Monday, October 29, 2012

Wishing You a Safe and Happy Hurricane


In reading my friends Facebook posts today, I noticed that only teachers are excited about the Hurricane Days.  Parents with other jobs are less than enthusiastic about the prospect of two days off from school, with the possibility of no power.  So as a public service, I have decided to provide you with a list of low-tech, literacy activities to engage kids for the duration of Hurricane Sandy. 

Admittedly, you might want to save your flashlight batteries, but if you've been watching the news for the past week, you've been warned to stock up.  So you can build a tent from blankets and chairs and read some good books by flashlight.  The best picture books to read in a blanket tent are Owl Moon by Jane Yolen and Brave Irene by William Steig.  For big kids, I’d recommend Hatchet by Gary Paulsen and The Underneath by Eva Ibbotson.  Some other options are books about storms.  I love Thundercake by Patricia Polacco, and if you haven’t lost power yet, Polacco includes her grandmother’s recipe at the back of the book.  It’s beyond my abilities in the kitchen, but I have a friend who made it for her class, and it was delicious.  Tomatoes are the secret ingredient.  There’s also Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs by Judi Barrett.  You might steer clear of non-fiction until the storm is over, but Gail Gibbons, Seymour Simon, National Geographic and DK Readers write great non-fiction about storms and hurricanes, in particular.  

Another option is to raid the Halloween candy early.  (Let’s face it; Halloween is going to be a wash, anyway.)  Hide individual pieces around the house and write clues or a draw a treasure map for your kids to follow and find them.  If they're older, it’s even better, because they can write the clues themselves and maybe you can get a load of laundry done.  There are tons of books about treasure hunting ranging from Dora the Explorer to Treasure Island.  My niece loves My Mermaid Counting Book by Sue Hendra, where she can count the sea creatures and find a treasure on each page.  
 
You can play the alphabet game with hurricane words.  If your child is in fourth grade, A is for anemometer and B is for barometer (It’s fourth grade curriculum.)  If they’re younger, A is for all the lights went out and B is for blowing wind.  Scattegories is another option.  Even if you don’t have the game, you can make up your own categories and choose a letter of the alphabet.  I found a Scattegories app for my phone last summer, and my cousins and I turned it into a drinking game. 

My last suggestion is the silliest, but when my sister and I were little, it was our favorite.  My mom made flashcards with sight words for us.  (She was a teacher, too.)  She taught us one a day.  Then when Dad came home at night, he’d quiz us on the flashcards.  When we got the words right, we took them and built a circle on the floor.  When the circle was complete, we pretended it was a swimming pool, jumped in and “swam” around.  We've played the same game with my niece, my mom used it with her kindergartners, and I even play a version with my 4th and 5th graders.  They roll dice, and read the number of flashcards they roll.  The person who reads the most . . . wins.  For some reason, kids love it.  Happy Hurricane Days and stay safe.
 
Books to Read During a Hurricane
Owl Moon by Jane Yolen
Brave Irene by William Steig
Hatchet by Gary Paulsen
The Underneath by Eva Ibbotson
Thundercake by Patricia Polacco
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs by Judi Barrett
Storms by Seymour Simon
Hurricanes by Seymour Simon
National Geographic Readers: Storms by Miriam Goin
Hurricanes! By Gail Gibbons
DK Eyewitness Books: Hurricane and Tornado by Jack Challoner
The Magic School Bus: Inside a Hurricane by Joanna Cole
The Magic School Bus: Kicks up a Storm by Nancy White
Judy Moody and Stink: The Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Treasure Hunt by Megan McDonald
Mayflower Treasure Hunt (A-Z Mysteries) by Ron Roy
Skippyjon Jones and the Treasure Hunt by Judy Schachner
Dora’s Treasure Hunt by Alison Inches
Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
My Mermaid Counting Book by Sue Hendra

Monday, October 22, 2012

Fluency Finds


This semester I’m taking a class on a reading assessment I’ve been giving for the last 6 years.  Since I changed counties last year, I have to be retrained.  Unfortunately, none of the homework assignments are the same, so I can’t even cheat.  This week my homework is to write an informational letter to parents about fluency.  So I thought I’d focus on fluency this week, and turn in my blog. 

Fluency is the way a child sounds when she reads.  It includes reading words correctly, quickly, and with phrasing and expression.  It’s the bridge between decoding words and understanding the story.  When you think about what your brain does as you read, your eyes are moving 3-4 words ahead of your brain as you decode the words.  You’re also attending to punctuation and grouping words together into phrases that make sense, and all the while your brain is turning the visual information into a meaningful story.  That seems like a lot to teach our kids, but not if we read with them.

I’ve spent the last couple weekends, with two 2-year-olds.  My niece “reads” in a silly, high pitched voice, but she imitates the inflections we use when we read.  My friend’s son reads the last word of every line in The Cat and the Hat and never misses the rhythm.  These kids have been read to since birth, and they are already showing signs of early literacy.  Every time a child asks you to reread a favorite book, you’re increasing her fluency.

There are also some books designed to build fluency in kids.  Poetry and rhyming books are perfect examples.  My favorite children’s poets now are Shel Silverstein, Kali Dakos and Jack Prelutsky, but as kids, my sister and I loved Dr. Suess’s Oh, Say, Can You Say?  It’s a book of tongue twisters that made our parents crazy, but brought us endless joy.  Mary Ann Hoberman has a series called You Read to Me, I’ll Read to You.  They’re collections of stories and poems designed to be read aloud by two people.  Kids love them.  Books written like comics with speech bubbles also lend themselves to fluency work.  It encourages kids to read the way they talk.  I like Yo! Yes! by Chris Raschka, Z is for Moose by Kelly Bingham, and the Elephant and Piggie series by Mo Willems.  Also by Willems is Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale.  It’s about the dangers of taking your favorite stuffed animal every where you go, and it’s written with a short phrase on each page.  And if you like the first one, you can enjoy the whole trilogy: Knuffle Bunny, Too and Knuffle Bunny, FreeNo, David! by David Shannon is another great option, because “No, David,” is repeated on each page with varying degrees of passion.  Reading to, by and with our children is the best way to build fluency. 
 
Books for Building Fluency
You Read to Me, I’ll Read to You by Mary Ann Hoberman
Yo! Yes! by Chris Raschka
Z is for Moose by Kelly Bingham
The Elephant and Piggie Series by Mo Willems
The Pigeon Series by Mo Willems
The Knuffle Bunny Series by Mo Willems
No, David! by David Shannon
Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein
If You’re Not Here Please Raise Your Hand by Kali Dakos
A Pizza the Size of the Sun by Jack Pretulsky
The Cat and the Hat by Dr. Suess
Oh, Say, Can You Say? By Dr. Suess










Sunday, October 14, 2012

Costumes, Candy and Books!


Halloween will be here in two weeks, and kids everywhere are overly excited.  It was never my thing.  The scariest costume I ever wore was Peter Pan – I carried a sword.  On the other hand, my students always seem surprised that school is not canceled for Halloween.  For kids it is a very real holiday, and it makes them want to read scary books.  My favorite elementary school librarian told me that a fourth grader asked for a scary book on Friday, and she suggested Acid Rain (a chilling topic).  We try to keep things tame in elementary school, and I've never liked horror as a genre, but kids do.  So I try to make an exception for Halloween.

For little kids, Halloween is a great time for counting books.  Perhaps publishers see it as practice for candy counting.  Any of the many versions of Five Little Pumpkins are good choices, and my niece has the sequel, Five Little Ghosts.  Both are rhyming books that count backwards from five. There’s also Halloween 123s by Patti Reeder Eubank and Too Many Monsters by Robert Neubecker.  Both books count up to ten.  For our middle readers, all of our favorite characters have a Halloween book.  Biscuit, Arthur, Franklin, and Amelia Bedelia all celebrate this scariest of holidays, as do Fancy Nancy, Junie B., Cam Jansen and Jigsaw Jones.  For readers who want something creepier, Marion Dane Bauer has a series of ghost stories that are geared towards second and third graders. 
   
At a time when vampires, werewolves and witches are everyday fare, our big kids want really terrifying Halloween books.  There are plenty of titles that will give them the shivers without, exposing them to the mature themes of young adult novels.  The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman is about a boy who is raised by ghosts.  It’s an unsettling story, but well written and clever.  My students are fans of Mary Downing Hahn, whose ghost stories provide the necessary chills, and I love Chris VanAllsburg’s The Stranger and The Widow’s Broom.  The first is about a mysterious stranger whose presence at a farm seems to keep winter from coming.  The latter is the story of a witch’s discarded broom, and it’s unending and unnerving usefulness.  Roald Dahl’s The Witches was always my October read aloud, because few things are more frightening than a group of witches plotting to turn children into mice.  As we busily gather costume accessories and candy over the next two weeks, take some time to share a good book.  Happy Halloween!
 
Halloween Books
Five Little Pumpkins by Dan Yaccarino
Five Little Pumpkins by Iris Van Rynbach
Five Little Pumpkins by Ben Mantle
Five Little Ghosts by William Boniface
Halloween 123s by Patti Reeder Eubank
Too Many Monsters by Robert Neubecker
Happy Halloween, Biscuit by Alyssa Satin Capucilli
Arthur’s Halloween by Marc Brown
Franklin’s Halloween by Paulette Bourgeois
Happy Haunting, Amelia Bedelia by Herman Parish
Fancy Nancy: Halloween . . .or Bust! by Jane O’Connor
Junie B., First Grader: Boo . . . And I Mean It! by Barbara Park
Cam Jansen and the Mystery at the Haunted House by David A. Adler
Jigsaw Jones and the Case of the Groaning Ghost by James Preller
The Blue Ghost by Marion Dane Bauer
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
All the Lovely Bad Ones by Mary Downing Hahn
The Stranger by Chris VanAllsburg
The Widow’s Broom by Chris VanAllsburg
The Witches by Roald Dahl




Monday, October 1, 2012

Make New Friends


In the first weeks of school, teachers spend a lot of time teaching friendship.  Consequently, we read a lot of books about making friends, sharing and cooperation.  They’re lessons that kids need, and a book can be a painless way to teach them.  I've had an opportunity to read some of my favorites in the last few weeks, so I thought I’d share some.

Duck and Goose by Tad Hills has been one of my favorites since it’s publication in 2006.  Duck and Goose find a ball, but mistake it for an egg.  While arguing over whose egg it is and determining the best way to care for it, they become friends.  My niece loves The Pigeon Finds a Hot Dog by Mo Willems.  It’s about what happens when Pigeon is faced with the choice of enjoying a hot dog all by himself or sharing it with a friend.  As you may know, Pigeon does not have a lot of self control and can be pretty impulsive, but he makes a good choice in the end.  So he’s a good model for Bella, who, like all two-year-olds, hates to share.  Both are very silly books with great messages.  Enemy Pie is another excellent choice.  A dad helps his son make enemy pie, ostensibly to get rid of the new kid who seems to be stealing his best friend.  I’d also recommend Yo! Yes! by Chris Raschka.  In about 15 words, it teaches us how to make a friend.  It’s also great for teaching reading with expression and attending to punctuation.

If you want something a little deeper, there’s The Other Side by Jacqueline Woodson.  Anna and Clover manage to become friends despite the fence that segregates their town.  Almost all of Kevin Henkes’ books deal with friendship, especially Chrysanthemum, and of course we have the classic book about friendship and sharing, The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister.  The Rainbow Fish discovers that when you don't share, you don’t make many friends.  Making and keeping friends are issues that all kids deal with.  Fortunately, there are hundreds of great book choices to help. 
 
Books about Friendship
Duck and Goose by Tad Hills
The Pigeon Finds a Hot Dog by Mo Willems
Elephant and Piggie by Mo Willems
Enemy Pie by Derek Munson
Yo! Yes! by Chris Raschka
The Other Side by Jacqueline Woodson
Chrysanthemum by Kevin Henkes
The Recess Queen by Alexis O’Neill
The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister
Frog and Toad by Arnold Lobel
Big Dog . . . Little Dog by P.D. Eastman
A Flea Story by Leo Lioni