Last year, students loved listening to Ada's Violin: The Story of the Recycled Orchestra of Paraguay, written by Susan Hood, which we read as a COCBA nominee. I mentioned that we should try to make our own instruments out of recycled material. We didn't have time last year, and one student remembered and asked about it on the first day of school and continued to ask every month! We finally got around to it in March. In the meantime, I brought it lots of recycled cardboard like cracker boxes, cereal boxes, cardboared tubes, egg cartons, etc. The elastic bands are from the daily mail delivery to the office, so the only thing I had to buy was masking tape. Before we started, the students watched Brain Pop videos about music and sound and shared what they had learned about sound in music class. Then they got busy! Students also discussed and practiced learning dispositions that are essential to maker projects, such as persistence, creativity, and flexibility. Students played a short concert and reflected on the experience. We loved it! Second graders listened to The William Hoy Story: How a Deaf Baseball Player Changed the Game. After reading the book, students generated a list of questions they had related to the story. Students sorted the questions into categories such as sign language, baseball, William Hoy, deafness, and miscellaneous. The categories weren’t always immediately clear, and students discussed and defended their choices. Pairs of students were given questions to answer. They chose an information source which they thought would mostly likely help them answer their questions. After finding answers, students shared their knowledge with their classmates. They reflected on their new learning, and of course they have new questions. Fourth graders read the book One Plastic Bag, by Miranda Paul. This is the true story of a woman in the Gambia who was concerned with the many plastic bags that were littered throughout her village and were killing goats, ruining their gardens, and contributing to malaria outbreaks. She and a group of women began using the bags to crochet into purses. They cleaned up their village and earned money for food, health care, and education. This book is one of the current elementary Nutmeg Nominees. After listening to the story, the students came up with many different questions. Students consulted different sources to find answers to their questions. They reread the book and looked at the author's note and a timeline in the back of the book. They looked at the book's website and watched a video showing how the women made the bags into purses. They searched Pebble Go Next and Britannica Online. We emailed the Connecticut State Library to find out how plastic bags got to the Gambia. A librarian promptly emailed us back with links to oil refineries and plastic bag manufacturers and videos showing plastic bags being manufactured and shipping containers being loaded. We weren't always able to get answers and had to think of different ways to find them. We tweeted the author, Miranda Paul, to find out how long it took her to write the book. She answered us and invited us to video conference. Each group chose one question and had a chance to talk to the author. It was a real-life opportunity to practice digital citizenship. Ms. Paul was wonderful! She gave us very detailed answers to our questions. Many of the questions from Mrs. Negrelli's class focused on the goats in the story. To answer their questions, we video conferenced with Amanda Thomson and two of her students from Middletown High's Vocational Agriculture program. We got to conference with the goats, too! What a great book and opportunity for the kids. A student commented, "I learned so much today." Yes! Students reflected on the experience.
Kindergarten through third graders have enjoyed Pat Zietlow Miller's Sophie's Squash, one of the nominees for the Charter Oak Children's Book Award. In the story, Sophie's mom said that a squash could not be a friend. The students had a lively discussion about this, and one insightful student said it mostly depended on if you had enough imagination. Who knew a squash with a little face drawn on it could be so charming?
We have wrapped up our Mock Caldecott unit for 2016! To begin the unit, second and third graders took a quick look at twenty books and voted on which ones they wanted to read together as a group. Eventually we narrowed it down to four: After hearing each story, students discussed and rated each book based on the following criteria, which are adapted from the official Caldecott criteria: Illustrator’s artistic skill Appropriate art style for the story Pictures help tell the story Kids like it. Kids discussed these things with a partner and as a whole group. After hearing all the stories, students voted for the book they thought should win the Caldecott Medal. They picked a book and explained why they thought it should win. We held an award ceremony to announce the winners. Students read descriptions of the books and then the winners were announced.
The envelope, please! Third place was Waiting Second place was Shark Detective First place was Finding Winnie. The following week, we watched a video of the ALA Youth Media Awards (Caldecott is announced around 55 minutes), and the kids were very excited to recognize some of the winners. Here’s what the kids had to say about Mock Caldecott: I am always searching for new ways to increase the amount of time students are actively learning. So this year, instead of showing book trailers or giving book talks to introduce the new Nutmeg Nominees, I decided to try book browsing. Each student gets a copy of one of the books. They have four minutes to look at the title and front cover, read the summary, and read inside they book. They decide if they would or would not like to read the book and give specific reasons why. Then, they pass the book to their neighbor and do the same thing for a new book. Students were engaged during the activity and told me that they enjoyed learning about the books that way.
This was our first year participating in a Mock Caldecott unit. Watch the Animoto video to get the highlights!
The results are in! Connecticut kids have chosen Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper as the Nutmeg Award winner for 2014. Here are the official results from the Nutmeg Award website:
Intermediate Book Award Total Votes: 17,349
Forty-eight (48) fourth and fifth graders voted for their favorite 2013-2014 Nutmeg books. Here are the results:
The Candymakers-12 Closed for the Season-7 The Fingertips of Duncan Dorfman-5 Wildfire Run-5 The Great Wall of Lucy Wu-4 Inside Out and Back Again-4 Out of My Mind-2 Wild Girl-4 Saving Armpit-2 Mike Stellar: Nerves of Steel-1 Check back soon to see the official statewide results! |
AuthorKerry Darby Archives
April 2019
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