Posts Tagged ‘Georgia Book Awards’

Georgia Book Award Nominee 2009-2010: Feathers

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

This year I plan to read all the GA Book Award Nominees and provide a “one stop” resource for teachers who would like to use these books in their classrooms.  I will be posting links to author Web sites, teacher’s guides, and related Web links.  I hope to make this an unbiased resource, so I will not be providing my own review of the books–other than recommending it as a read aloud (or not).

Feathers by Jacqueline Woodson

Summary: When a new, white student nicknamed “The Jesus Boy” joins her sixth grade class in the winter of 1971, Frannie’s growing friendship with him makes her start to see some things in a new light.

Author Web Site:  http://www.jacquelinewoodson.com

Teaching Resources:

Teacher’s Guide:  Not Currently Available

Lesson Plan from National Council of Teachers of English on Similar Books (Does Not Include Feathers, But Could Be Used As Building Block/Includes The Other Side, a Picture Book by Woodson )

Reading Guide of Discussion Questions by Penguin Publishing

Review Suitable for Booktalk from Kidsread.com

Related Links:  Civil Rights

Brown v. Board of Education:  National Archive Documents and Lesson Plans

Learn NC:  Race Relations (Includes Multimedia Resources)

Research Starters from Scholastic:  Civil Rights

Related Links:  Emily Dickinson

Biography of Emily Dickinson from the Academy of American Poets Web Site

Dickinson Electronic Archives

Teaching with Emily Dickinson:  The Classroom Electric (Emily Dickinson Resources)

Text and Slideshow of Entire Poem (TextFlow) from the Academy of American Poets Web Site

Excerpt:

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all,
-Emily Dickinson

Related Links:  Hearing Impaired

Resources from the American Society for Deaf Children

Resources from Raising Deaf Kids

Related Links: Multimedia

Slideshow and Reading of Excerpt from Feathers on the Author’s Web Site

Mini Documentary of Woodson on Writing Realistic Fiction, Video of Author Reading from Feathers, & More

Related Links:  Sign Language

First 100 Signs (with Illustrations, Descriptions, and Photos of Person Making Each Sign)

Handspeak.com (including American Sign Language Online Dictionary with Videos Showing Signing of Words)

Read Aloud Recommendation: This is a good book to open dialogue about social issues such as race relations.  It will challenge students to question social injustices such as prejudice and stereotyping.

Georgia Book Award Nominee 2009-2010: Uprising

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

This year I plan to read all the GA Book Award Nominees and provide a “one stop” resource for teachers who would like to use these books in their classrooms.  I will be posting links to author Web sites, teacher’s guides, and related Web links.  I hope to make this an unbiased resource, so I will not be providing my own review of the books–other than recommending it as a read aloud (or not).

Uprising by:  Margaret Peterson Haddix

Summary: In 1927, at the urging of twenty-one-year-old Harriet, Mrs. Livingston reluctantly recalls her experiences at the Triangle Shirtwaist factory, including miserable working conditions that led to a strike, then the fire that took the lives of her two best friends, when Harriet, the boss’s daughter, was only five years old. Includes historical notes.

Author Web Site:  http://www.haddixbooks.com

Teacher’s Guide (Indepth Lesson Plan):
http://urbandreams.ousd.k12.ca.us/lessonplans/triangle/index.html

Related Links: The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

Triangle Factory Fire Online Exhibit by Cornell University

Related Links:  The Gilded Age

Consuelo and Alva Vanderbilt (NPR Article with Photos)

Related Links:  New York City History

Big Apple History from PBS Kids

Related Links:  Shirtwaists

Photo of Shirtwaist

Related Links:  Strikes and Labor Unions

AFL-CIO:  The Uprising of 20,000 and the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

Related Links:  Women’s Suffrage

Alva Vanderbilt Belmont:  Suffragist

Votes for Women:  Selections from the National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection, 1848-1921 (For Teachers with Great Images from the Library of Congress)

Related Links:  Wright Brothers

Discovery Channel:  The Wright Stuff

National Geographic:  Short Video on History of Flight

Read Aloud Recommendation: This book would be a good choice when studying the Industrial Revolution, suffrage/women’s rights, immigration, the Gilded Age, or American immigration.  It’s also an engaging example of historical fiction.  Knowing that two characters perish in the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, but not knowing which character survived keeps the reader intrigued.

Georgia Book Award Nominee 2009-2010: Saving the Griffin

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

This year I plan to read all the GA Book Award Nominees and provide a “one stop” resource for teachers who would like to use these books in their classrooms.  I will be posting links to author Web sites, teacher’s guides, and related Web links.  I hope to make this an unbiased resource, so I will not be providing my own review of the books–other than recommending it as a read aloud (or not).

Saving the Griffin by :  Kristin Wolden Nitz

Summary: When eleven-year-old Kate and her younger brother Michael encounter a baby griffin in an Italian garden, they vow to help the creature find its way back home and to keep Griffo’s existence a secret.

Author Web Site:  http://www.kwnitz.com

Teacher’s Guide:  Not Currently Available

Behind the Scenes from the Author’s Blog:  http://kristinwoldennitz.wordpress.com/category/saving-the-griffin

Definition of Griffin:

A griffin is a legendary creature, usually represented in literature and art as having the head, beak, and wings of an eagle, the body and legs of a lion, and occasionally a serpent’s tail. The griffin seems to have originated in the Middle East, as it is found in the paintings and sculptures of the ancient Babylonians, Assyrians, and Persians. The Romans used the griffin merely for decorative purposes in friezes and on table legs, altars, and candelabra. The griffin motif appeared in early Christian times in the bestiaries, or beast allegories, of St. Basil and St. Ambrose. Stone replicas of griffins frequently served as gargoyles in the Gothic architecture of the late Middle Ages. The griffin is still a familiar device in heraldry and is thought to represent strength and vigilance.

Citation
Griffin
. (2009). Retrieved August 16, 2009, from
Discovery Education: http://streaming.discoveryeducation.com/

Griffin Gargoyle Photos:

Credit:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/chuntera/ / CC BY 2.0

Credit:

Photograph by Dona Acheson. Courtesy of Toronto Public Library

Related Links:  Griffin (Mythical Creature)

KidzWorld:  Griffin

Mythical Creatures Coloring Pages

Related Links:  Florence, Italy

Guide to Italy (Photos and Video of Florence)

Related Links:  Sienna, Italy

Guide to Italy (Photos of Siena)

Video of Siena, Italy from GeoBeats


Related Links:  Basic Italian

Children’s Conversational Italian (Short Audio Files by Native Speakers)

Video of Top Local Italian Phrases from GeoBeats

Read Aloud Recommendation: Definitely!  This story has fantasy, adventure, and a hint of danger.

The Percy Jackson Series

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

I read Rick Riordan’s The Lightning Thief when it was nominated for the 2009 Georgia Book Award.  I preceded to read the entire series as the books became available.  The Percy Jackson books are fast paced and entertaining.  The series centers around stories and characters from the Greek myths, in a modern day setting.  It was no surprise to me that The Lightning Thief was selected as the 2009 Georgia Book Award Winner by students across Georgia (grades 4-8) .

Book 1:  The Lightning Thief (Georgia Book Award Winner, 2009)

Summary: After learning that he is the son of a mortal woman and Poseidon, god of the sea, twelve-year-old Percy is sent to a summer camp for demigods like himself, and joins his new friends on a quest to prevent a war between the gods.

Book 2:  The Sea of Monsters

Summary: Seventh-grader Percy Jackson has recently discovered that he is the son of Poseidon, making him half human and half god, and along with his a demigod and a satyr friend, must save his beloved Camp Half-Blood from evil forces determined to destroy it.

Book 3:  The Curse of the Titans

Summary: The disappearance of the goddess Artemis while out hunting a rare, ancient monster, prompts a group of her followers to join Percy and his friends in an attempt to find and rescue her before the winter solstice, when her influence is needed to sway the Olympian Council regarding the war with the Titans.

Book 4:  The Battle of the Labyrinth

Summary: When demonic cheerleaders invade his high school, Percy Jackson hurries to Camp Half Blood, from whence he and his demigod friends set out on a quest through the Labyrinth, while the war between the Olympians and the evil Titan lord Kronos draws near.

Book 5:  The Last Olympian

Summary: The long-awaited prophecy surrounding Percy Jackson’s sixteenth birthday unfolds as he leads an army of young demigods to stop Kronos in his advance on New York City, while the Olympians struggle to contain the rampaging monster, Typhon.

Teacher’s Guide to Percy Jackson Series (including Author Interviews, Discussion Questions, Reader’s Theatre Scripts, Literature Circle Activities, Units, and More!!)

Recommended by the Author:  Mythology Sites

Award Winning vs. Kid Appealing: A Library Mama Goes More Mainstream

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

As a library media specialist in a public elementary school, I have always felt it was my duty to buy and promote the Newbery, Caldecott, Coretta Scott King Illustrator, and state award winners and nominees in order to showcase some of the best books of year––even though I have had reservations about the kid appeal of some of the books. After all, part of my job is to help kids discover literary gems. However, despite my best efforts, every year a portion of these books eventually become “shelf-squatters” as my attention becomes focused elsewhere and the kids naturally gravitate toward more commercial, mainstream books (which I also purchase as my budget allows).

When considering books for the school library collection, the library media specialist must make tough decisions regarding the major award winners. It is very difficult for me to be objective about award books because in most cases, I find the chosen books to be so worthy of recognition. However, my young patrons do not always agree. After all, in most cases a committee of adults select the award winners based on specific criteria. (With the Georgia Book Award process, students select the winner from a list of nominees by voting for their favorite.) I have found that adults judge literary merit using a set of criteria that is very different from the criteria that children use to decide what is appealing to them. I have also found that even though adults may find a book to be of great literary merit, if kids find the book to be unappealing, it will not be read (no matter how many awards adults have bestowed upon it). That is this the case with this year’s Newbery winner, Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from a Medieval Village. It is an excellent choice, but it doesn’t have much kid appeal. It will never have the same popularity as some of the winners (such as the 1999 winner, Holes). In fact, I will have to work really hard to promote the book, or it will seldom be checked out. While I realize that is part of my job, it does illustrate my point. So what is the solution? Maintain the current course, or steer more into the mainstream?

Motherhood has really been the catalyst for the clarification of my thoughts on the struggle of literary vs. mainstream. I have found with my own child, now a busy toddler, that I have to appeal to his interests in order to keep him reading. That doesn’t mean that my little one hasn’t succumbed to the charm of Caldecott winner Where the Wild Things Are and classics like Goodnight Moon. It just means that when something is holding his attention (currently Thomas the Tank Engine), I have to seize the moment. Therefore, I have learned to balance the award winning and classic with the kid appealing. I have come to realize that I may never get my little one to listen to Snowy Day. It just doesn’t appeal to him. (And let’s face it, my son, who hates to travel, has never seen snow where we live––in south Georgia.) That doesn’t mean that I won’t keep trying. It just means that if I want to keep him reading, I have to keep his interests in mind when purchasing new books. It’s all about balance.

I read one of the classics to him every day, though not always an award winner. Tonight, it might be Dr. Seuss’s Green Eggs and Ham (which he loves after I convinced him to give it a try). After that, he can choose. He usually chooses a Thomas story like Catch Me, Catch Me! A Thomas the Tank Engine Story, Go, Train, Go!, or Stop, Train, Stop! A Thomas the Tank Engine Story, a Cars story like Driving Buddies (Step into Reading), or a Dora or Diego story like Diego’s Wolf Pup Rescue . As long as we are reading together every night, I have stopped obsessing so much about what we are reading.

There is a wonderful article on this topic at http://www.warriorlibrarian.com/LIBRARY/qual_vs_pop.html. An extensive review of literature on this topic shows that readers of commercial/mainstream literature are the most prolific readers and are more likely to to continue their reading development at a higher rate than those who do not read popular literature. Researchers also found that popular literature can be a bridge to higher quality literature. While I already knew this from experience––both academic and maternal, I have to say that I like being able to back up my own thoughts with research.

In conclusion, I will always pursue and purchase the best in children’s literature. However, I am going to be much more careful about balancing the award winning with the popular literature that students crave. After all, as a librarian and as a mother, I have to serve the needs of my patrons and keep them reading!

Here are a couple of my son’s current favorites as mentioned above: