This week in the library, fourth grade students will be experiencing life on the Underground Railroad with Harriet Tubman, thanks to National Geographic's webquest. Students must choose which paths they wish to take as they follow Harriet across New York and into Canada.
Check it out: Moses is Coming
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Chapter book of the week: Boys Without Names
I love all things Indian....movies, music, and food. Especially food. We typically go to our favotite Indian restaurant every other weekend. So when I saw that a new chapter book about the horrors of child labor in India, I had to read it. When I read the review, I thought it was a non-fiction adult book, but I was pleasantly surprised to see that it is actually a juvenile chapter book. Kashmira Sheth's Boys Without Names will have students sitting on the edge of their seats, and would be a great read-aloud when discussing India or child labor.
Gopal's family is forced to leave their village and is lured to the big city of Mumbai, where jobs are supposedly plentiful. While wandering in the slums, Gopal is offered a job at a factory, which turns out to be a sweatshop. Gopal is locked in a shanty with five other boys and is unable to tell his family where he went. The boys must try to band together to escape Scar, the boss who has them gluing beads on picture frames for twelve hours a day. Will they escape and find their families, or will they be sent to the fireworks factory and never see their families again? This book will keep students guessing right until the very end.
Gopal's family is forced to leave their village and is lured to the big city of Mumbai, where jobs are supposedly plentiful. While wandering in the slums, Gopal is offered a job at a factory, which turns out to be a sweatshop. Gopal is locked in a shanty with five other boys and is unable to tell his family where he went. The boys must try to band together to escape Scar, the boss who has them gluing beads on picture frames for twelve hours a day. Will they escape and find their families, or will they be sent to the fireworks factory and never see their families again? This book will keep students guessing right until the very end.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Book of the Week: Jamie O'Rourke and the Big Potato
St. Patty's day is almost upon us, and that means looking for a good read-aloud for my students. Tomie DePaola's Jamie O'Rourke and the Big Potato is an excellent choice for first through third graders. You really can't go wrong with anything by Tomie DePaola, but this book has some great tie-ins that would be easy to do with very little prep.
This book is an excellent choice not only for St. Patrick's Day or folktales, but also for cause and effect. Every action causes as reaction, so I have been charting causes and effects on the whiteboard. And there are some good vocabulary words in there, too. Practice your Irish brouge and check this out!
This book is an excellent choice not only for St. Patrick's Day or folktales, but also for cause and effect. Every action causes as reaction, so I have been charting causes and effects on the whiteboard. And there are some good vocabulary words in there, too. Practice your Irish brouge and check this out!
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Chapter book of the week: Emmy and the Incredible Shrinking Rat
I am excited about this book for many reasons. Not only did it get starred reviews from Booklist AND School Library Journal, the rat mentioned in the title is from Schenectady! I was intrigued by Lynn Jonell's choice, and I assumed that she must be from the northeast, so I did a little research. She is not from the northeast, however, so I because even more intrigued and I wanted to find out how Rat came to be from our city. I emailed her, figuring that I would never hear back from her, but she wrote me back that very same day and said that she loved the way Schenectady sounds when you say it. She liked it so much, she decided to come and visit, and the third book in the series actually takes place in Schenectady, mostly in the Stockade area. In my opinion, this book has it all: humor, mysterious characters, and a local tie. And if that isn't good enough, Mrs. Jonell offered to email any of our students who would like to chat with her. This would be an excellent choice for a classroom read-aloud, the possibilities for extensions are endless!
Book of the week: A is for Abigail: An Almanac of Amazing American Women
March is Women's History Month, so I will be highlighting some books that would be great to share this month. A is for Abigail: An Almanac of Amazing American Women by Lynne Cheney (yes, that Cheney) is my first suggestion. Done in alphabet format, one woman per letter (or sometimes more than one), this is a great choice because you could highlight a different woman (or group of women) every day and read the book for the entire month. The illustrations are whimsical, and while this book highlights some of the standard women that we all know, it also mentions some women that students probably have not heard of, such as the first woman chief of the CherokeeNation and the first woman governor. If you're looking for some new women to highlight, check this book out!
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