Page
Featured Topic: How the Scaredy stories work at different age levels
Thursday, 4/10 [2 blogs]
Hip Librarians Book Blog
Featured Topic: Talking with Mélanie Watt about writing
Metrowest News
Featured Topic: Kids' questions for Scaredy Squirrel
Friday, 4/11
MotherReader
Featured Topic: Mélanie Watt talks about Scaredy Squirrel
Friday, April 04, 2008
Mark Your Calendars Now!
Today, Mother Reader announced her 3rd Annual 48 HOUR BOOK CHALLENGE! This is the idea that totally hooked me on Mother Reader's blog 2 years ago. It was clear from this idea that the woman is brilliant!
Each year, Mother Reader invites us all to her 48 Hour Book Challenge--a weekend that we devote to reading...just reading. Reading the whole weekend. Making reading the main thing that we do. See how brilliant she is?
This year, it just so happens that the annual fun begins on our very first day of summer vacation. What perfect timing! Now, I have never been able to participate in the fun of this challenge. I have always had some prior commitment. Right now, I have this exciting event marked on my calendar. I am hoping that I can participate. I will start my stack soon--imagine what I can get read in 48 hours! And, like I told Mother Reader, even if I don't participate, this challenge makes me happy just thinking about it. Thinking about having 48 uninterrupted hours to read is such a great thing.
I think we should make this an official holiday--this 48 Hour Challenge started by the brilliant Mother Reader.
Each year, Mother Reader invites us all to her 48 Hour Book Challenge--a weekend that we devote to reading...just reading. Reading the whole weekend. Making reading the main thing that we do. See how brilliant she is?
This year, it just so happens that the annual fun begins on our very first day of summer vacation. What perfect timing! Now, I have never been able to participate in the fun of this challenge. I have always had some prior commitment. Right now, I have this exciting event marked on my calendar. I am hoping that I can participate. I will start my stack soon--imagine what I can get read in 48 hours! And, like I told Mother Reader, even if I don't participate, this challenge makes me happy just thinking about it. Thinking about having 48 uninterrupted hours to read is such a great thing.
I think we should make this an official holiday--this 48 Hour Challenge started by the brilliant Mother Reader.
Poetry Friday -- 15 Words or Less Poems
Each week during the month of April, we are going to study a different short form of poetry in my class. This first week, inspired by Laura Salas' weekly challenge, my students wrote 15 Words or Less poems.
Armed with the power of iPhoto and flat screen TV that I can connect to my teacher computer, I shared a different image each day for their inspiration.
Here are a couple of poems from the first day:
The upside down y
floats in the sky.
And the moon is very
close.
(Look hard for the second jet trail to the right of and below the obvious one. It makes the y in this student's poem.)
Is it a star?
I wonder.
Is it a rocket?
I wonder.
Not surprisingly, yesterday's photo really got the creative juices flowing.
The Devil is
cruel and mean,
I just hope
he doesn't eat
too many beans!
Yo, little
Jack-o-lantern
with two glowing eyes
and two horns.
I wonder when you
were born?
Pumpkin, pumpkin, filled with a flare
Now there's light everywhere.
Look at that Jack-o-lantern
on Halloween night
just waiting
to cause some fright.
I think it looks like the devil
on Halloween
smiling.
Hello Jack-o-lantern
with your bright eyes.
Some people think it's a mask,
but I know it's a big disguise.
Jack-o-lantern
burning bright
Burning bright on Halloween night
Smiling face
an evil trace
Jack-o-lantern
Jack-o-lantern
I pledge allegiance
to the pumpkin picture beside the flag.
...with candy
and costumes
for all.
(That one was mine!)
Next week instead of counting words, we'll be counting syllables with haiku. After that, we'll try acrostics, and finish up with limericks.
The roundup this week is at Becky's Book Reviews.
Armed with the power of iPhoto and flat screen TV that I can connect to my teacher computer, I shared a different image each day for their inspiration.
Here are a couple of poems from the first day:
The upside down y
floats in the sky.
And the moon is very
close.
(Look hard for the second jet trail to the right of and below the obvious one. It makes the y in this student's poem.)
Is it a star?
I wonder.
Is it a rocket?
I wonder.
Not surprisingly, yesterday's photo really got the creative juices flowing.
The Devil is
cruel and mean,
I just hope
he doesn't eat
too many beans!
Yo, little
Jack-o-lantern
with two glowing eyes
and two horns.
I wonder when you
were born?
Pumpkin, pumpkin, filled with a flare
Now there's light everywhere.
Look at that Jack-o-lantern
on Halloween night
just waiting
to cause some fright.
I think it looks like the devil
on Halloween
smiling.
Hello Jack-o-lantern
with your bright eyes.
Some people think it's a mask,
but I know it's a big disguise.
Jack-o-lantern
burning bright
Burning bright on Halloween night
Smiling face
an evil trace
Jack-o-lantern
Jack-o-lantern
I pledge allegiance
to the pumpkin picture beside the flag.
...with candy
and costumes
for all.
(That one was mine!)
Next week instead of counting words, we'll be counting syllables with haiku. After that, we'll try acrostics, and finish up with limericks.
The roundup this week is at Becky's Book Reviews.
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