Monday, July 30, 2018

PD Reads on Nature Based and Eco-Learning


        "Normally I share on the children's books that line the shelves in my classroom, however, I wanted to share a few of the books that have lined my own shelf these past couple of months. This past winter and spring I wanted the focus of my professional development (pd) reading to be on eco-learning (naturalist learning or nature based learning). Here's a little snapshot of each book that I'd recommend to other educators who have the same passion and interest" N. Grimm

The Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv. Children spend less time outdoors in nature more than ever before: Richard Louv explores the causes that have lead to this nature deficit culture children live in currently through a great deal of research that he shares in this award winning book--a must-have for any educator's bookshelf who wants to cultivate and implement eco-learning in their classroom and school.

The Nature Connection by Clare Walker Leslie. If a teacher were ever in need of a resource packed with nature based lessons and activities, then this ought to be the book to pick up. From garden planning, to building a nature table, to exploring dirt, The Nature Connection is sure to lay out a wide variety of ideas for the whole year--every season--to choose from to take into your classroom.

Botany on Your Plate: Investigating the Plants We Eat by Katharine D. Barrett. This book is a great curriculum resource for bringing gardening into your classroom. We did a lesson out of it this spring that the kids loved on taste-testing various garden vegetables and collecting data on them.

The Sense of Wonder by Rachel Carson. Carson weaves together a beautiful narrative, parried with lovely photographs, of her days exploring outdoors with her young nephew and on the importance of helping children keep their "inborn sense of wonder" through nature.

Cabinet of Curiosities: Collecting and Understanding the Wonders of the Natural World by Gordon Grice. This book shares on the art of collecting the nature treasures that peek our curiosity or serve as a memento of a memory made--the art of bringing natural history into your life. I still have nature finds from my own childhood in a small wooden cabinet on display that remind me of days spent walking sandy shores or hiking through the Colorado mountains. The book has a small section on building one's own cabinet of curiosities and caring for your specimens, with the majority of the book focused on classifying specimens with the Linneaus system. This would be a great reference book to have in a class library for older elementary students to practice classifying specimens and building their own collection.
And a couple of articles from across the web that resonated with me while I've been learning more on integrating eco-learning into the classroom...

7 Books on Tide Pools for Children

Seven new titles have rotated into our class library for our last summer inquiry on tide pools. Check them out!
Ocean Soup by Stephan R. Swinburne. Student learn about different tide pool creatures through rap and rhyme.

Is This a House for Hermit Crab? by Megan Mcdonald. Readers follow a little hermit crab along the sandy shores as he searches for a new home.

A Swim through the Sea by Kristan Joy Pratt. An alphabet book about creatures from A-to-Z of both tide pools and the ocean deeps. There's specific facts per each animal given as well for older students to expand their knowledge further. 

In One Tidepool by Anthony D. Fredricks. Follow a young curly-haired girl to the beach as she explores the creatures that make their home in tide pools through a clever rhyming narrative.

Barnacle is Bored by Jonathan Fenske. Underneath the pier lives a barnacle who's grown bored with the predictable rise and fall of the tide life he lives. One day a bright, colorful fish swims by and barnacle learns a lesson that 'excitement' isn't sometimes all we imagine it to be.

Shell by Alex Arthur. From DK Eyewitness, all the information a young scientist could need about shells with corresponding photographs.

Flotsam by David Wiesner. A wordless book that tell the story of a young boy who is treasuring hunting along the beach--and treasure he does indeed find--through vivid illustrations.

7 Gardening Books for Kids

Check out these 7 beautiful stories on gardens and all the wonders they can hold for you and your young readers!

Grandpa Green by Jane Smith. A young boy shares the story of his grandfathers life through the topiary trees he's made in the garden.

The Imaginary Garden by Andrew Larsen. Most gardens grow with soil, sunlight, and water, but Theo and her grandpa's garden grows with paint and their imagination. A lovely story of how a grandpa shows his granddaughter how they too can have a garden even when they live in an apartment lacking in dirt.

In the Garden with Dr. Carver by Susan Grigsby. A small community of rural children learn first-hand from Dr. George Washington Carver how to grow their own food having struggled with planting and farming due to depleated soil from cotton farming.


Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt by Kate Messner. Young readers discover the many treasures to be found in the garden beds and beneath the dirt from which their roots grow.

Jack's Garden by Henry Cole. Told in familiar verse to This is the House that Jack Built, Children read about the steps to building a garden all the way through seeing blooms pop up from the ground in vibrant color.

Linnea's Windowsill Garden by Cristina Bjork. Explore Linnea's world of gardening through various activities, stories, and how-to's projects. From organizing a pea Olympic game to scrumptious recipes, this book is bound to be a favored narrative resource book for young green thumbs.

Tops and Bottoms by Janet Stevens. A lazy, sleepy bear gets tricked by a clever hare in this retelling of an American slave story. Who will come away with the most food from the harvest? 

10 Must Have Insect Books for Your Classroom


        Our classroom library was recently invaded with many insect-tastic reads for our upcoming unit on insects! Here are 10 of my favorite insect and bug books to introduce to youngsters:

Bugs in My Hair by David Shannon. A hilarious tale of finding--horror of horrors--live in your hair! How did they get there? What are they doing hidden in your roots? And when will they ever leave?!

The Grouchy Ladybug by Eric Carle. A grouchy, bossy ladybug stumbles upon many other creatures to learn how to be a kinder and more polite insect.

Are You a Dragonfly? by Judy Allen. From the well written Backyard Books comes yet another story of an amazing, unique insect: the dragonfly.

The Big Bug Book by Margery Facklam. Discover the 13 largest insects in the world with this reference book. Each insect is drawn to actual size in the illustrations to help readers get a picture of just how big these creepy crawlers can grow.

Caterpillar, Butterfly by Vivian French. With charming illustrations, a young girl and her grandfather observe a the metamorphose process of a caterpillar into a butterfly.

Ant Cities by Arthur Dorros. This book showcases all the life that takes place deep in an ant hill--how to identify different types of ants and all the different things they do as a colony.

Some Bugs by Angela DiTerlizzi. The vibrant, bold insect illustrations will capture any child's--and adult's--attention to pick it up. A great introduction to children about all the many things bugs can do.

Where Butterflies Grow by Joanne Ryder. Another excellent  book that explains the life cycle of a butterfly in simple story prose.

The Magic School Bus Inside a Bee Hive by Joanna Cole. Elementary students are sucked into a bee hive with Ms. Frizzle and her class to learn all about the many benefits of bees. 
The Ultimate Bugopedia: The Most Complete Bug Reference Ever by Darlyne Murawski. An awesome reference book for children to identify all the different varieties of insects in folk's backyards across the globe.

6 Books to Celebrate Valentines Day

6 Books to warm your child's heart is the days leading up to Valentine's Day!

Mamma, Do You Love Me? by Barbara M. Jones. Set in the arctic, a little girl tests the boundaries to see just how much her mother really loves her... and it's a love without end or limits.

Guess How Much I Love You by Sam McBratney. Can you measure how much you love someone? It can be hard to do... even harder to put into words as this father and son rabbit discover.

Happy Valentines Day, Mouse! by Laura Numeroff. Mouse is busy at work making valentines to share with each of his friends to tell them exactly why he loves them.

The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams. The classic tale of a little stuffed rabbit who dreams of nothing else but to be real. He learns though that becoming real is a process that requires a great deal of love, and sometimes love brings heartache... but equally, joy!

The Valentines Bears by Eve Bunting. This bear couple cut their hibernation season short to celebrate Valentine's day with each other, a jar of honey saved from summer, and other surprises for each other. (Update: see how we used this book in our classroom to practice making inferences here.)

How Raggedy Ann Got Her Candy Heart by Johnny Gruelle. After a disastrous flight high up on a kite, Raggedy Ann gets a thorough cleaning up, and a special gift of a candy heart.

Rotating Library for Winter Book Themes

Here's a look at some of the recent titles that have rotated into our class library for these chilly winter days...
Sugar Snow by Laura Ingalls Wilder. The delightful tale of Laura and Mary eating sugar snow cakes in the big woods after pa's long day making maple syrup.

Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin. The true story of William Bentley who photographed snowflakes, thus contributing to the scientific community's knowledge on these beautiful winter crystals. The book has charming woodcut illustrations that correspond with the story by illustrator Mary Azarian. 

The Little Polar Bear by Hans de Beer. A simply sweet story of a polar bear cub who finds himself on an iceberg, floating away from his father after hunting one day--and the adventures that follow.

Trouble with Trolls by Jan Brett. A small girl journey's up a snowy mountain, but trolls keep thwarting her as they attempt to kidnap her beloved dog.

Do Like Kyla by Angela Johnson. Join Kyla as she follows her older sister around on a snowy day filled with many sister memory making moments.

Brave Irene by William Steig. Sent on a mission from her dressmaking mother, little, but brave, Irene weathers a snowstorm to deliver a package to the duchess.

Snowmen at Night by Caralyn Buehner. This certainly has been one loved book by my students and as soon as I put it out, it's checked out and gone into the hands of a student. Not only is it a fun tale of snowmen playing at night while the world sleeps, but part of the fun is spotting the pickle-nosed snowman on each page if you can! 

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Favored Children's Books of 2015

 
Looking back over year 205, this small stack of children's books were not just my own favorites of that year, but also my students'.
  • What Do You Do with an Idea? by Kobi Yamada - I read this story at the beginning of the school year to my students in conjunction with a couple of different activities on what creativity is and how it would look for each individual student in the upcoming school year. The story follows a little boy who has an idea (which is depicted as an egg), which grows and grows... until it explodes into being. The book starts out in black and white and slowly grows more colorful to show the children visually the growth that's taking place in the idea "egg."
  • The Princess and the Pony by Kate Beaton - All Princess Pinecone wants for her birthday is a mighty steed to show off her warrior side. But what does she actually get? A very pudgy, stout, crazy-eyed pony... that farts. A hilarious tale to read and laugh at over and over again. Maybe I can relate to this story more than I should be able to and I love Beaton's work too much, but this was by far my personal favorite book of the entire year.
  • Home by Carson Ellis - A beautiful picture book that celebrates all the different types of houses found around the world... and in myths and tales known by children alike. My students loved pouring over the pages of this inspiring book during the beginning of the year when they had to design their own house. 
  • The Tea Party in the Woods by Akiko Miyakoshi - Kikko runs after her father, who forgot grandma's pie, one snowy day, and along the way she comes to a strange house in the woods. When she peeks into one of the windows she sees several woodland animals sipping on tea. They warmly welcome her in to join them in their tea party. The illustrations are absolutely charming with the primarily black and white pages with the happy pops of color in between.  
  • Lady Pancake and Sir French Toast by Josh Funk - GAH!!! There's only one drop of maple syrup left in the refrigerator! And what ensues next, is the most epic breakfast food race yet between Lady Pancake and Sir French Toast. This book will get your children giggling right from the start. 
  • Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh by Sally M. Walker - I picked up this book to read to my students for our upcoming unit on A.A. Milne who wrote the well known children's stories Winnie-the Pooh. It shares the true inspiring tales of the bear that eventually becomes personified in Milne's tales of Christopher Robin, Pooh, and Piglet too! A charming non-fiction story told in wonderful narrative tone. 
  • Atlas of Adventure by Rachel Williams - Unlike your average atlas that shows the locations of countries and rivers and geographical landmarks alike, this atlas highlights the adventures to be had in all of these wonderful far off places (or maybe even your own backyard). From snorkeling in the Great Barrier Reef to exploring the pyramids in Egypt, this is sure to be a book children and adults alike will want to steal away with to a hidden corner or nook and escape to wonderful places.