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Get A Grip!. Pictures, Poetry, & Prose Presented by Hope Krum, Bowie Middle School and Mary Boyd, MacArthur High School Library Harvest, Region XI, September 16, 2010. Sources Used: What’s New In Children’s Literature 2010 by Peggy Sharp Selected Books by 2010 Round Up Poets
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Get A Grip! Pictures, Poetry, & Prose Presented by Hope Krum, Bowie Middle School and Mary Boyd, MacArthur High School Library Harvest, Region XI, September 16, 2010
Sources Used: • What’s New In Children’s Literature 2010 by Peggy Sharp • Selected Books by 2010 Round Up Poets • Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People 2009 • Outstanding Science Trade Books-2009 by NSTA Get A Grip!
Literary Text: Poetry, Fiction, Drama, Literary Nonfiction (biography, autobiography, memoir, diary, journal, speech, personal essay) • Informational Text: Expository, Procedural, Persuasive, Culture and History Two Main Genre Catgegories:
Vacation Time! By Laura Salas Whenever I’m checked out, it’s like a vacation. I’m scanned and I’m packed for a new destination! I’ve floated in airplanes. I’ve lain on the beach I’ve hidden in bunk beds—just out of your reach. Been stained by spaghetti, been splashed at the lake. I’ve shared your adventures. I’ve kept you awake. At night in your sleeping bag—too dark to see— you whipped out a flashlight to keep reading me. I never quite know where my reader is bound, and hundreds of times I’ve been lost and then found. It’s good to get home, look around, see what’s new, but before long I’m antsy— A trip’s overdue! Bookspeak! (Clarion, Fall 2011) Poetry
Choose books with choral readings and let students read the parts • Give each group a sentence strip and have the groups piece the poem together • Give the poem in prose form and have students decide the line breaks • Copy change-Take a poem students like and write their own imitation of the rhythm and rhyme. Poetry: Instructional Strategies
Twitter the summary • Write a text message conversation between two characters in a book-Include the popular shortcuts and you don’t have unlimited texting • Write a half minute horror story • www.halfminutehorrors.com - a resource for the teacher Fiction: Instructional Strategies
Capstonepub.com>resources>reader’s theater (over 60 scripts) • Use poetry with multiple voices • Harper Collins paper back editions with scripts • Re-write scenes with lots of dialogue • Use script novels with authors such as Fleishman, Walter Dean Myers, Nikki Grimes, Lauren Myracle Drama: Instructional Strategies
Literary Non-fiction includes biographies, memoirs, journals, diaries, speeches and narrative non-fiction. Literary Nonfiction: Description
Narrative Non-fiction: Tells a story but is based on fact and includes factual information Literary Nonfiction: Description
Story Impressions: List words from the story that include the names of characters, setting, theme, etc. Have students write the story before they read it. Compare the results. • Show pictures of the beginning, middle and end of the story. Have students predict what will happen. Literary Nonfiction: Instructional Strategies
6 word summary- Write a 6 word memoir about the person’s life; then have students write their own • Do a face book page on a person, include personal profile, list of friends, 6-10 postings of events • Graffitti wall of quotes (using large kraft paper) Literary Nonfiction-Biographies: Instructional Strategies
Use Read–aloud nonfiction(Nic Bishop, Steve Jenkins) • Fact or Fiction-Tell 3 things about the book. Two must be facts and one must be false • Have a Book-Look: Identify parts of a book and have students label the parts with sticky notes (Glossary, Index, Table of Contents) Informational-Expository: Instructional Strategies
Use How to Books, cookbooks, maps, letter writing books • Draw a library map-Have the student write the directions for finding a certain book • Partner up- one person describes the drawing and the other person draws without looking • Write a Dear Abby letter or response Informational-Procedural: Instructional Strategies
Includes speeches, advertisements, reviews, top ten lists, trip advisers • Write a Top Five list and justify • Create a billboard • Write a classified ad for your favorite fairy tale character (Wanted! Chauffeur for Red Riding Hood. Wolf need not apply!) Informational-Persuasive: Instructional Strategies
Sources: • Vocabulary Unplugged by Alana Morris • http://ptgmedia.pearsoncmg.com/images/0131198033/samplechapter/0131198033_ch03.pdf • Region 10 Workshop on Genres with Terry Roper • http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6312744.html Additional Sources