Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Whispers from a Blog

I have thought about this blog all summer long. I feel like it has been calling me to write. It's been several years since my last post. I've also thought, sheesh...I should just give it up. Then, I hear it calling me back. It's one of those things like Facebook status updates. I am in a situation or doing something, saying something, creating something and I think I should post about it. I can't tell you how many times I do this for Facebook status updates. THANK GOD I don't put everything that crosses my mind. Who cares, really?

So perhaps I will come back the personal blogging world.
I'll let this be my start.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Time Goes By...so quickly

Summertime! Ah sweet summertime! This summer is a bit strange as I have nothing official planned. No camp, no mission trips, no vbs, no vaca... So you see...usually there's always something.
So you must wonder what I do with all my time? It's actually quite easy. I go to lunch with friends, shop, read, and shhhh...I go to my classroom. (But, don't tell my friends at work that) Some of them tend to think I'm what the Kardashians call kra-kra. Believe it or not I can think more clearly about the next year during the summer. My mind is free from the dirty t word...testing.
In my free time I decided to try and do a project a week...err...every two weeks.
So my first project was pretty quick and simple. (oh and most of these ideas came from pinterest of course)
I got this first project from the blogger from Simply Living
Here's what she did...



So I went along the same lines...except I just used clear tape rather than Mod Podge. This way I didn't end up with the wrinkles. 
Thanks for the great idea for my old junkie drawers Jen!
Here's Mine...
I changed my color scheme in my room so I might change out the bottom. The picture really doesn't do it justice. The lighting in the room wasn't great...

So this was my first project...I have done others, but I'll have to post later...After all it's the 4th of July! Time to go hang on the porch and watch some fireworks!



Wednesday, May 23, 2012

STAAR test Fun

Yeah, I know...my title seems like an oxymoron. But, I do what I can to make it fun...this time, for the teachers.
I wanted to do something special to for my teacher friends to ease the STAAR stress. Also, monitoring our little beans for 4 straight hours can be grueling. So, after searching online and on the great Pinterest. I decided to copycat and tweak a teacher survival it as seen here. Rather than a beginning of the year teacher's survival kit, I decided to call it the STAARVIVAL KIT!


I added little stickies with dumb notes on them, to maybe make them smile while they are pacing...bored to tears...






Anyway...just thought I'd share my STAAR fun...see? No oxymoron.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Module 15: Draw Me a Star


Book Cover Image

Summary
This is a story of creation. It begins with an artist drawing a star and that star which moves on and asks to draw a sun and on to humans and even more of a modern scene. This could be considered a story of creation. 

APA Reference
Carle, E. (1992). Draw me a star. New York, NY: Penguin Putnam Books. 
My Impressions
I thought the pictures and stories were beautiful in Draw Me a Star. Though some may be taken back by the nudity of the humans in the middle. This is probably the main concern for it to be on the censored or challenged book list. 

Professional Review

In this large, brightly illustrated picture book, an artist draws a star, which asks him to draw a sun, which asks him to draw a tree, which asks him to draw a man and a woman . . . and so on. There are biblical overtones, with the man and woman next to the tree looking like Adam and Eve before the Fall, but within a few pages the house is built, the tulips are up, and the scene becomes modern, from houseplants to clothes. Soon, the night asks the artist to draw a moon, and the moon requests a star, bringing the text full circle. Then there’s a switch. A drawing lesson demonstrates how to make an eight-pointed star. Next, the artist’s star carries him, floating Chagall-like, across the dark, star-spangled sky. On the last page, Carle addresses a letter to his “Friends” describing how his grandmother showed him how to draw a star while reciting a nonsense rhyme, and how his trip on a shooting star inspired this book. The illustrations, in Carle’s signature style, are collages of painted, torn, and cut papers. A free-spirited, original offering. (Reviewed Sept. 15, 1992)— Carolyn Phelan
Phelan, C. (1992). Booklist. 


Library Uses
Draw Me a Star could be used to show children how fingerpainting in the illustrations can be done even by a grown up illustrator.

Module 14: For Laughing Our Louder


Book Cover Image

Summary
A book of poems that are silly and fun for all ages. Animals play as the main character in most of the poems. 

APA Reference
Prelutsky, J. & Priceman, M. (1995). For laughing out louder. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf.

My Impressions
I read this book to my 3rd graders as well. They love poems. It has made up words and made up ideas that are sure to "tickle your funny bone" as the cover of the book states. 

Professional Review
Prelutsky and Priceman repeat the successful combination of For Laughing Out Loud (1991) with nonsense verse from many poets and bright, slapstick illustrations. Much is visceral, literally (“I’m very grateful to my skin / For keeping all my insides in” ), with lots about smells, foods, and all kinds of bodily distortions and dislocations. Some verses fade out, with forced rhyme and blah repetition; but there’s plenty of silliness in wordplay and situation to show kids that language can be fun. Lilian Moore’s “I Left My Head” is wonderfully surreal; there’s the same deadpan tone in X. J. Kennedy’s “The Vacuum Cleaner’s Swallowed Will.” The poets in this anthology relish the sounds of words (“Down in Patagonia / A walrus caught pneumonia / From playing its trombonia / While swimming all alonia.” “ ). Everyone will have a favorite to read aloud. (Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1996)— Hazel Rochman
Rochman, H. (1996). Booklist.

Library Uses
This is a great introduction to poems and how they can relate to stories with rhyme. 

Module 13: Tales from Outer Suburbia


Book Cover Image

Summary
Tales in Outer Suburbia is just that. It is one book with many short imaginative tales. The beginning is a tale of a water buffalo in the middle of an empty lot, he doesn't talk. He only points passers by in the correct direction if they ask. Another tale is of a foreign exchange student (who is not human). He comes and is inquisitive about the small things in the country. Each tale contains an element that is out of the ordinary but riveting. 

APA Reference
Tan, S. (2008). Tales fom outer suburbia. New York, NY: Arthur A. Levine Books. 

My Impressions
Shaun Tan definitely has a different approach, or better yet an imaginative mind. His books are always original. It always leaves the mind to wonder, did something like this really happen somewhere? You really have to follow along every page to think deep about what the story is about. I generally enjoy Shaun Tan's illustrations above his writing.

Professional Review
After teaching the graphic format a thing or two about its own potential for elegance with The Arrival (2007), Tan follows up with this array of 15 extraordinary illustrated tales. But here is an achievement in diametric opposition to his silent masterpiece, as Tan combines spare words and weirdly dazzling images—in styles ranging from painting to doodles to collage—to create a unity that holds complexities of emotion seldom found in even the most mature works. The story of a water buffalo who sits in a vacant lot mysteriously pointing children “in the right direction” is whimsical but also ominous. The centerpiece, “Grandpa’s Story,” recalling a ceremonial marriage journey and the unnameable perils faced therein, captures a tone of aching melancholy and longing, but also, ultimately, a sense of deep, deep happiness. And the eerie “Stick Figures” is both a poignant and rather disturbing narrative that plays out in the washed-out daylight of suburban streets where curious, tortured creatures wait at the ends of pathways and behind bus stops. The thoughtful and engaged reader will take from these stories an experience as deep and profound as with anything he or she has ever read.
— Jesse Karp
Karp, J. (2008). Booklist.

Library Uses
Students can write a tale from their neighborhood and add an out of this world fictional character. 

Module 12: Starry Messenger

Book Cover Image




Book Summary
Starry Messenger is told in a story format of Galileo Galilei's life as a philosopher. It begins with Galileo as a boy and his great intellect. He went to great schools and had big ideas about the earth and it's placement in the universe. Galileo went on to create what is now called a telescope to look at the stars. This is where he discovered the earth was not the center of the universe. Every page includes actual documentation from Galileo's journals and book, The Starry Messenger. The book details Galileo's trial against The Church, which disagreed with his philosophy. It is said that it was years later that The Church went back and claimed Galileo was right all along.




                     
APA Reference


Sis, P. (1996). The Starry Messenger: Galileo Galilei. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.


My Impressions


In my opinion, Starry messenger could be considered part biography and part autobiography. Though, it is classified as biography for juvenile literature, much of the book contains actual words from Galileo. I definitely believe this book is on a higher elementary reading level as far as Galileo's words. Some of my 3rd graders struggled with it because most of the text was in cursive script. The main storyline was easily read by my 3rd graders since it was in plain text. But, I believe for the reader to truly get the gist of the story they should read both texts (cursive and print). The storyline is very basic as far as the plain text, and probably wouldn't make for an extremely interesting story if it weren't for the illustrations. I found myself looking for Galileo in each illustration. Overall, I learned something new and enjoyed the book. I plan to keep it in my classroom a bit longer to see some of my other students thoughts.


Professional Review
Sis celebrates the life, ideas, and genius of Galileo in a picture book that achieves a brilliance of its own. Relating events in Galileo’s life, the book offers a sense of the world in which he lived and makes readers understand why his work was dangerous to the church and ultimately to himself. Large, beautiful drawings reflect the ideas, events, books, maps, world view, and symbolism of the times. These intricate ink drawings, idiosyncratic in concept and beautifully tinted with delicate watercolor washes, are complemented by smaller drawings and prints that illustrate a side-text of significant dates, time lines, quotations, comments, and explanations. These are printed in cursive and sometimes in serpentine or circular shapes that force the reader to turn the book around to make out the words. Without a doubt, this unusual picture book will attract an audience of adults who appreciate the art of Sis as well as the legacy of Galileo. The questions of whether children will be drawn to the book and what they will take away are more problematic, since the text and illustrations will be more rewarding for a reader who already has some knowledge of Galileo and the period. Still, those drawn to the book will find that it works on many levels, offering not just facts but intuitive visions of another world. An original. (Reviewed October 15, 1996)— Carolyn Phelan

Phelan, C. (1996). Booklist. 


Library Uses


It is most likely that this book will be used with students researching an invented, scientist, or mathematician. Though, it can be used for research in the field of the beginnings of science and our knowledge of the Earth's place and involvement in the universe.