Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Friday, October 21, 2011

Halloween fun and ABC and Personal Narrative culminating projects

Week 9

The week before Fall Break is always a bit wonky with a half day off for our Halloween Carnival and teachers busily wrapping up units. We enjoyed some Halloween videos, and grades 1 and 2 worked on culminating projects that will be finished after the break. (I HOPE!!)

PreK 3 - Guiding Question: What Halloween words do we remember?

We watched a film version of Pumpkin Eye, by Denise Fleming, which zooms in on details in the pictures of this Halloween rhyme. It makes a good review of some of the words we've been talking about: costumes, trick-or-treat, mummy, jack-o-lantern and more. Because the narration is slow, there are plenty of places for students to repeat the words they hear or for the teacher to ask clarifying questions. 

My copy of the book was checked out at the time, but it would be best to read the story beforehand and then show the clip. It's also best to read this with youngsters who are somewhat familiar with Halloween since the overall mood is dark and spooky.


PreK 4 and Kindergarten - Guiding Question: What's a series? What will be we for Halloween?

Kindergarteners have been learning about series books, so we talked about the popular book and TV series, Charlie and Lola. In this charming episode, Lola has two problems to solve. I asked students to watch for these problems and be ready to tell about them at the end. She needs to figure out what to wear for Halloween, and she and her friends need to deal with the big disappointment of having their much-loved jack-o-lantern ruined by accident.

After the film, many students took home some Charlie and Lola books!

We also played "Who Stole the Candy from the Trick-or-Treat Bag?" using some cute character cards from the PreK Pages. I saved it onto my wiki under "holidays."


Grade 1 - Guiding Question: What places begin with different alphabet letters?

Alphabet Books board


We began filming of our alphabet movies. 
But... fire drills and various interruptions conspired to keep us from finishing! We will complete our movies after the vacation.







Grade 2 - Guiding Question: Why is this story personal narrative? Which is the most important part of the story?

Students' choice from The Wednesday Surprise

We began our VoiceThread projects by working in small groups to review the stories we read during the unit. Each group needs to answer two questions:

- Why is this book an example of a personal narrative story?

- What is the most important part of the story?


Everyone in the group needed to agree on the most important part

Today, we selected the most important part of the story. The photos of the pages will be added to our VoiceThread slideshow. Next session, each group will record their ideas along with pictures.

Here are some photos of the pages students selected to mark the most important part in their story. They did an amazing job of remembering each text and tapping into the emotional content of each story.

The key page from Wilfred Gordon MacDonald Partridge



Grades 3, 4, 5 - Check out extra books for the vacation!

Photos by Elise
Grade 2 and 5 students paired up for some impromptu reading time. Here are some photos of them reading to each other: sometimes the fifth grader is reading and sometimes the second grader is reading.















Monday, October 17, 2011

Halloween, Traffic Light Paragraphs, and Cat the Cat!

Week 8

PreK 3: Guiding Question - Can we memorize a Halloween poem?


Five Little Pumpkins, by Iris Van Rynbach

We read the story, retold it with flannels, and practiced again with a handout and printed booklet to color. By the time we finished, yes, we had it down!

Printables and clip-art from DLTK 



PreK 4: Guiding Question - What are some fun Halloween counting books?


We read several counting books with a Halloween theme. See this week's Book Talk Tuesday post for full write-ups about  these and more Halloween counting books.





Kindergarten: Guiding Question - Who is "Cat the Cat"? What makes a "series"?

We're continuing to talk about character and met another fun new friend this week.

We're enjoying Mo Willems books so much, we continued with another one of his series: Cat the Cat!

This is another set of early readers with lots of humor and funny surprises. After reading three "Cat the Cat" books, we played a few games with her.




Grade 1: Guiding Question - What countries and cities can we match to alphabet letters?

'Paris' photo (c) 2010, Moyan Brenn - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/
We're making an alphabet movie! This week we created a list of places that start with each letter of the alphabet. Next week, we'll film each child in front of the green screen saying "A is for..." and the locations will show in the background. Stay tuned for the finished product.

We also practiced our alphabet song: ABC to the tune of "Mary Had a Little Lamb" - one letter per note: not as easy as is sounds!


Grade 2: Guiding Question - What is a personal narrative?

This week, we finished up with reading models of personal narratives. Next week, we'll make VoiceThread presentations to show what we know about the elements of this genre.

Picnic at Mudsock Meadow, by Patricia Polacco

Everyone in town fears the swampy patch of quicksand at Mudsock Meadow; it is rumored that the ghost of an old miner surfaces and glows eerily at night. But the Halloween carnival is held there in any case, and William is not going to miss the fun just because of a ghost. What he really wants is to win some of the games to show that pest, Hester, that she's been picking on the wrong guy. Alas, every activity seems to go wrong for him and his mistakes give Hester more reasons to jeer and make fun of him. How can he show everyone that he's got something to offer?

A longer story illustrated with Polocco's signature bright splashy watercolors, this makes a good blend of personal narrative and Halloween for the fall.


Grade 3: Guiding Question - What can we do with our library accounts?

Grade 3 students were excited to get their library accounts started. Beginning in grade 3, we talk about keeping our private information safe and about developing ethical habits on the computer: we log ourselves out of programs and check to be sure we are never working within someone else's account.

When logged in with their username and password, Grade 3 students can:
- See which books they have checked-out
- Create lists of books for various purposes (to-read, for a project, finished reading...)
- Hold/reserve up to five books that are currently checked out.



Grade 4 & 5: Check out and use book-choosing tools introduced last week.

Also, I worked with some classes in grade 4 about recognizing the signs of a well-organized paragraph using a traffic light metaphor.

A basic paragraph starts with a "green light" sentence to introduce the topic, continues with "yellow - keep steady - sentences" that fill in the supporting details and examples, and closes with a "red light" sentence to give the reader a clear signal that the paragraph is over.

We used level 4 "Step Into Reading" nonfiction books to practice identifying these types of sentences in published paragraphs, then we wrote our own.

The PowerPoint and handout are on the lessons page of my wiki under "Poetry & Writing." The idea for this lesson is from Education World.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Halloween Counting books

We have a large collection of Halloween books in our library. It's so big, in fact, I can even come up with themes within the collection: personal narrative Halloween stories, alphabet Halloween stories, Halloween stories about families, Halloween stories that are not scary (last week's post), and Halloween stories that ARE scary (next week's post!)

Here are six Halloween counting stories. These are all good for the preschool age and up to about grade 3. 

I saved my favorite for last.

In the comments: What's your favorite Halloween treat?


Six Creepy Sheep, by Judith Ross Enderle and Stephanie Gordon Tessler

Six creepy sheep decide to go trick-or-treating, but as they meet various costumed groups along the way, they disappear one by one. Tongue-twisting rhymes make this a good read-aloud, and the line ink illustrations have a spooky Edward Gorey feel. This would be a fun way to introduce some collective nouns such as "gaggle" (of goblins) "warren" (of witches), herd, flock, and "passel" (of pirates).


The Thirteen Hours of Halloween, by Dian Curtis Regan

This is a silly take-off on the song "Partridge in a Pear Tree." As each hour of Halloween approaches, a young girl receives a number of spooky gifts from her family members: "a vulture in a dead tree, two pumpkins carved, three fat bats, four witches' cats, five ghasssssstly ghosts!" This makes a fun sing-along if the words are posted and is a great memory exercise as each verse repeats the gifts from before. The colored pencil illustrations show lots of movement and picture each item for counting purposes.


On Halloween Night, by Ferida Wolff and Dolores Kozielski

On Halloween night, we count up all of the various creatures who are awake: one witch, two cats, three owls, and on up to thirteen ghosts. Written in free verse, each verse ending in a ghostly "oo-oo-oo-ooh", this makes a good rhythmic read-aloud. Since most of the creatures are forest animals, this would also be good to tie into a unit about nocturnal animals. At the end, we realize that the white streaks of translucent light that have floated through each picture are the thirteen ghosts who appear on the final page. The illustrations in muted watercolors capture the atmosphere of a cold evening.


Five Little Goblins, by Lark Carrier

This small book on card stock pages counts up what five little goblins (kids dressed up) see of a witch on Halloween night. Each one spies a different part of her: first, a broom; second, purple feet; and so on. As each part is revealed, cut-away pages show a bit more of her and the children hiding behind trees. Finally we see all of her on the last page. We've been nervous to see if she'll be a scary witch or a friendly witch.

The best part of this small quick read is the book's design: the increasingly narrow pages lead us closer and closer to the witch!


10 Trick or Treaters, by Janet Schulman

A cartoony group of ten trick-or-treaters sets out for some Halloween fun, but they gradually get scared off and leave. A familiar rhyming pattern helps children anticipate the next number down making this an engaging read-aloud for youngsters. For example: "9 trick-or-treaters, the night was getting late. A toad hopped near and then there were....8" The strength of this short story is the illustrations which show costumed children full of lots of smiles, having fun, and getting plenty of candy. Even the spooky creatures like bats are smiling! The final page invites readers to count up different types of candy; don't we all love to sort and count our Halloween candy?


One Witch, by Laura Leuck

A creepy counting book! One witch on a hill is planning to throw a party for all of her gruesome friends. We count along as her friends each give items to make a stew: "nine skeletons on a stone gave the witch a finger bone..." 

After the concoction is cooked, she sends out invitations so we get to see them again in different settings: "four goblins in their holes, three scarecrows on their poles..."  The best part of this story is the surprise ending because guess who else is invited to the party?

Two strengths here: highly detailed ink and watercolor illustrations show some of the creepiest Halloween creatures in their natural settings and the word choice of the rhyming text. It's a smooth and satisfying read-aloud that ends with a shock!



Saturday, October 8, 2011

Alphabet Guessing, Personal Narratives with Tomie, and Book-choosing tools

Week 7

PreK 3: Guiding Question - What are some words associated with Halloween?

We will have our fall vacation during Halloween this year, which means we only have a few weeks to enjoy all of the Halloween stories in our library! PreK 3 has the most to learn, so they got an early start this week with some simple stories that introduce the key vocabulary.

What is Halloween? by Harriet Ziefert

Little girl mouse learns about Halloween from her parents, and we learn alongside her. We learn about dressing up in costume, carving a pumpkin, and trick-or-treating. The treats may be candy, baked goods, or fruit - a refreshing change from the focus on sweets. As she learns about each new concept, we lift a flap to reveal the rest of the picture: trick-or-treaters behind the door, or a closet that opens to show costume ideas, or a pumpkin that goes from whole to cut with decorations. This is an ideal starter for young children who are just learning about Halloween. Thick pages and flaps are perfect for toddlers and up.

Boo Who? A Spooky Lift-the-flip Book, by Joan Holub

This small square book introduces Halloween vocabulary in a fun way. We're asked questions such as "Who is that in the pointy hat?" and we lift the flap to see a picture and text of the answer. A few of the words are tricky to explain to our littlest ones: mummies, for example, but we can at least describe the costume if not the full details.



The rhyming questions create a pleasing rhythm. Double spread watercolors have a friendly cartoony style. Geared to a preschool audience, the sturdy pages are another bonus.


PreK 4: Guiding Question - What colors do we know? What's the story of Elmer?

We learned the story of Elmer last week and retold it this week based on what we remembered. Our key point seemed to stick: Elmer is unique and his friends appreciate that about him. 

This week we read another Elmer story about a time when he and his friend played a joke on the herd. When we look at Elmer (also in plush toy form) we try to name all of his colors.

Elmer and the Wind, by David McKee

Elmer and his friend Wilbur play a joke on their friends by pretending to blow away on a windy day. When the joke is revealed everyone has a good laugh, but will Wilbur regret the prank? 

Later, he actually does blow away, and no one comes to his rescue because they think he's joking again. Happily he lands safely and makes it back home. This is would pair well with any version of The Boy Who Cried Wolf.

We all agreed that Elmer's joke did not show kindness to his friends.



Kindergarten: Guiding Question - What is a series? What is "character"?

We have read different series books each week to emphasize the concept "character". A character is the main person (or animal) in the story and s/he has a set of characteristics, a personality!

This week, we met Elephant and Piggie, two characters who are very different from each other. Elephant is a grumpy and paranoid, while Piggie is a happy and positive.

After learning about each character, we played "Elephant and Piggie Dance" on the computer. We chose three dances for each character to perform, started the music, and watched their moves. To play at home, click here or see the Early Childhood page on the library website.


Grade 1: Guiding Question - How can our background knowledge help us guess words? How can we indicate we're having a "text-to-self" connection?

We're continuing to enjoy fun alphabet books. The two we read this week both involved some guessing. We talked about how guessing requires us to search our minds for something we remember, something we've done or seen.

Grade 1 students excel in making text-to-self connections. Every two minutes we have someone who wants to tell about something the story reminds them of. This week, we introduced a signal to indicate when we're having that urge. We tap our temples like we're thinking hard; this tells me that the student is having a good connection to something we've read without stopping the flow of the story for others.

Tomorrow's Alphabet, by George Shannon

The simplest concepts are the best: what we see today may turn into something new tomorrow. So we can say "A" is for seed when we understand that later on it will become an APPLE. 

So, "B" is for egg...can you guess why?

Close-up realistic watercolor illustrations and large block text make this a good choice for a read-aloud since children can see and read the words themselves. Each letter is introduced on the left page, so we can hide the right page to see if students can guess the answer.

Look Once, Look Twice, by Janet Marshall

This is another simple concept book, done well. Each letter is shown as a pattern in nature. We need to guess the object or animal that starts with that letter. For example, letter "B" has the colors and designs of a butterfly wing. Letter "H" has the pattern of honeycomb.

This is a vocabulary builder since some of the objects are difficult (kingfisher, macaw, iris, asparagus...) Still the bold style of the book is appealing and guessing keeps kiddos engaged.


Grade 2: Guiding Question - What is a personal narrative? Who is Tomie de Poala?

After last week's tear-jerkers, I promised something more upbeat this week.

We read one of my favorite Tomie dePaola stories about his desire to become an artist very early in his childhood. Afterward, we looked at his wonderful website, found here and on the "authors" tab of the library website.

The Art Lesson, by Tomie dePaola

Young Tomie anxiously awaits the chance to have art lessons when he begins school. Although the art teacher comes infrequently, and he's heard she only gives students one piece of paper, he figures it's got to be a better experience than art with his regular teacher. With his regular teacher, he can't use his own 64-color box of crayons, and he has to use paint so cheap it flakes off the page!

Details like these amaze our students who are used to having regular art classes and plenty of materials to use. They also support our understanding of a personal narrative as a story that zooms into a particular moment in time and uses strong details to create an image for the reader.



Grade 3: Guiding Question - What can we tell about a book from its call number? 

Zig - Zag - Zoop along the shelves
Grade 3's are making the match between the call number listed for a book on the catalog and the book's location in the library. 

We practiced identifiying types of books based on their call numbers, practiced matching the first part of the call number to its section in the library, and practiced the zig-zag-zoop motion we use as we look for books alphabetically on the shelves. 

It goes like this:
zig = read across to the right
zag = drop down to next shelf
zoop = move UP to the next row

I think next week we'll make up a little dance to show this motion (along the lines of "Staying Alive!") 


Grade 4 & 5: Guiding Question - What tools can we use to select books on our own?
Read, Kiddos, Read!

Here's a scenario that happens at least weekly:

Student: Mrs. Ducharme, do you know any good books?
Me: (laughing) Yes, I know about 24,000. What kind of book would you like?

In an effort to give students more strategies to self-select their next book, we reviewed four tools this week. All of these are found on our library home page.

1) Our own catalog. Try Visual Search which gives pictures to follow to help spark ideas. OR, type in the name of a book you know you've enjoyed and see what other titles are listed under "You Might Also Like." OR, type a genre or topic into the search bar and then use narrowing tools like Interest Level and Genre to find titles.

2) Read Kiddo Read. Choose one of four main categories, then choose a genre. The list we get shows book covers and short summaries> Click each book for more information and often a trailer. 

3) Guys Read. A massive website geared toward boy readers. We love the categories to choose from ("Books with at least one explosion", anyone?) But we wish it showed more covers. Still a fun place to explore.

4) Book Adventure. A database that lets us tick off topics we're interested in and then generates a list of books that matches. It can return some strange results if we check too many items but can also lead to some new ideas.

With these last three tools, we MUST check the catalog as well to be sure our library has the book we want. If not, ask for it here (also found on the library home page via the link "Buy This Book (Please)"




Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Book Talk Tuesday: "Happy" Halloween Reads

While many students enjoy a good scare at Halloween time, some youngsters, especially our preschoolers, want "happy" Halloween books. Here are a few that hit the right note: fun, silly, and totally not scary!


Ghosts in the House, by Kazuno Kohara

A girl moves into a new house and finds it already inhabited by ghosts. No problem for her; she's a witch! But she's the sweetest witch around and makes a happy job of ridding the house of the ghosts. She catches them, puts them in the washing machine, hangs them on the line, and finds other purposes for them. Curtains! Tablecloths! Blankets! She and the ghosts all happily coexist after the girl takes charge. Illustrations of black and white woodblock prints on orange paper give a rustic and warm feeling. The stunning simplicity of the visuals and text led this to be a New York Times Best Illustrated Book of the Year in 2010.
(Note: This cover shows a different title via LibraryThing.com)


Boo Who? A Spooky Lift-the-Flap Book, by Joan Holub

This small square book introduces Halloween vocabulary in a fun way. We're asked questions such as "Who is that in the pointy hat?" and we lift the flap to see a picture and text of the answer. 

The rhyming questions create a pleasing rhythm. Double spread watercolors have a friendly cartoony style. Geared to a preschool audience, the sturdy pages are another bonus.


We're Off to Find the Witch's House, by Mr. Krieb

This is a fun rhyme about a group of trick-or-treaters who are being brave as they journey past creepy characters to find "the witch's" house. 

There's a fun sense of irony as we realize that the various spooks are actually other kids dressed up in costume; the group doesn't realize this until later. As they anxiously approach the witch's door, we're wondering along with them what will appear. Happily, it's a just costumed friend. 

The strengths of the story are the sing-songy beat of the poem and the strong word choice. For example, "We're galloping past a ghastly ghost  / a mostly misty, ghostly ghost, / a flying, floating, twisty ghost, / swishing through the dark." Chunky verbs and adjectives make this a good model for voice and word choice. Action-packed watercolor and ink illustrations are another plus.


See more Halloween books in our library HERE