Monday, December 31, 2012

Assign That Category - Grade 4 Dewey Continued

In our previous class, the students figured out the following Dewey categories by examining the books that lived in each section:

500s = science
700s = entertainment/hobbies (arts & recreation)
900s = history & geography

This time, their assignment was in reverse: figure out where certain topics would live. The following were the trickiest, since all of our brains don't work the same way as Melvil Dewey's. Where would YOU go to find the following? You can find the answers below the Room 10 photos (it was Pajama Day!).

  1. You have to find out when dinosaurs lived. 
  2. You are planning a trip to Hawaii. 
  3. You need to identify a rock you found on vacation. 
  4. You are doing a project about 16th century explorers.
  5. You want to find information on some famous paintings. 

 
 


Answers
  1.  Dinosaurs = 500s (even though they lived a loooooooooong time ago ... the 900s are only about HUMAN history)
  2. Vacation destinations = geography, or 900s (even though going on vacation is a recreational activity)
  3. Rocks = 500s (even if you found one on vacation)
  4. Explorers = 900s (even if you're doing a project for fun about them)
  5. Paintings = 700s (even if they are old and the artists lived a long time ago)

Credit for lesson idea: Anne Oelke via LMNet

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Book, Book, Book and Other Animal Sounds

The library often sounds a little like a zoo, but this past month, it also sounded like a farm! I read a selection of animal sounds books to the PreK, DLP, and K classes:

scholastic.com
arthuralevinebooks.com



harpercollins.com
Students got a huge kick out of the story of Bark, George (thank you to fellow librarian Suzanne Jordan, who recommended it!).

To support their retelling skills, students colored and cut out the characters so they could bring them home and share story to their families. (You can click on the link to access and download more copies.)

Then we watched this puppet-show version of the story:



Because students' animal sounds sometimes got a little ... enthusiastic ... I taught them the conductor's cut-off signal. Which reminded me of The Sesame Street All-Animal Orchestra, conducted by Seiji Ozawa:

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Room 7 Creativity

The fifth graders of Room 7 seem to all be artists ... they have wiped out our drawing book collection, and jumped on the chance to create their own holiday cards last week to send through the Wee Deliver system. I predict careers as graphic artists and illustrators!





Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Grade 1 BUG Research

As you may already have heard, the new Common Core standards emphasize informational text. It's never too early to start getting used to reading nonfiction books. In fact, several first graders at Garden City asked me earlier in the year to get more nonfiction for their section, because they prefer facts to stories. I've been working on it and welcome any donations!

In class recently, first grade students reviewed how to use a table of contents. They all received a book about bugs and then found the chapter that described how their bugs look. They drew a picture of their bug and wrote down at least one fact. Here they are at work:












Monday, December 10, 2012

Name that Category - Grade 4 Dewey

I don't expect my students to memorize the Dewey Decimal system - that's what the online catalog is for! I do, however, want them to get practice with categorization and classification - skills that are needed in the workplace. For example, in my prior life as a "mutual fund operations communications analyst," I developed filing systems and web site architectures. Being able to see how pieces fit together is important.

Last week, I set fourth graders loose in the 500s, 700s, and 900s, the sections with the most books and the most nonfiction circulations. Their assignment: by looking at the topics included in each section, figure out how they are related and name the overall category. For example, can you tell how the following topics go together?

Crafts    Sports    Magic    Riddles    Ballet   Costumes    Drawing    Music   

I'm happy to report that both Garden City fourth grade classes completed their assignment with time to spare. Here they are in action.







Sunday, December 9, 2012

Don't Let the Pigeon Touch the Books

In kindergarten, we are discussing book care in preparation for the students' first checkout. I decided to have them teach THE PIGEON some rules.

In case you haven't been introduced to the Pigeon yet, he is the star of a series of books by Mo Willems; the first one is Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! We read that and Don't Let the Pigeon Stay Up Late!, and I am happy to report that MOST students resisted his arguments.

Then we watched this video:


The students compiled a list of rules that the Pigeon should know. For example:

DO DON'T
use clean hands drop your book in a puddle
treat them gently rip the pages
leave the covers/wrappers on color in your book
put your book back where you got it throw your book at the wall


In our next class, we drew our own Pigeons; Mo Willems has step-by-step instructions for drawing the Pigeon on his site. Then each student chose a rule to teach him. Here is some of their work:







Sunday, December 2, 2012

Caldecott Voting - 2004 Style

2013 marks the 75th anniversary of the Caldecott Medal. This annual award from American Library Association, goes to "the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children." Several titles are already getting a lot of buzz, and I'll be taking a look at some of them with the second graders.

First, we're warming up with some past winners and honorees. I decided to start with the 2004 batch ... the year some of the second-graders were born. Here are the four books we read ... I covered up the medals on the covers so the kids wouldn't know which won what.


There was a CLEAR winner among Stadium and Garden City students. Here is the data, presented three ways. Which way do you think is the easiest to read?

Bar Chart


Data Table



Pie Chart

 


The actual winner of the ALA medal was my favorite: The Man Who Walked Between The Towers by Mordecai Gerstein, which is based on a true story. Here is the trailer for the recent documentary about the events, called "Man on Wire":




Saturday, December 1, 2012

Most Borrowed Books - November


Source: wimpykid.com
  • Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Third Wheel by Jeff Kinney
  • Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Greg Heffley's Journal by Jeff Kinney
  • Guinness World Records 2005 
  • Guinness World Records 2012 (still on list)
  • The PS Brothers by Maribeth Boelts
  • Sidekicks by Dan Santat 
  • The Wimpy Kid Movie Diary: How Greg Heffley Went to Hollywood by Jeff Kinney
  • The Worst of Friends: Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and the True Story of an American Feud by Suzanne Jurmain (still on list)
  • Big Nate Strikes Again by Lincoln Peirce

Thank You, FEN!

Source: guinnessworldrecords.com
It was nice to meet a lot of parents during conference night when they stopped by the book fair in the library. It was also really nice to receive about a dozen books from FEN to add to our collection. I processed them that evening, and they were all checked out the next day ... some already have long hold lists! The titles include:

  • Guinness World Records 2013
  • Weird But True! 4 :
    300 outrageous facts
  • The Hunger Games trilogy
  • Several Dork Diaries volumes
  • Two Big Nate volumes
  • Real-size Baby Animals 

THANK YOU!