Thursday, August 30, 2012

Jobs People Do by Christopher Maynard

Jobs People Do is the book for helping children find out all about the careers that interest them.
I want to be a builder, firefighter, veterinarian, paramedic, mechanic, musician...
Here is the book to help me choose. Entertaining text and photographs of real children dressed for each hob help youngsters explore 50 different careers, from chef to scientist. Pages also detail the duties and training required for each one.
Here is a list of books about various jobs - http://www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/labor-day/kids-books/
Here are some lessons as well, for those of us that have started school in August :) http://lessonplanspage.com/LaborDay.htm/

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Chrysanthemum by Kevin Henkes

She was a perfect baby, and she had a perfect name. Chrysanthemum. When she was old enough to appreciate it, Chrysanthemum loved her name. And then she started school. “I’m named after my grandmother,” said Victoria. “You’re named after a flower.” Chrysanthemum wilted. Life at school didn’t improve. In fact, it got worse. Then the students were introduced to their music teacher, Mrs. Twinkle. Mrs. Delphinium Twinkle. And suddenly, Chrysanthemum blossomed….

Here is the link to the author's site - http://www.kevinhenkes.com.php5-25.dfw1-2.websitetestlink.com/

Monday, August 20, 2012

The Story Blanket by Ferida Wolff


Other titles by this author - http://www.barnesandnoble.com/c/ferida-wolff 
Although this is an original text, its folkloric structure conjures up echoes of other traditional tales known variously as "Just Enough to Make a Story," and "I Had a Little Overcoat," (most familiar to today's children as Simms Taback's Joseph Had a Little Overcoat). The children of the village love to gather on Babba Zarrah's intricately patterned blanket to listen to her stories. Gradually, as Babba Zarrah notices first one villager and then another in need of warm clothing-socks, scarf, mittens, apron, shawl, cap, blanket, and coat-she unravels the blanket and re-knits it. The children squeeze ever closer together to hear her tales until, at last, the blanket disappears. Eventually, the children-who knew the blanket better than anyone else-are the ones to solve the mystery of the anonymous gifts. A coda of sorts restarts the story from the beginning promising an endless cycle of kindness. Knitters will realize the impossibility of unraveling a small portion of one project and re-creating the exact same pattern in the new one (the yarn would not be in the right proportions) but the visual repetition provides young readers with the clue they need to enjoy the story. White (or lightly tinted) backgrounds focus attention on the various objects, though there is a missed opportunity in the failure to show the children progressive squished onto the ever-shrinking blanket. Most effective of all is a double-page spread of Babba Zarrah's floral backside moving though a vast snowscape with only a curious owl to mark her progress. Other humorous details-the placement of the children's shoes, a raven caught in a pair of bloomers on the clothes line-will provide chuckles for the sharp-eyed reader. 



Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Brand-new Pencils, Brand-new Books by deGroat

It's the first day of first grade! Gilbert is looking forward to learning how to read and making new friends, but . . . Will the teacher be nice? Will first grade be too hard? Will he like his classmates? Will they like him? Gilbert is excited and nervous at the same time! Gilbert's excitement over starting first grade turns to worry that the teacher will be mean, the work too hard, and his classmates too unfriendly, but throughout the day there are pleasant surprises.  More books by this author . . . http://www.dianedegroat.com/