I’m a Picture Book Month Ambassador – Are You?

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I love Picture Book Month because I can highlight my favorite picture books throughout the month of November, and share my love of them with all my students – even the ones who think they are too old for picture books!

Some of my favorite picture books are these:

I Hate Picture Books by Timothy Young

 

 

BE QUIET

Ryan T. Higgins Be Quiet!  is an amazing picture book — it is hilarious, and even my youngest students appreciate the humor (and the adults in the room, even more!!).

Absolutely all Elephant & Piggie books by Mo Willems- especially The Thank You Book and We are in a Book!  I even decorated pumpkins like Gerald & Piggie to celebrate autumn in my library!  Mo has many fun resources on his site to go along with the books, too.

EPLRBadgeelephant and piggie

Aaron Reynolds and Peter Brown’s Creepy Carrots and Creepy Pair of Underwear have my students sitting on the edge of their criss-cross-applesauce-bottoms when I read in my best creepy voice.  Their book trailers are great, and they also have activity guides available:    Creepy Carrots and  Creepy Pair of Underwear (scroll down)

pete the cat

Pete the Cat books by James Dean are also extremely popular with my students!  Another picture book pumpkin that graces my book shelves in my library is Pete-the-Pumpkin 🙂   Be sure to check out the songs that go along with the books!

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They have a great teacher activity guide – check it out here!

I hope you enjoy Picture Book Month as much as I do this November!

Box of Buttons, Room of Readers by Dana Kramaroff

I loved the analogy in this Nerdy Book Club post! I am just like the author’s daughter — I have an empty peanut butter jar filled with buttons, and it is fun to put my hand in there and feel the textures and shapes of the different buttons. Perhaps the 4-holed buttons could also be the two eyes of the adult and the two eyes of the child as they read a picture book together! Melissa

BOX OF BUTTONS, ROOM OF READERS BY DANA KRAMAROFF  (First posted in The Nerdy Book Club)

In those moments, I considered how each button tells a story.

You dig in and hold one in your hand, inspecting it up close you wonder where it has been.

Like buttons, readers come to us and tell a story about their reading journey. Some readers are shiny and new, eager and ready. Some are worn and experienced. Some are even broken, their love for books, seemingly ruined forever.

The similarities between a button and the bookish or not-so-bookish student runs deep.

Within a box of buttons, some have four eyes, some two, and some none at all. Within our students we might see that their eyes for reading are not open yet to the magical feeling one finds when they experience a book and feel it to their core. Our students may read with two eyes open but may lack the know-how, that reading is more than simply decoding the words. And those readers with four eyes wide-open, are able to reach new heights in their journey for they have the power within them already, to truly attach reader to their identity.

We wish for all of our students to live like this, open to the possibilities of the page.

We might find a broken button at the bottom of the pile. We imagine what it must have taken for it to break, knowing it would require super strength and we wonder how the unthinkable could be possible. Some might consider giving up, just throwing it away, but no. We dutifully search for the other half and when we find it, we lift those pieces up and fit them back together. Two halves of a broken button seem beyond repair but super glue and the human spirit are mighty. Anything is attainable if we try.

A reader of ours might come to us, in the very same way. Broken or even hanging on by a thread. But that does not mean they are beyond repair. We would never dare to throw a reader away or give up on them.

Like the box of buttons my three year old is enamored with, we too, become enamored with our room of readers that were given to us and we hold them close. We may only have them for a short while, but for that time, they are ours as we gently push them to see their world open up with each book they complete.

Like a needle and thread, we weave our own love for books throughout the school day in crafty ways, in hopes we may connect child to book, reader to the courageous act of reading. We show them the way, sharing aloud the most stick-to-our-gut stories. We model our own reading lives. We inspire, so that by year’s end we can hold each in our hands and know that we have impacted their journey.

Dana Kramaroff is a K-5 Instructional Coach. She is a proud fellow of the National Writing Project and is a co-director of her local site: the Pennsylvania Writing and Literature Project. In addition to being enamored by her work with teachers and students, she is a mom of three, a wife, a reader and writer, and an active member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. Dana would be very happy to connect with you! Follow her @litdanak.

via Box of Buttons, Room of Readers by Dana Kramaroff

Common Sense Media & Snapchat

Snapchat LogoFrom Common Sense Media’s website:

Kids and teens love using the messaging app Snapchat because it lets you send texts, pictures, and videos that you program to disappear after a few seconds. Snapchat also offers fun, easy-to-use instant-editing tools that let you add cool effects to your “Snaps,” such as captions, drawings, and emojis.

The fact that the messages don’t last makes texting feel like a game, and it offers a sense of freedom: Kids can share the silly, fleeting moments of the day that don’t rise to the level of, say, an Instagram or Facebook post that documents their lives. On the other hand, they may be tempted to share inappropriate images, thinking the pics will go away.

But parents should be aware that it’s not actually true that Snaps disappear forever. You can purchase additional “Replays” — though you’re limited to one Replay per Snap. It’s also possible — especially in the case of friendship drama or dating/flirting situations — that the receiver could take a screenshot using his or her phone or another app to capture Snaps. So kids really need to use good judgment about what they send.

Learn more about the pros and cons of Snapchat and how to help your kid use it responsibly here:  https://www.commonsensemedia.org/app-reviews/snapchat.

Does Snapchat have a minimum age?
Yes, the minimum age is 13, in compliance with the U.S. Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). Snapchat ask for a date of birth upon sign up, and if the birth date indicates that the user is under 13, they’re not allowed to create an account.

Connect Safely: A Parents’ Guide to Snapchat, please visit: https://www.connectsafely.org/wp-content/uploads/snapchat_guide.pdf

Bottom line:  Snapchat, as with other social media sites, is not intended for use by children under 13.  Parents should carefully monitor their children if they choose to allow them to use social media when they are under the age of 13.