Thursday, September 29, 2011

A Journey to the New World: The Diary of Remember Patience Whipple (Dear America Series)

Dear America: A Journey to the New World
Kathryn Lasky
Published by Scholastic Inc.
Copyright 2010


     Twelve year old Remember Patience Whipple (Mem for short) is a young girl who goes with her family on the Mayflower in order reach the New World where they will be able to practice their religious beliefs without being persecuted by King James of England. On her journey Mem experiences loss as well as hope for the future in a new place. Young readers will find, as Mem did, that nothing is as it seems. They will learn about how difficult the journey from Holland to the New World was, the hardships of settling on new land, the first real Thanksgiving, and much more. 

Kathryn Lasky
Reading Level: Grade 4-9; Lexile: 900L

Suggested Delivery: Independent Read, Guided Reading

Web Resources: 
Author's Site: Here you can find out more about Kathryn Lasky, the author of A Journey to the New World and many other children's and young adult novels. 
Activities and Discussion Questions: Here you will find discussion questions and fun student activities to share with your students. Make succotash, the recipe that one of the Indians shares with Mem in the story. You can also read an interview with Kathryn Lasky and find helpful websites to further the students' understanding of the Plimoth Settlement.

The following links are lesson plans to help students further their knowledge of how it might have been for the Pilgrims who came to the New World on the Mayflower. The second link will lead you to a number of resources that focus on different events and people that are mentioned in A Journey to the New World such as the first Thanksgiving, the Mayflower Compact, Squanto, etc. 
Key Vocabulary: 
 scours
 petticoats
 turpentine
 contortions
 sieve
 providence
 incredulous
 sundry
 draught
 cajoling
 cantankerous
 victuals
 scurvy
 adze
 tansy

Suggestions for Activities for Students:
Before Reading: Before having the students read this text I would suggest having a discussion about what the students know about the Mayflower, Pilgrims, and the first Thanksgiving. The teacher could record the student's thoughts on a KWL Chart (What they Know, What they Want to Know, and What they Learned). It would be interesting to see what the students know or think they know about these different topics. A teacher might find that they need to address some misconceptions that the students have. Should a student say something about these topics that are wrong the teacher should ask where they got that information and advise them to pay close attention the text they are about to read to see if that truly happened or not. 
Teachers can also help the students fill out the "What they Want to Know" part of the KWL Chart. Ask students what they wish to learn about these topics. This will help them engage in the text because they will be looking for information to help them find answers to their questions. 

During Reading: While reading the text have the students focus on the vocabulary. In their reading and writing journals have them write down what page they saw the vocabulary word on, what they think the word means based on context clues, and what the word actually means after they have looked it up in a dictionary or online. 

After Reading: Have the students fill in the rest of the KWL Chart with what they learned after reading the text. Go over the misconceptions that students had and have the student who had the misconception explain what happened in the text that was different from what they stated at the beginning. For comprehension purposes have the students respond to inferential discussion questions. These may help them make connections to personal experiences or perhaps make connections to other texts that students have read. Click here for examples of thought provoking questions to ask students after they have read the text. 

Awards and Acknowledgements:

"More than a supplement to classroom textbooks, this series is an imaginative, solid entre into American history." -- Publisher's Weekly
"Engaging, accessible historical fiction." -- School Library Journal 

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Thank you, Mr. Falker


Thank you, Mr. Falker
Patricia Polacco
Published by Philomel Books 
Copyright 2001

Mr. Falker
In school, have you ever felt as if you just weren't getting things as quickly as the other kids? Maybe you don't do your math times tables as fast? Maybe you weren't as creative when it came time to draw or paint? Maybe you didn't run as fast? For Trisha, she couldn't seem to read as well as everyone else. As years went on her teachers really never paid much attention to the fact that she wasn't able to read very well. She could create beautiful pictures but when it came to words on a page all she saw was a jumble of letters. Soon other students started to pick on her and bully her. This caused her to become very isolated and scared. It wasn't until her teacher Mr. Falker realized what the issue was and was determined to help Trisha overcome her reading problem - dyslexia. Trisha became very thankful to her teacher Mr. Falker for helping her overcome her fears, frustrations, and reading impairment. These are the types of teachers who make a difference and help children realize what their potential really is despite what others may say or do to make us think otherwise. 
Reading Level:  Grades 3-5; Lexile: 650L
Suggested Delivery:
Read-Aloud, Small Group Read
Web Resources: 
Patricia Polacco



Author's Cite: This is the author's website where you can find information about the book and it's author, art work from the text and you can even create your own postcard with the illustrations from the text. You can also browse the other children's books that she has created!


Lesson Planning: This is an example of a lesson plan that focuses on the development of comprehension using the text Thank You, Mr. Falker. This lesson plan provides worksheets, diagrams, and helpful discussion questions that will engage the reader all while helping them develop their comprehension skills. 


The following links are more examples of lesson plans that could be used to help students expand their thinking about the text and other connections they can make to other subjects, life situations, etc. These lessons include writing activities, vocabulary, art, topics for journal writing, etc.



Key Vocabulary: torture, elegant, cunning, bravery, ladle, twilight, mole, odyssey
Suggestions for Activities for Students:
Before Reading: Before showing the book cover ask the questions (Questions were taken from this lesson plan by Nancy Drew of Tecumseh, Ontario) 
  • Have you ever really wanted to learn to do something? How did you do it? Was it easy or difficult?
  • If it was difficult, how did you feel? Were you able to do it? Who or what helped you? Who or what didn't help you?
These discussion questions can be used as a good initiation to get into the text. As the student discuss what challenges they have had or are having the teacher could write these challenges on a large piece of chart paper. (Note: Do not write names next to the difficulties each student is having as it might be a sensitive subject and we want to make it clear that they are not the only ones who may have this difficulty. Maybe give examples of other well known individuals that might have their difficulty.) Next to what the students might be having difficulty with write down what they say helped them or what other students say might help that 
difficulty.
Other questions you might want to ask the students before reading the text are:
What are your predications for this story after seeing the cover of the book?
Why do you think the author titled the book Thank you, Mr. Falker?
Who is Mr. Falker?
It would also be helpful to mention the vocabulary words that the teacher selected for the students to focus on during the read-aloud or small group reading.

During Reading: As the teacher reads the story students should focus on the vocabulary that was mentioned before the lesson. After reading the sentence in which the vocabulary word is in ask the students if they can use context clues to help them figure out what the word means. Have the students try and connect the vocabulary words to their own life or an experience that they have witnessed. For example, ask the students if they have ever met someone who was "cunning" or if they can share with the class an act of "bravery" that they have seen or heard about.

After Reading: A fun and creative activity that a teacher can use to give to their students would be to make a character time-line. The students could be given a sheet of paper that has the significant events that happened to Trisha in the story (click here for an example). Explain that the students have seen the illustrations in the book but you want them to make their own illustrations using what they know from the story. Encourage the students to make their illustrations as original and creative as possible and not rely so much on the illustrations in the book but just the text and the information on the timeline provided. Students can take long pieces of blank white paper, cut out the words from the timeline provided, paste them on their timeline paper, and begin to draw/color their illustrations to go with the text.  
Awards and Acknowledgements: 
Parent's Choice Honors, 1998
Rhode Island Children’s Book Award Winner, 2000


Publisher's Weekly Review:
Fans of Polacco's (Thundercake; Pink and Say) work know well her talent for weaving her colorful family history throughout her picture books. Here Polacco shares her childhood triumph over dyslexia and discovery of reading in an inspiring if slightly formulaic story. Young Trisha is eager to taste the "sweetness of knowledge" that her grandfather has always revered (here symbolized by drizzling honey onto a book and tasting it, which harkens back to Polacco's earlier The Bee Tree). But when she looks at words and numbers, everything is a jumble. Trisha endures the cruel taunts of classmates who call her "dumb," and falls behind in her studies. But finally the encouragement and efforts of a new fifth grade teacher, Mr. Falker, trigger a monumental turning point in Trisha's life. She begins to blossom and develop all of her talents, including reading. Polacco's tale is all the more heartfelt because of its personal nature. Young readers struggling with learning difficulties will identify with Trisha's situation and find reassurance in her success. Polacco's gouache-and-pencil compositions deftly capture the emotional stages?frustration, pain, elation?of Trisha's journey. Ages 5-up. 
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Booklist Review:
Ages 5^-9. Like many of Polacco's picture-book stories, this one is autobiographical. Who would believe that this gifted storyteller had started off with a serious learning disability? From kindergarten on, Trisha gets attention because she can draw; but she hides the fact that she can't read--all she sees on the page are "wiggling shapes" --until her fifth-grade teacher discovers Trisha's problem, gets her special help, and sets her free. "That little girl was me," Polacco says in a final note. As always she tells the story with intense emotion: no understatement here; reading is "torture." The big line-and-watercolor illustrations are bright with color and theatrical gesture, expressing the child's happiness with her grandparents in a family of readers, her fear and loneliness in the classroom ("she hated hated hated school"), her anguish when the kids jeer at her in the schoolyard, and her joy when finally she reads the words on the page ("she was happy, so very happy"). Trisha isn't idealized: we see her messy and desperate, poring over her books. This will encourage the child who feels like a failure and the teacher who cares. Hazel Rochman
School Library Journal Review:
Kindergarten-Grade 4AOnce more Polacco shares a personal story with engaging results. This moving saga of her struggle with a learning disability makes an inspiring picture book. Young Tricia wants desperately to read but when she starts school she finds that the words "wiggle" on the page. Teased by her classmates, she retreats into dreams and drawings. It's not until the family moves to California and Tricia has managed to reach the fifth grade that a new teacher finally recognizes her pain and distress. What's more, he does something about it. Without belaboring the point, the author clearly shows the ways that children internalize critical comments made by others and suffer for their differences. This touching story is accompanied by illustrations in Polacco's signature style. Youngsters, as well as adults, may find themselves choked up at the emotions so eloquently described in words and pictures. Yet, like the tears young Tricia cries at the end of the book, these are ultimately tears of joy. Thank you, indeed, Mr. Felker (the real name of the teacher involved) for making it all possible. Readers will be grateful for the chance to recognize, appreciate, and share in Polacco's talent and creativity.ALisa Dennis, The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, PA
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Crispin: The Cross of Lead

Crispin: The Cross of Lead
Avi
Published by Hyperion Books for Children, New York
Copyright 2002


With the recent death and burial of his mother's death, Asta's son is overwhelmed with the new realities that are now in front of him. He must find out about his birth and childhood as well as why the steward has declared him a "wolf's head" meaning anyone is allowed to kill him and would collect a reward should they succeed. In order to survive Asta's son must flee his home town and run away from everything he knows. Crispin is confused, scared, and alone as he makes his way into the woods so that he can travel without being seen easily. 
Along his journey, Crispin finds an abandoned town affected by the plague or "Great Morality". It is here that he meets Bear; a large man that travels around the kingdom juggling, playing music, and dancing in order to make enough money for food. It is Bear's mission to get to Great Wexley for a dangerous but necessary meeting. Crispin makes a vow to Bear that he will be his servant and although he desires to run away he refuses to break his vow. Along the way Bear teaches Crispin to play music on a recorder and also protects him from the soldiers who are still on the hunt for Crispin. 
When the duo arrives at Great Wexley the soldiers are everywhere and it is clear that this is an unsafe place for Crispin. Bear is captured by the soldiers and Crispin is determined to get him back. In doing everything he can to save his teacher and friend he learns the truth about his mother and his noble father. Using this newly found information Crispin is able to find it in himself to make the ultimate sacrifice to save Bear. 


Reading Level: 
Grade 6; Lexile: 780L
Suggested Delivery: 
Independent Read, Guided Reading
Web Resources: 
Avi
Author's Cite: Here you will be able to look at not only the other books that Avi had written, but there are also links to help teachers help students understand different aspects of the text. Through this website there is a teacher's guide that provides different ways to engage the reader and help them comprehend what is happening in the text. These guide sheets give information like Plot Summaries, Key Ideas and Issues, Discussion Questions, and Writing Activities. This website could give teachers great ideas to initiate discussions and help students understand background information relating to the text for better comprehension.


Reader's Worksheet: This link will bring you to a worksheet that teachers can give to students in order to keep the students engaged in the text and to see if the students are able to understand what they are reading. This worksheet begins with explicit questions about the text and as it goes along the questions become implicit. This will challenge the students to expand their thinking about the text they are reading. This will also help students develop their ability to make connections to other texts they read and this will help their comprehension. 
The following links are other teaching guides that may be helpful in discussing this book with students. These guides include questions, summaries, and other information regarding the historical information that is related to the story. These guides can help teachers engage the students by giving them worksheets and other activities.   
 Vocabulary:
Crispin Chapter by Chapter Vocabulary List - This link is a list of the vocabulary words worksheet that might be words students have not seen before or that they do not know what they mean. This list would be great for a guided reading group. Students can use this list as they go. They might be able to use context clues to help them understand the meaning of the word or they might have to find other means to find the meaning (i.e. dictionary, internet sources).


Suggestions for Activities for Students:


Before Reading - Crispin: The Cross of Lead is categorized as a historical fiction text that follows the main characters who are living in Medieval England in 1377. The time period in which this book takes place covers a range of historical events and other historical information that could help the student comprehend the text better. For instance the text discusses the "Great Morality" or the Great Plague, the role of Religion during the Middle Ages, and a Feudalist government. By discussing these topics before they read the students will be able to make connections within the text to historical facts. Click on the link to see descriptions about the historical context that this story was based on: Avi Activities Link
During Reading - As students are reading the text a teacher could put together a worksheet that will help the students understand the vocabulary by using context clues to fill out the worksheet. To begin the guided reading group the students could be given the worksheet and asked to fill out as much of the worksheet as the can using context clues from the chapters they were assigned to read. For the questions that some students did not get but others did the teacher can generate a discussion so that students can help each other in figuring out what the meanings of the words are. If there are questions that all students did not get correctly then the teacher can refer the students to their dictionaries and have them look up the word and discuss what they found. This will help the student have a firm understanding of the vocabulary that is embedded in the text. Click here to see an example of a vocabulary worksheet. (Look for the page that is titled "Dictionary Digs")


After Reading -  Once the students have read the text the teacher could give the students an overall questionnaire about the text to see if they can identify key elements of the text, the plot, main ideas, etc. Also, the questions should challenge the students to think more critically about what they have read by using explicit as well as implicit questions.On pages 5 through 9 of this document (Reader's Worksheet) there are questions that require students to use their knowledge of the story to write in depth responses. As the questions go on they focus more on implicit questions rather than explicit. This type of worksheet can be given to students and completed before the students begin their next text.


Awards and Acknowledgments:
Newbery Award, 2003
ALA Notable, 2003
Starred Review: School Library Journal
Starred Review: Publishers Weekly
Booksense Top Ten
Best Children's Books of the year, 2003 list, Bank Street College of Education
Children's Choice nominee, Kansas 
Children's Choice nominee, Vermont
Children's Choice nominee, Texas
Colorado Book award
School Library Journal Review:
Grade 6-9-As with Karen Cushman's The Midwife's Apprentice (Clarion, 1995), the power of a name is apparent in this novel set in 14th-century England. "Asta's son" is all the destitute, illiterate hero has ever been called, but after his mother dies, he learns that his given name is Crispin, and that he is in mortal danger. The local priest is murdered before he can tell him more about his background, and Aycliffe, the evil village steward for Lord Furnival, declares that the boy is a "wolf's head," less than human, and that he should be killed on sight. On the run, with nothing to sustain him but his faith in God, Crispin meets "Bear," a roving entertainer who has ties to an underground movement to improve living conditions for the common people. They make their way to Great Wexley, where Bear has clandestine meetings and Crispin hopes to escape from Aycliffe and his soldiers, who stalk him at every turn. Suspense heightens when the boy learns that the recently deceased Lord Furnival was his father and that Aycliffe is dead set on preventing him from claiming his title. To trap his prey, the villain captures Bear, and Crispin risks his life to save him. Avi has done an excellent job of integrating background and historical information, of pacing the plot so that the book is a page-turner from beginning to end, and of creating characters for whom readers will have great empathy. The result is a meticulously crafted story, full of adventure, mystery, and action.
Cheri Estes, Detroit Country Day Middle School, Beverly Hills, MI
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Publisher's Weekly Review:
Set in 14th-century England, Avi's (The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle) 50th book begins with a funeral, that of a village outcast whose past is shrouded in mystery and whose adolescent son is known only as "Asta's son." Mired in grief for his mother, the boy learns his given name, Crispin, from the village priest, although his presumably dead father's identity remains obscure. The words etched on his mother's treasured lead cross may provide some clue, but the priest is murdered before he can tell the illiterate lad what they say. Worse, Crispin is fingered for the murder by the manor steward, who declares him a "wolf's head" wanted dead or alive, preferably dead. Crispin flees, and falls in with a traveling juggler. "I have no name," Crispin tells Bear, whose rough manners and appearance mask a tender heart. "No home, no kin, no place in this world." How the boy learns his true identity (he's the bastard son of the lord of the manor) and finds his place in the world makes for a rattling fine yarn. Avi's plot is engineered for maximum thrills, with twists, turns and treachery aplenty, but it's the compellingly drawn relationship between Crispin and Bear that provides the heart of this story. A page turner to delight Avi's fans, it will leave readers hoping for a sequel. Ages 8-12.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Booklist Review:
Gr. 5-9. In his fiftieth book, (see interview on p.1609) Avi sets his story in fourteenth-century England and introduces some of his most unforgettable characters--a 13-year-old orphan, seemingly without a name, and a huge, odd juggler named Bear. At first, the boy is known as Asta's Son, but when his mother dies, he learns from a priest that his name is really Crispin. He also quickly comes to realize that he is in grave trouble. John Acliffe, the steward of the manor, reveals himself to be Crispin's mortal enemy and declares the boy a "wolf's-head," which means he is anyone's prey. Clutching his only possession, a lead cross, Crispin flees his village into a vast new world of opportunity--and terror. At his lowest ebb, Crispin meets Bear and reluctantly swears an oath to be his servant. Yet Bear becomes much more than a master--he's Crispin's teacher, protector, and liberator. Avi builds an impressive backdrop for his arresting characters: a tense medieval world in which hostility against the landowners and their cruelties is increasing. There's also other nail-biting tension in the story that builds to a gripping, somewhat confusing ending, which finds Crispin, once weak, now strong. Readers may not understand every nuance of the political machinations that propel the story, but they will feel the shifting winds of change beginning to blow through a feudal society. Ilene Cooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Number the Stars

Number the Stars
Lois Lowry  
Published by Random House Children's Books
Copyright 1989


       Annemarie Johansen is a ten-year-old girl from Copenhagen, Denmark who is questioning her ability to be brave. World War II is raging in Europe and Annemarie has little understanding of what exactly is going on around her. She begins to realize the true danger that has entered Denmark when her best friend Ellen and her family must go into hiding because the German soldiers are beginning to relocate all the Jews in Denmark. Annemarie's family takes Ellen into their care as the rest of her family goes into hiding without knowing if they will ever see each other again. With her best friend living in utter fear for her family and herself, Annemarie finds the strength and courage to get her friend and her friend's family to safety in Sweden. She realizes that she is willing to put her life on the line to save her best friend and realizes that there are some things worth fighting for. To do this has made Annemarie one brave ten-year-old.           
Reading Level: Grade 4-6; Lexile: 670L
Suggested Delivery: Whole-class Read (Social Studies/History Class), Guided Reading
Web Resources:
Lois Lowry
Author's Site: Here you can learn all about Lois Lowry and her other awards winning books. You will find interview videos, teacher discussion guides to her novels, pictures, speeches etc. 

Lessons/Activities for Students All in One: This site has numerous teaching guides for this novel that include Vocabulary Lists, Activities to generate inferential comprehension of the text, Lesson plans, etc. This site also provides a number of other websites you can go to for even more information on how to use this text in your classroom. 

The following links are more teacher resources to use that will help students further understand not only this text but also the Holocaust. These include lesson plans, activities, interviews with Holocaust survivors, and further readings that are age and reading level appropriate should students need or want to do more research on this topic. 

Key Vocabulary: This text has a unique challenge for students regarding language; there are words in a different language. For this challenge it might be a good idea to bring up a German translator from the internet so that the student can not only see what the words mean but also what they sound like. At this link you will find a vocabulary worksheet that will help students understand the English words as well as a few of the German words.  
Suggestions for Activities for Students:
Before Reading: Before reading this historical fiction text it is important to do an initiation or lecture about the time period and the events that are occurring. Students need to have background knowledge so that they can fully understand what the characters in this text are going through. 
Also before reading you could have a class discussion about one of the main themes of the text which is bravery. Begin by asking the students what makes someone brave? What are the characteristics of a brave person? How can we as students be brave? The teacher should record the students comments on large chart paper. 

During Reading: As the students read the teacher might give them graphic organizers and reading journals to compare and contrast characters in the text, pick out specific passages of the book that might be confusing or interesting, display the plot/climax/falling action/etc, summarize key moments or ideas, etc. These notes will help them remember and reflect on what they have read. They might also help the students make connections to further research or class lectures that they may have as they continue to learn about the Holocaust. 

After Reading: To assess the students comprehension of the text the teacher may give the students questions to respond to. It could be better for the students to be asked questions that are more inferential so that they might experience empathy for those to had to experience the Holocaust. For example, have the students do a personal reflection on the text by asking them  whether they feel optimistic or pessimistic about human nature. You can find this and other questions and activities at this link
Also after reading, the teacher should go over the topic of discussion that the class had before they read the text. Ask questions such as: What made Annemarie brave and why? What other characters in the text showed that they were brave? How would you be brave to save your best friend?

Awards and Acknowledgements: 
2-Time Newbery Award Winner
Newbery Medal, 1990
National Jewish Book Award, 1990
Sidney Taylor Award, 1990
National Jewish Libraries Award, 1990
Publisher's Weekly Review:
Set in Nazi-occupied Denmark in 1943, this 1990 Newbery winner tells of a 10-year-old girl who undertakes a dangerous mission to save her best friend. Ages 10-14. Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
School Library Journal Review:
Grade 3-7. The gripping story of a ten-year-old Danish girl and her family's courageous efforts to smuggle Jews out of their Nazi-occupied homeland to safety in Sweden. Readers are taken to the very heart of Annemarie's experience, and, through her eyes, come to understand the true meaning of bravery. Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.