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Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts

Thursday, June 10, 2010


Sisters and Brothers: Sibling Relationships in the Animal World
by Steve Jenkins and Robin Page
(Non-Fiction Primary)

Summary
Sisters and brothers. Sometimes you love and sometimes you want to scream and shout at them! People aren't the only ones though with sibling issues...animals have them too! This uniquely illustrated book lets the reader into the lives of many different animals from armadillos to naked role rats and black widow spiders. Did you know that armadillos are born with in quadruplets that are identical or clones of each other? Can you imagine 3 more of you? Sisters and Brothers is a great book to find out more about animal sibling relationships in addition to learning about animal lives and animal behaviors!

Discussion Questions
1. What set of animals siblings to you most relate to? Why?
2. What was the most surprising thing you learned in Sisters and Brothers?
What did you used to think before?

Author's Website
http://www.stevejenkinsbooks.com/

Other Books to Check Out
Hottest, Coldest, Highest, Deepest by Steve Jenkins
Looking Down by Steve Jenkins
Slap, Squeak, Scatter: How Animals Communicate by Steve Jenkins
What Do You Do When Something Wants to Eat You? by Steve Jenkins

APA Citation
Jenkins, S. & Page, R. (2008). Sisters and brothers: sibling relationships in the animal world. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Books for Children.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010




When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead

Discussion Questions
1. By the end of the story, Miranda finally recognizes that her friendship with Sam had started to decline before that day Marcus punched him on the street. Why didn’t she see it before? Where there any clues throughout the text that lead you to predict why Sam acted the way he did. Have you ever been in a situation like Miranda’s and Sam’s? How did you deal with it?


2. What changes does Miranda go through from the beginning to the end of the text? How does she grow as a friend? A daughter? A student? Or as a person in general? What are some important turning points for her throughout the text? What have been a couple important turning points in your life in regards to friendship, family and/or school?

Activity
Create a class book on friendship, choices, and/or family.
Throughout the text, the author uses various categories for chapter titles just like in the game show The $20,000 Pyramid. Type out the category titles and put into a hat or container. Have each student pull out one category and brainstorm 3 to 5 clues that go along with the category.

Students will be writing a personal narrative with one of the following themes: friendship, choices and consequences, and/or family. Encourage students to think about Miranda and her challenges throughout When You Reach Me for ideas. Within their personal narrative, the student must include three to five clues to support their category. Compile all students’ narratives into a class book. Each piece of writing will have the title of the student’s category.

Students should have the chance to read others’ writing, give feedback, and discuss the various themes/lessons learned in small groups. For an extra challenge, students should try to identify the clues in the writing that go along with the category.

Have students write a letter to someone you cannot reach.
Miranda receives multiple letters from someone that is unknown to her throughout most of the book. Marcus was able to travel back to time to send his letters to Miranda, someone who, in the “real world” he would not have been able to reach.

Write a letter to anyone at any point in time that you may not be able to reach. This could include: someone who has died or lived at a different time, someone in your life you may not know, someone you don’t know where he/she is, someone you may know but are afraid to tell him/her your thoughts/feelings, etc…

When writing your letter, consider what you want him or her to know about you, your life or even their life. Would you give them advice? Seek advice? Express feelings? Ask questions? Try to fix a wrong or redeem yourself for a mistake you had made?