Monday, December 31, 2012

Flash SALE...Happy New Year!!!!

Happy New Year, sweet friends! All I have to say is bring it 2013! I can't wait to see what this new year has in store for me, my family, and friends. I have a feeling that the best is yet to come! ;) To say "THANK YOU" for being such amazing followers, I am throwing a flash sale in my TPT shop! It only lasts until midnight tonight {January 1st}, so go get your shop on! Click on the link below to stock up in my shop! Hope you all have the most amazing new year! Love to all! 



Here are a few things that you will want to add to your collection for the winter months! You can click on any of the pictures below to find it in my TPT shop

Winter Graphing: 



Penguin Research: A Definite Fave! 



If I Lived in a Snow Globe! 



January & February Math Centers: 
     


Celebrate the 100th Day:
You can check out our 100th day from last year {HERE}.





What better time to practice friendly letters than February...and learn about famous American, Abe Lincoln! 





In March...My Leprechaun in a Jar! 


January would also be the perfect time to implement Reader's Workshop into the classroom. My newest RW unit will be on sale as well! 

Now...what are you waiting for?!? Here is to a blessed 2013! Happy New Year, y'all!!

Happily Ever After

Some of the most beloved stories, those most remembered into adult years, begin with, Once upon a time... and close with happily ever after.  In fact, in my experience, those seven words have an almost universal effect on listeners; people know something out of the ordinary is going to happen in-between.  When Once upon a time is read or said, anticipation grows, listeners lean in or move closer.  At the sound of happily ever after, there is always a collective silent or audible sigh.

Have you ever wondered, though, what happens after happily ever after.  Do The Three Pigs start a construction company specializing in earthship homes?  Does Little Red Riding Hood become an activist for the protection of wolves?  Do Hansel and Gretel open a health food store? Or as in Goldilocks and Just One Bear (Nosy Crow, an imprint of Candlewick Press) written and illustrated by Leigh Hodgkinson does what you least expect happen?


Once upon a time, there was this bear.
One minute, he was strolling in the woods,
all happy-go-lucky...
The next minute, he didn't have a crumb-of-a-clue
where he was.

In fact, this bear has gotten so far off course, he is no longer in the woods.  He is smack dab in the middle of a noisy, busy city, standing on the sidewalk in front of an apartment building.  He's pretty shaky at this point so he strolls into the entrance of Snooty Towers only to be more confounded by the revolving door.

Seventeen-floors-up later he is glancing into someone's cozy penthouse.  The peace and quiet are exactly what he needs as soon as he satisfies his hunger cravings.  These people certainly have terrible taste in porridge.

Their chairs are prickly, screechy and not quite as comfy as a real bed. On the third try he finds the perfect spot, a bed fit for a lost bear, for drifting off into dreamland. As you can imagine when the daddy person, mommy person and little person return home the longed-for solitude is shattered.

Who could have been drinking from the fishbowl?  Who sat on the cat? And who, yes who, is sleeping in the little person's bed?  Picture if you can when recognition dawns on two members in this group.  The tables are turned in a most delightful way.


The upbeat, you'll-never-guess-what-happened-next narrative penned by Leigh Hodgkinson is a welcoming invitation into the bear's adventure.  Comparisons, descriptive words and phrases, and the grouping of threes leave little doubt in readers' minds, they have entered into the world of fairy tales, albeit a much more modern one.  Humor, the appropriate exaggerations, placed at the perfect point to compliment the pace are the crowning touch.


Unfolding the matching jacket and cover offers astute observers a possible hint of the story's outcome; the red line from the bear's boot moving left to the back, winding through the forest where we see a golden-haired girl eating a bowl of porridge. Opening and closing endpapers, done in shades of blueprint blue, each different, show maps of the bear's trips to, and from, the city, marked by dotted lines from points A to B. An opening page of leaves, in a variety of unusual colors (lime, pink, navy blue, turquoise) scattered around a tree stump, bear's empty boots on top, with three birds perched on them, surrounded by white space provides a peek into the color palette used throughout the book.

Hodgkinson's clever, masterful use of mixed media not only extends the storyline but tells a tale not told by the text.  This chair is too ouchy shows bear trying to sit on the arm of a cactus.  Although she alternates between two-page spreads, single pages (some crossing the gutter), singular close-ups of bear grouped together, the flow is flawless.  Exquisite detail can be found at every turn of page; the leaves on the first page are part of the pattern on the little person's bedspread, the stores in the city have names such as Wolf's Clothing Boutique, The Coffee Beanstalk and The Ugly Sisters Beauty Parlor, the bear is always carrying the spoon or it can be seen in the illustration, the special text types used with certain words and at the conclusion the look on the cat's face is definitely wary unlike the happy grins worn by others in the room.


Walk with bear into fractured, fairy tale fun of the first order in Goldilocks and Just One Bear.  Author/illustrator Leigh Hodgkinson's writing and illustrations work beautifully together in a bright, spunky, funky sort of way.  Links to Hodgkinson's website and blog are embedded in her name.  Follow this link to Nosy Crow's page for some inside views of the book.  This link is to the Candlewick Press website for another glimpse inside the book.  I knew the illustrations in this book were outstanding, so I checked the CILIP Kate Greenaway Medal longlist for 2013 and it was there!

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Guest Post: Mouse Count!

I have a very special Guest Post to share this week. It is about the first swap item that I received from our recent First Annual Storytime Swap. So fun!

If you would like to learn more about the Storytime Swap, please click here for the original invitation post and here to see other items shared in this swap. 

If a swap is something that you would enjoy participating in, please feel free to contact me at storytimeabcs@gmail.com

Planning is underway for another swap. 
It will be soon and is in honor of Flannel Friday's birthday!

This Guest Post features Ann and her props for this fun mouse book by Ellen Stoll Walsh:

I adore Ms. Walsh's mice books
so I was very excited to see what Ann sent me!

Ann teaches preschool and loves to use props to share a book with her classroom friends. Here are the props that she chose to use with this book:



Ann says she found the stuffed mice at Walmart in the pet department. She also purchased  the container and lid at Walmart and the snake at the Dollar Store. The rock was not purchased. It is just a mouse-shaped rock that she found.

The props can be used for telling the story at storytime or at circle time. They can also be used by the children for re-telling purposes.

Ann also included a few other items to use with the book:

These are copies of simple shapes that can be used
as coloring pages for the children or
~ you didn't think I would neglect to find a way to flannelize a book did you? ~
you can use them as patterns for a flannel set.
Watch for a blog post about my flannelized version of Mouse Count!
What a FUN swap for me! I was very excited and happy to see what was in my box. It is so thrilling to get a surprise in the mail that I can share with my storytime friends in the New Year! 

I hope you enjoyed seeing what Ann sent! Oh, but wait!

There's more!

Ann also sent:

A cute little mouse and cheese for an extension activity

Here are a few pictures from Ann that explain how to use the mouse and cheese. It looks like lots of hands-on learning is happening here!

   


Thanks for taking a minute to check out my special Storytime Swap surprise. 

And a very special thanks to Ann
My storytime friends are going to fall in love with the book,  Mouse Count, thanks to you! 



And, as always,

HAPPY READING TOGETHER!




This week's Flannel Friday Round-Up is being hosted by Lisa on her blog, Libraryland
Be sure to swing over and check it out. 
It is the first Round-Up of 2013!

Storytime Swap 2012 Blog Hop

So excited for everyone to share their swap items!




Twitterville Talk #81

Twitter was fairly quiet this week as people were enjoying the time with family and friends celebrating the holidays plus lots of reading.  Still there were lively discussions about books being read; much sharing of titles.  Xena and I are wishing each and every one of you a very Happy New Year!  Don't forget to look for the giveaway question and keep reading.







Enjoy this video clip by author/illustrator Matt Traverse (Helen's Big World reviewed here) in the continuing series by Candlewick Press, We Believe In Picture Books!  This is a man who loves life and his work.





Thanks to Candlewick Press for this tweet and this year-long tribute to children's literature.








For those that champion the cause and understand the value of libraries this video is priceless.




Thanks to the New York Public Library for this tweet and for producing this informative, supportive and passionate video.





This is an outstanding resource listing some of the best books published and read during this past year, 2012 Nerdy Book Club Award Nominations.  Not only is Donalyn Miller one of the co-founders of The Nerdy Book Club blog, an educator in Texas and the author of The Book Whisperer but she has compiled these nominations in a Slideshare with annotations.

For the first person to leave in the comments three of the wives and husbands both having books in the nominations (three sets of two) I will send them a copy of Lane Smith's Abe Lincoln's Dream and Each Kindness written by Jacqueline Woodson with illustrations by E. B. Lewis.

Sending out a huge thanks to Donalyn Miller for all she does for the reading community.




Just in case you were wondering...'Hunger Games' Disney Infographic:  What If Your Favorite Characters Lived in Panem?

Thank to HuffPostTeen for this tweet.





This is an interesting infograpic on Social Media in 2012: Month by Month

Thanks to Jane Hart, independent advisor on Social Learning & Collaboration for the tweet and post.





Author of historical fiction title, May B. released in 2012, Caroline Starr Rose is asking for guest bloggers for National Poetry Month in April 2013.  Contact her via Twitter @CStarrRose .

All year long we readers have been treated to special posts simultaneously at Mr. Schu's Watch. Connect. Read. , the Nerdy Book Club and at Michigan fourth grade teacher, Mr. Colby Sharp's blog, sharpread in celebration of new titles.  These Sharp-Schu Trifectas have been gathered together by Mr. Schu.

Thank to John Schumacher, teacher-librarian, a 2011 Library Journal Movers & Shakers and blogger at Watch. Connect. Read. for these tweets.






Going out on a limb, they're calling the best for 2013 already---Best Books of 2013?: Our Picks For The Year's Biggest Reads  Look and see what children's and young adult books made the list.

Thanks to HuffPostBooks for this tweet and post.




Ten Digital Story Projects posted at Free Technology for Teachers seems to have some tested, good ideas ready for use in the classroom. 

Thanks to Richard Byrne for this tweet and post.







For fans of Marissa Meyer's Cinder, the prequel short story, Glitches, is free for a limited time only.

Thanks to Macmillan Kids for this tweet.







Interesting debate going on in The New York Times The Opinion Pages Do We Still Need Libraries?


Thanks to teacher-librarian and blogger at NeverEndingSearch, Joyce Valenza for this tweet.




These are some of my favorite tweets and quotes of the week.  Enjoy.




Friday, December 28, 2012

Don't Look Now But It's The...

Even before all the scientific studies, we knew in our deepest selves the power of laughter; feeling an overall sense of well-being the harder and longer we laughed.  Shared laughter with children, students, is the best of the best; the sound of their immediate joy, heavenly.  Having a sense of humor fine-tuned to the slightest nuance in a narrative or picture makes them the perfect candidates for the enjoyment found in a good story.

The popularity of graphic novels has thankfully grown by proverbial leaps and bounds in the past several years.  Their ability to hook those reluctant to read, with tightly woven narratives (some wordless) and artwork stunning in layout, design and detail, is a source of pleasure for all who want to bring more members into the reading community.  When looking through the nominations for the 2012 Nerdy Book Club Award for graphic novels, Bird & Squirrel On The Run! (Graphix, an imprint of Scholastic) written and illustrated by James Burks caught my eye; a title already on my TBR pile.


WHAT A...
...PERFECT...
...DAY...
...FOR...
...FLYING!

Zooming through the trees the delight of Bird is obvious as he extends joyous greetings to one and all.  Nearby Squirrel is on a mission scurrying with infinite care from point to point, ever alert to danger, to get one final acorn for his winter stash.  All is well until Bird swoops down and nearly scares him to death.

Speaking of death...Squirrel is sure vigilance is necessary to:  1. keep the Cat from enjoying him as a meal and  2. make sure he has enough acorns stored to fend off starvation during the winter. Squirrel turns down all invitations to fly with Bird determined to make it home with his last load.  But Bird flies back into his life much sooner than he thought he would.

Due to his devil-may-care curiosity Cat is now hot on Bird's tail.  Squirrel becomes a reluctant hero but looses all his food.  Circumstances have left Squirrel with no choice.  He has to travel south with Bird.

Neither the raging waters of a river and waterfall, the thunder and lightning of a ferocious storm, the deepest dark of an underground home, the vicious attack by a swarm of bees, the sudden cold of snow showers, the dangers of a slithering snake nor the horrors of a hungry hawk can dissuade Bird from his over-the-top optimism.  Squirrel, on the other hand, is nearly paralyzed by his persistent pessimism.  Of course Cat, in possession of at least some of those nine lives, is constantly prowling ready to pounce when they least expect it.

This clash of personalities with danger lurking around every corner leads to a humorous adventure that's an action bonanza.  The tenuous friendship of Bird and Squirrel (more on Squirrel's part than Bird's) is tested again and again.  Readers will be on the edge of their seats wondering if the two can, however briefly, assume some of the other's personality traits in order to complete their trip.  Will they be able to plunge with pleasure into the Great Unknown?


Within the first few pages the stark contrast of descriptive dialogue written by James Burks for his characters leaves no doubt in the reader's mind as to how each views life.  The non-speaking role (except for some loud meows) of Cat as an adversary heightens the differences between the two.  The playful, sometimes taunting, even sarcastic, verbal exchanges provide for laugh-out-loud moments.

Here is a single example after they've driven off a bridge into the river.  Bird begins the conversation.

WOOHOO!
HIGH FIVE!
WE LOST
THE CAT.

ARE YOU INSANE?
WE ALMOST DIED.
AND NOW WE HAVE
NO SUPPLIES.

BUT WE GET TO
FLOAT DOWN THE
RIVER ON A LOG,
AND THAT'S
PRETTY COOL.
JUST LISTEN TO
THE SOOTHING
SOUND OF THE
RUNNING WATER.

ACORNS
TO OAKS!
IT'S A WATERFALLLL!

WOOOHOOOOOO!


Using bright realistic colors Burks brings us panel by panel, page by page, into the madcap escapades of these two seemingly mismatched pals.  The first two pages with the goggle-clad yellow Bird zipping up and down and around the trees zooming in and out on his flight pattern sets the stage for the ensuing events. Following his pure delight is the furtive, frightened, overly cautious movements of the blue acorn-helmet wearing Squirrel intent on reaching his goal undetected.  Their squarish body shapes (not to mention Squirrel's head looking like a nut when he wears the helmet) add to the comedic effect.  When the plump feline enters the scene with the exaggerated mouth size, an emotional impact is guaranteed.

The looks on all the characters faces, the combination of eyes, mouths and general body language, are hilarious.  Extra details endear readers to the duo; Squirrel having a red bike with a cart attached for hauling nuts, Bird wearing a sink plunger as a hat when they begin their journey.  Then too, there's the faint trail of smoke coming from the Cat's tail hours after he's struck by lightning.  Lucky for Bird and Squirrel, without their knowledge, Burks has given him troubles of his own.


Who doesn't love to laugh?  Written and illustrated by James Burks Bird & Squirrel On The Run! is pure fun; perfect for readers of any age.  Shared troubles on the road south bring about changes, all for the good of a friendship founded and forged on differences.  This is one graphic novel not to be missed.

For more information about James Burks follow the link to his website embedded in his name above.  Here is a link to a page on his blog for drawing Bird.  I thought Bird's idea of a theme song for the friends was pretty cute, so here is a link to my version of his tune.

Organize Me....Please!!!! {Plus a FLASH GIVEAWAY}


Can I get an amen?!? Now...change house to classroom, and we have a winner! This year, I am determined to stop pinning and start implementing. {I will let you know how this works out for me!} 

Until then, I am counting my blessings, and I am teaming up with some of my sweetest bloggy BFFs to share some of my New Year's Resolutions. It never fails...one of my biggest resolutions {every.single.year} is to organize my life! Seriously, one can never be too organized! Right?!? 


Here are several steps that I am *going* to take in the next few weeks to "get-it together" and organize my life! 

Step 1: Erin Coronden Life Planner {Oh Yes!} 
I have never *ever* been a write it down kinda gal! However {and this is a big however}, I either have too much on my plate, or my age is getting the best of me, because I forget every.thing lately. I can't wait for this sweet little love to come in the mail. I am hoping that this can add a few years to my life and keep me going in the right direction! 

Step 2: Organize my plans and materials


It has been no secret this year that I have not been able to get ahead of the game. Moving grade levels each year has definitely presented it's share of challenges. Now that I am getting the hang of things, I hope to be able to get myself a little ahead each week. I love how my sweet friend, Lindsey, has organized her weekly materials. I think if I force myself to create a system, I will be better about thinking ahead and not waiting until the last minute. Something else that may add another 10 years to my life!  


Step 3: Organize my Paperwork! {Ay..yi..yi}


One major change from primary grades to elementary...the graded paperwork! It becomes very time consuming in the classroom trying to figure out who has turned in what...who is missing what...who hasn't taken what....! I am so in love with this little system for turning in papers from Simply 2nd Resources. I love how in just one glance you know exactly who has turned in what and what you are still missing. This is genius! Period! Check it out by clicking on the link above! 

Step 4: Organize my Chapter Books: 


I have posted information about how I organize my library many times, but one thing that I just hadn't quite figured out is how to level and organize all of my chapter books.  Then, I stumbled across this system above. Again...genius! This system uses paint sticks and alphabet stickers to organize books by level! Seriously?!? How easy is that? I love...love...love this and can't wait to give my chapter book organization a makeover ASAP! 

Step 5: Organize My Jewelry



I know, I know...you say this has nothing to do with school...*but*...if I could find all of my accessories each morning, I would arrive to school 15 minutes earlier! Which means that I could get more things ready in the morning and leave earlier in the afternoon. Or...it means that I could sleep 15 minutes longer in the morning. Both situations are a win for me...and my husband, since I am always asking...have you seen my________?!? {Like he even knows what the heck I am talking about, and he is *so* not a morning person.} This is happening for me tomorrow! I have already made plans for an "organize my closet" day. My jewelry is in need of some good TLC! Plus, how cute is that earring organizer?!? 

Okay...so these may be pins now, but they are turning into reality in my life! I have already started several projects. I will be sure to post updates and let you all know how much easier my life becomes with a little more organization! {No...That was not meant to be a joke!} :) 

Be sure and link up below to share how you are going to meet all of your organizational needs this year! 

NOW....

Here is a little treat from us to you!  Enter below for your chance to win some amazing resources to get your new year off to a great start! 

Giveaway Ends in 24 Hours! Don't Wait to Enter! 


a Rafflecopter giveaway

If you like what you see above, check out the following blogs for more fabulous ideas! 

Erica: Erica Bohrer's First Grade

Lindsey: The Teacher Wife
Michelle: Fab-u-lous in First
Amy: Step Into Second Grade
Amanda: One Extra Degree
Anna: Crazy for First Grade
Cheryl: Primary Graffiti 
Deanna: Mrs. Jump's Class
Deedee: Mrs. Wills Kindergarten 
Natalie and Rachelle: What the Teacher Wants
Sarah: First Grader At Last
Kim: Kinder Gals
Kathleen: Growing Kinders
Cara: The First Grade Parade
Abby: The Inspired Apple 

Now what are you waiting for...link up and show us how you will get organized with the new year! 

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Across The Ocean Blue

 The experience of reading The Perfect Storm:  A True Story of Men Against the Sea by Sebastian Junger is forever etched in my mind.  Junger had constructed the truth so well, I was compelled to consume every written word as quickly as possible, as if I were reading the latest adventure thriller.  The same can be said of historical fiction.

When a reader feels a part of the place, time and people through the careful combination of known facts within the narrative, the author has truly brought the past into the present.  Documentation exists regarding Nicholas Young, the smallest member of the crew sailing aboard the Endeavour with British explorer James Cook on his first voyage.  Author Michael J. Rosen has written Sailing the Unknown: Around the World with Captain Cook (Creative Editions), with illustrations by Italian artist Maria Cristina Pritelli, so readers can relive the journey through the eyes of one who was there.


19 August 1768, Plymouth
Once there's a fair Wind,
Endeavour will leave England for a Continent
None has mapped---None knows exists.
She will not return soon---if She returns.

If Someone finds this Journal
my Name was Nicholas Young,
11 Years of Age.

An apt description of the crew numbers, their positions and their quarters follows.  Beginning with the day they set sail Young documents events, moods, opinions, and weather with descriptions using each of his five senses.  We readers hear, see, smell, taste and touch as he does.

When the crew is seasick we feel queasy.  We pause in our reading to listen intently for the scuttling of rats and cockroaches.  As first-time sailors are dunked three times into the ocean by rope for crossing the Equator, it's hard not to hold your breath, sputtering and shaking your head when air replaces water.

Sometimes Young will write an entry within a few days of the previous one.  Other times a month or more will pass before we are privy to life aboard the Endeavour again.  Geographical locations reached  are added to certain daily notations; Canary Islands, The Equator, Rio de Janeiro, Tahiti, New Zealand. 

Amiable interactions with the Tahitians are duly noted especially the addition of Tupia and his servant Tayeto to the crew when they leave.  He speaks in detail of the less than cordial welcome with the Maori and native Australians.  Discord among the crew, disease, nearly sinking on the Great Barrier Reef, and more sickness, the sight of strange plants and animals are painstakingly recorded before home, England, is sighted.

Michael J. Rosen's skill as an author is to convey much with a few chosen words; each ideal for depicting a moment, a memory, a characteristic, a scene and the importance of each.  Rosen constructs the day's recollections using the the language and writing style of that particular time period given the education of the writer.  As we read these journal entries of Nicholas Young, each painting a clearer, more complete picture of life aboard the Endeavour, we become the shadow of Nicholas Young.  Here is a single sample.

Day 151
Howling Squalls and Snow---Endeavor is a Bottle
tossing on angry Swells. We rope down Everything---
Thrice Captain cannot steer Her through the Straits.


According to a short biographical sketch, illustrator Maria Cristina Pritelli prefers hand working using a mixed airbrush with acrylics technique to create her pictures.  In this title the effect is a stunning portrayal of life at sea, and of lands, flora, fauna and people discovered.  The jacket flap opens to complete the front visual sans text with Nicholas Young perched upon a mast.  The cover and endpapers are in tones of brown with a smooth matte finish replicating that of a journal.

Following the introductory foreword the title pages are a map of this first voyage seagulls flying as Young walks across the page carrying a trunk with a portrait of Cook placed in left bottom corner.  Alternating between single framed pages with text opposite (small drawings enhancing the narrative) and double-page spreads with a liberal use of various shades of blue, readers are at sea with the Endeavour crew.   The tiniest of details add to the depth of our understanding and an appreciation for those 1,056 days spent away from home and those 40,000 miles traveled.  Perhaps my favorite illustration is of their third Christmas celebrated without friends or family, sadly death has visited them again.. We see Endeavour in full sail small through the clouds upon the water as if we are birds looking down.


Sailing the Unknown:  Around the World with Captain Cook written by Michael J. Rosen, with illustrations by Maria Cristina Pritelli, is an engaging, lively recreation of the years spent with James Cook aboard the Endeavour through the voice of Nicholas Young.  I highly recommend this title as an excellent example of historical fiction and as an incentive for further research about this particular voyage.  If the study of European Explorers is a part of your State curriculum, as it is in Michigan, this book should be at the top of your list.

Links embedded in the names of the author and illustrator will take you to their websites.  There is a two page resource and activity guide linked here.  This link will take you to the publisher's website so you can see inside the book.  Here is a link to a simple Annotary I created about Captain James Cook.