It’s Monday! What are you reading?
I haven’t posted for 3 weeks so have many reading photos to share! Narrowed it to 3. Here is a keen little reader who has discovered Robert Munsch books for himself as an independent reader! He couldn’t stop reading all day!
“This book is really long and really hard and I can read it!”
Ah the joy of buddy reading!
#classroombookaday titles have included themes of stories, characters creatively solving problems and interacting with monsters.
Classroom Highlights
Follow along with us through our classroom twitter account @CuriosityRacers
We have been diving into the Story Workshop experience on Tuesday afternoons creating stories with loose parts and natural objects and then drawing, documenting and writing about these stories. Often stories are also shared orally between students. Want to know more about Story Workshop? Look up Opal School in Portland, Oregon.
In the Art and Discovery studio with Maggie, we have begun to explore and create imaginative creatures that might live in the garden.
Join Jen from Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki from Unleashing Readers and share all of the reading you have done over the week from picture books to young adult novels. Follow the links to read about all of the amazing books the #IMWAYR community has read. It’s the best way to discover what to read next.
Bloom: A Story of Fashion Designer Elsa Schiaparelli written by Kyo Maclear and illustrated by Julie Morstad
Wow. Wow and more wow. Such an incredible story and that cover! A fantastic biography of a wonderfully creative individual and how she perceived the world.
I Lost My Tooth! by Mo Willems
So I read this and liked it. But I knew that kid testing was going to be the true measure. My students ADORED this one. It’s a delightful read aloud experience and students have been continuously picking it up to read on their own. Their only complaint? Where are the rest of the titles? These children are used to a full shelf of Elephant and Piggie and can’t fathom waiting and waiting as the next titles in this series are published!
Up the Mountain Path by Marianne Dubuc
Oh what a delightful little title that teaches the love of nature and the cycles of life. Follow along as old Mrs. Badger takes a weekly journey up to the top of Sugarloaf Peak.The illustrations!
Sterling, Best Dog Ever by Aidan Cassie
Very adorable. Sterling sends himself out to a family’s home as part of a new cutlery shipment and tries to be the best fork ever! Of course, his fork like abilities are limited. But his dog nature is a lot more valued than he ever thought possible.
Your Fantastic Elastic Brain: Stretch It, Shape It written by JoAnne Deak and illustrated by Sarah Ackerley
This is the BEST book for classroom teachers teaching about growth mindset! I am using this title to support our understanding of the brain as part of the Mind Up curriculum.
Merci Suárez Changes Gears by Meg Medina
Merci and her older brother are scholarship students at a private school in Florida. Her busy family life full of hard work, shared family responsibilities and grandparents, aunts and annoying younger cousins feels dramatically different than the lives her classmates seem to lead. Merci struggles to understand the changes in her beloved Lolo as he begins to act more and more strangely and seems to forget things all the time. A powerful middle grade novel about growing up, family and figuring out it all out.
Grump: The (Fairly) True Tale of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (MG) by Liesl Shurtliff
I was so very pleasantly surprised that I was able to fall into this story so fully and be transported to the imaginative fairy tale world that Shurtliff can build so wonderfully. I still love Rump the best, but this title is a close second. Can’t wait to see where Liesl Shurtliff goes next!
Tilly by Moniqu Gray Smith
This novel is really about what it says on the cover – hope and resistance. Based on the author’s own life, this is the story of a young Indigenous woman growing up in the 70s and 80s in British Columbia. I learned a lot.
Up next? I am reading The Night Diary by Veera Hiranandani
So glad that the new Mo Willems passed the kid test with such flying colors! I am sure I will end up buying it, as my students can’t ever get enough Mo Willems. I also thought that Bloom was phenomenal. (Reading Kyo Maclear’s book for grown-ups, Birds Art Life, right now and really liking that as well.) My son and I still haven’t read Grump together, so we might do that next. We’ve abandoned our last three read-alouds so really needing a hit!
I just checked and, unfortunately, Your Fantastic Elastic Brain: Stretch It, Shape It is not available in my area. Sounds wonderful! I’m also looking forward to Grump, Willems new book, and Sterling, Best Dog Ever. Thanks for all the shares, Carrie!
Will find the new Mo Willems soon, I’m sure. Thanks for all the others, Carrie. They’re new to me except for Merci Suarez, which I liked a lot & Liesl Shurtliff’s new one, on my list & maybe someday.
I was a wee bit sceptical of the new Mo Willems books, but I have found I Lost my Tooth to pass the kid test, too! 🙂
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I’ll have to check out Merci Suarez Changes Gears. I love that bright cover!
Here’s what I’m reading: https://bookloaner.wordpress.com/2018/10/21/its-monday-what-are-you-reading-october-22-2018/
Love the settings your students are creating with loose parts and natural objects! We just got a copy of I Lost My Tooth! So excited that there is another engaging and easy-to-read series coming out.
Thank you for sharing the Story Workshop pictures. I’m intrigued by them now!
That was interesting about I Lost My Tooth – I did not really like this one, but so often I remind myself I am not the intended audience… check out their thoughts first!
There was a team of teachers at Dickens who were doing Story Workshops with students while I was still teaching. It’s a fascinating process.
I’m hoping to get to Tilly by Moniqu Gray Smith since I just finished Tilly and the Crazy Eights a couple of weeks ago. I want to know more about her!