Sunday, November 9, 2014

Guest Speaker Visit: K.L Going




K.L Going visited Mount Saint Mary College on November 4, 2014.  Kelly was a wonderful speaker and talked about her own life growing up and ho she became an author as well as her picture books and young adult novels.  Below is a little bio of what I learned about Kelly.

Kelly began her career working at one of the oldest literary agencies in New York City. She used this inner knowledge of publishing to write her books.  She rights young adult novels as well as short stories for several anthologies.  Kelly is an award winning author of numerous books for children and teens. Kelly’s first novel, Fat Kids Ruled the World was named a Michael Printz Honor Book by the American Library Association. I learned that many of her books are written in many different languages and sold throughout the world. 

Another thing that I was surprised to find out was that one of her books was put on a ban list.  This I found very interesting.   Kelly explained that some parents thought the content was to mature for children to read.  I can see where the parents are coming from but I still think the book was a great novel.  I loved how the book gave a message of self-acceptance and how we should love ourselves the way we are. 

Kelly lives in Glen Spey, New York, where she both writes and runs a business critiquing manuscripts. She’s also a mom to the world’s cutest little boy.




Here are some of her books:

 












What about biographies and memoirs??????

Literature and the Child
Eighth Edition
By: Lee Galda, Lawrence Sipe, Lauren Liang, Bernice Cullinan


How to include it in your classroom:  Biographies and memoirs are great to teach to 5th graders.  They can be included in their ELA module.  I taught about biographies to my 5th graders last year and they loved writing their own biographies as a project.  


Biographies and memoirs are stories of people’s lives.   Biographies and memoirs must present accurate depictions of the time and place in which the subject lived.  Facts and story line must be accurate as well but as I learned through this course some times this may not be the case. 


When I was a 5th grade special ed teacher last year I was so excited to introduce what a biography was to my 5th graders.  They were excited as well to learn about them. One of the biographies that we read was Promises to Keep.  This was a biography about Jackie Robinson.  His daughter wrote it.  I had never seen my students so engaged before when they started reading this book.  The biography walked about Jackie’s struggles through out his life as an African American baseball player.  Many of my boys in the class couldn't put the book down most days because they wanted to know more and more about his life.  The book did a great job explaining the issues African Americans had to deal with back in the day.  As a class we would compare how these issues are the same and different now a days.  I truly enjoyed reading this biography with my students. 

Cullinan, B. (1989). Literature and the child (2nd ed.). San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

What is a folklore????

Literature and the Child
Eighth Edition
By: Lee Galda, Lawrence Sipe, Lauren Liang, Bernice Cullinan



How to incorporate in the classroom:  I love teaching about folklores to my 1st graders through the ELA domains.  My students love when I read them the different folklores which include: Thumbalina, Tomb Thumb, and The Girl with the Red Slippers.  Students are very engaged when they are reading about follklores. 


Folklores began as stories and poems told across the generations and passed down for centuries.  I learned that folklores help us understand other cultures and how they live. My students love listening to different folklores and comparing them to how people lived back then to how they live now.  This is a great way to introduce a venn diagram.  Students can compare and contrast different folklores. 


Folklores are included in the Common Core for Domain 3.  After reading folklores to students it important to complete a story map with students.  The story map can include the title, author, setting, characters, and solution.  This can be used as a reading comprehension assessment. 


Cullinan, B. (1989). Literature and the child (2nd ed.). San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

I just love picture books…..

Literature and the Child
Eighth Edition
By: Lee Galda, Lawrence Sipe, Lauren Liang, Bernice Cullinan


Picture books are great for non readers and students who have a difficult time reading.  I use many picture books for my struggling readers. I tell them that good readers use look at pictures to help them read the words.  They love using the pictures as clues.  Below is plenty of information on how to incorporate picture books in your classroom.

Picture books are the first exposure to fine art for many children.  They enrich reader’s worlds by providing opportunities for experiences through pictures and print.  Things to consider in choosing picturebooks are the quality of the book, quality of the text, qualify of the art, and quality of the overall design of the book.   These include elements of visual art.  These include materials used in making the art such as watercolors, oils, acrylics, ink, pencil, charcoal, pastels tissue paper, construction paper, fabric, etc.  Illustrators use line.  Line is a mark on paper or place where colors meeting.  Lines focus the viewer and keep their eye in a particular direction.    Artists use color to convey warmth and coolness and also personality trait.   Texture conveys a sense of reality.  Interesting patterns or contrasts suggest movement and action, roughness or delicacy.  Design expresses the artist’s unique visions.  Artists make choices about the media and techniques they use to create their art.  Many artists develop a characteristic way of presenting ideas visually.  Picturebooks educate our student’s imagination.  

Wordless storybooks tell a story through illustrations alone.  Its title often contains clues as to what the story is about.  Picture storybooks and graphic novels for older readers entice visually sophisticated student.  They also help struggling readers lean more easily using boos with more pictures and less text.  Picturebooks of poetry and song present an artist’s visual interpretation of a story.  The artist arranges the text across the pages, often with only one or two lines per page and then illuminates each thought expressed by the text.  Nonfiction picturebooks contain text that is accurate, organized in a manner appropriate to both the information presented and the intended audience, designed in an attractive and appropriate fashion, and written and illustrated with verse and style.
Topics presented in nonfiction picture books are may, the language is clear, and the illustrations work with the text to convey information that young readers want and need to know.  Many nonfiction picturebooks offer a way to read about and see the lives of others.  Many nonfiction picturebooks are biographies.  These are stories of real people.  Alphabet books serve many useful purposes.  Children ages two to four point to pictures and label objects on the page.  Five year olds may say the letter names and words that start with each letter.  Six year olds may read the letters, words or text to confirm their knowledge of let-sounds.  Alphabet books help children develop an awareness of words on the page.  They increase language learning and serve as a pleasurable activity for children.

Board books are a format that appeals to adults as well as infants, toddlers, and children in preschool.  The books are often six to twelve pages log and made of cardboard.  There are also cloth booths, shape books, pudgy books, lift-the-flap books, toy books and plastic bathtub books.  Books of this style are appropriate for children in the picture identification stage.   Predictable or patterned books are structured using strong language patterns, such as repeated phrases, rhyme and rhythm; cumulative story structures that add, or accumulate, information; and familiar concepts, illustrations reinforce the language patterns and provide a visual reproduction of the text.  These attributes help children anticipate hat s going to happen next and predict the next word to come.  Beginning to read books are those that children who have just become independent readers can enjoy on their own.  They combine controlled vocabulary with creative storytelling and engaging illustrations.  Their sentences are simple with few embedded clauses, and the language is often direct dialogue.  Sentence breaks occur according to natural phrases. 

Students who encounter excellent picturebooks learn how to read not only the worlds but also the pictures.  They pay close attention to what they see, often noticing things in the illustrations that most adults would miss.  Students notice the artist’s craft and discuss it. 



Cullinan, B. (1989). Literature and the child (2nd ed.). San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.