Sunday, August 16, 2015

You and Me: None Of Us Are Alone

 

Without our best friends, how would any of us have the strength to travel the daily winding road of students who also need to be loved? Every day we help children become readers, writers and thinkers in the face of many obstacles and pressures. Our best friends constantly remind us that we are still important and loveable. Right now, we are spending a lot of time and money getting ready to start a brand new school year. Great classrooms that will be like home for us and our students for the next nine months don't just appear out of thin air. Our best friends support us and understand why we're a little bit crazy and anxious these days. Our best friends insist on nurturing us and making sure we enjoy these last few days of summer.

You and Me by Susan Verde and Peter H. Reynolds is a beautiful, heartwarming ode to friendship. The simple, rhyming text with colorful illustrations of two cats who are best friends, wonders what would happen if fate hadn't brought the two together. It explores the minutiae of everyday moments and decisions: oversleeping, broken clocks, bad weather, and flat tires to consider circumstances that might have kept the two apart.

"The very idea makes me ache in my heart." My chin started to quiver a bit as I looked at the illustration of the cat missing the train as it pulls out of the station with a missed opportunity of a lifelong friendship.

But thankfully, "serendipity, perfect timing, all the stars aligning" brought these two together. When I read the last lines, I reached for the tissues:

"I'm so grateful for each step and each choice that led me to you, your spirit, your voice. Feeling as one when we're actually two."

I made my husband read it. He gave me a smile that helps me know that he will be with me and help me make this the best year ever!

(Me and my best friend)



Saturday, August 15, 2015

Circus Mirandus: Being Brave Enough to Find Our Own Specialness

 
I just  finished reading Circus Mirandus by Cassie Beasley, and I have to say that this book found it's way into my hands at the perfect time: the beginning of a new school year! I went in to school yesterday for the first time since the beginning of summer recess. As I stepped into my classroom and surveyed the bare walls and the furniture piled in the middle of the room, I smiled to myself.  Even though there's A LOT of work to do before our first day with students (August 26), this room is where the magic is going to occur!
 
One of the first messages I took out of this wonderful book is that it's "important, when you first see magic, to recognize it. You don't often get a second chance."  When the fifth graders come to me on that first day of school, I am going to see the magic in their faces and in the way they approach reading and writing, and in the stories they have to share about who they are. I am not going to miss it, because I may not have another opportunity.
 
Another critical lesson from this book is that "just because a magic is small doesn't mean it is unimportant; even the smallest magic can grow." This advice from Lightbender applies to all of us. A child's magic (whether it's writing, drawing, singing, dancing, smiling, etc.) is critical during fifth grade, and I want every child in my class to grow their magic. And whatever magic a teacher has (listening, reading aloud, teaching a math lesson on fractions, etc.) is important and it can grow (and must!).
 
As the story progresses, we learn that Micah has inherited his grandfather's magic of tying knots. The concept of knots is an important message for having a successful school year as well. Relationships are critical for each child's success in my classroom. Without those connections, how will learning take place? One of my favorite quotes of the book is very powerful:
 
"Knots were such a versatile thing really, especially once you started thinking beyond string. They were everywhere you looked and in many places that you didn't, and then there were knots that were completely invisible, like the ones that held families together."
 
Hopefully, I can develop my magic of tying those invisible knots that hold our classroom community together. It'll take strength and courage, especially since "some of us aren't brave enough to find our specialness" (Grandpa Ephraim). Also, "once in a while, it's good to be ridiculous and amazing."
 
Finally, Chintzy (the parrot messenger) had great advice for all of us: "Be careful not to let (magic) slip away from you, and you'll always be able to hear the music."
 
I hope all of you have a wonderful beginning for your school year and remember that magic "is what's inside...the parts of you that are too big to keep just to yourself" (Micah).
 
 
(Here's where the magic begins, once I get this room organized! It's a work in progress!)
 



Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Thanks To All My Twitter Heroes!

 
 
Today I met for a lunchtime meeting at Panera with some of my fellow members of our school's
Literacy Leadership Team. The Gay Su Pinnell Educational Foundation is offering grants for up
to $20,000 to support implementation of Literacy Collaborative in the 10 research schools in
our school district. We met to discuss our school's needs and how we could write a grant proposal
that would ensure success for our students.
 
After a quick chat about our summer vacations, we got down to business. At this moment, I really felt
the effects of a summer spent learning so much about children's literacy and awesome books from great friends on Twitter! Participation in wonderful Twitter Chats such as #SharpSchu and #5thChat (just a few, but there are so many more) allowed me to connect with the nicest and most helpful teachers and librarians to expand my knowledge of great children's books.  Attending such exciting conferences such as NerdCampMI and the Scholastic Reading Summit through the magic of my TweetDeck taught me so much about how to be a Reading Warrior and really be an advocate for giving kids more choice in what and how they read. (By the way, before I met my Twitter friends, I didn't even know what a TweetDeck was!) Fun Twitter activities like #Chompsticks (where we shared snacks with chopsticks and great books) and #pb10for10 gave me such great ideas and ultimately led me to start this blog!
 
As a result of this exciting experience in professional development through social media, I have read more children's literature this summer than ever before. I've also learned so much and become a much more confident member of my school's literacy team. I actually sat up a little straighter, discussed at length the literacy needs of the children in the intermediate grades, and mentioned professional book titles that I've read and some of the awesome kids' books that I've read.
 
So this post is a Thank You to all of the people on Twitter that have helped me, encouraged me, shared books with me, followed me, favorited me, reTweeted me and laughed with me. I'm so excited about this upcoming school year. I wish everyone the best school year ever!
 



Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Learning from Student Recommendations: Touching Spirit Bear

Last year I started having my 5th grade students keep Readers' Notebooks. This is a helpful way to keep students accountable for their reading and provides an ongoing record of their progress. As a tool to connect reading and writing, students would write a letter to me weekly to share their thinking about the books they were reading.

In addition to helping students develop skills in writing thoughtful and personal responses to the books that they read, the letters helped me gain insight into which books students really enjoyed.  One of the books that several of my students recommended enthusiastically was Touching Spirit Bear by Ben Mikaelsen (2001). This book came to my classroom as part of a collection of books purchased by our school from a generous grant donation. I had never read it, and since it was constantly being read by a student, I didn't get a chance to read it, until now!

Wow! What an awesome book! The story focuses on a fifteen-year-old boy, Cole Matthews, who has been in trouble with the law numerous times for fighting and stealing. The book opens with the consequences for Cole's latest crime, smashing Peter Driscal's head into the sidewalk and critically injuring him. Cole is given a choice between prison and Native American Circle Justice. Cole chooses Circle Justice and is sentenced to a year of banishment to a remote Alaskan island. Within the first few days of his stay on this island, Cole is mauled by a mysterious white bear and comes very close to dying.

As Cole suffers through this attack and faces the island once more, he learns and grows so much. There are so many lessons for all readers in this book, I was just blown away by it!

Immediately after the bear attack, as Cole is lying broken, bloody and very close to death, he has quite a bit of time to reflect and think about his situation. He is suffering so much, that he is ready to just let go and die. But he wasn't ready and suddenly "in that moment, Cole made a simple decision. He wanted to live. In death there was no control, no anger, no one to blame, no choices, no nothing. To be alive was to have choice. The power to choose was real power, not the fake power of making others afraid."

After he had been rescued from the island, people had a hard time believing that he had been attacked by a Spirit Bear, because they weren't known to be in that geographical area. Cole had kept a handful of the white hair and was going to show it to people to prove that this bear was the one that attacked him. As he reached for the bag of hair, he paused. "His life had been filled with lies, and the more he lied the more he always tried to prove he was right. Never had he been strong enough to simply tell the truth. Cole put down the bag. Today things would change. From now on he would speak the truth, even if it meant going to jail."

When he returns to the island, he is accompanied by Garvy (a Native American probation officer) and Edwin (a Tlingit Indian caretaker). With their help he learns a lot about how to look at life and let go of anger. Edwin teaches Cole to soak in a freezing cold pond every morning at dawn to help him focus on what's important, "What you focus on becomes reality. Everybody carries anger inside. But also happiness. Those who focus on anger will always be angry. Those who focus on happiness will..."

As the story progresses, there are so many awesome lessons about how to look at your circumstances, being honest with others and yourself, healing and forgiveness. This book has made an impact on my own feelings about starting the school year. I can choose to focus on the stress of all of the work that we do or I can focus on the happiness I have when I help children learn to love reading (or math, or science, or social studies...). I can choose to be frightened to get involved or extend myself because of what others might think or I can take risks (like starting a blog or going out of town to a conference) that might make a world of difference in the learning of kids.

I'm so glad I took the time to read this book. Now when one of my students wants to discuss the story with me, I know that I'm prepared to share all of the excitement I felt when I read it and help him/her appreciate all the lessons this book has.




Sunday, August 9, 2015

Picture Book 10 for 10 August 2015

When I was first asked to be a part of Picture Book 10 for 10, I agreed right away. As a 5th grade teacher I'm constantly reading picture books, middle grade novels, and all sorts of things to share with children. I love reading and figured this would be a piece of cake.

As I started considering which books would be part of my first list, though, I struggled. There are so many amazing picture books.  There are picture books that have a terrific and important message. There are picture books that incorporate beautiful language and poetry. There are picture books that just make you laugh. There are nonfiction books that are informative and entertaining. I would start one list and then start questioning my choices. Then I started to worry that, for my very first blog post ever, I should only pick truly sophisticated and cool picture books.

Then as I got busy reading the stacks of picture books that seem to be taking over my house, I decided why not just go for the ten picture books that have made me happy this summer?  Reading is supposed to be fun, for me and my students.

So here are my 10 Picture Books for August, 2015:

1. Yard Sale by Eve Bunting and Lauren Castillo

2. Growing Up Pedro by Matt Tavares

3. Sam and Dave Dig a Hole! by Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen

4. Sidewalk Flowers by JonArno Lawson and Sydney Smith

5. Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson

6. Extra Yarn by Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen

7. Rufus the Water by Elizabeth Bram and Chuck Groenink

8. Thunder Cake by Patricia Polacco

9. The Relatives Came by Cynthia Rylant

10. Goin' Someplace Special by Patricia C. McKissack and Jerry Pinkney