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Showing posts from March, 2017

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind - Reading With Our Community

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Our community is reading The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind  by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer as a One Book, One Community read. I was especially excited this year because the different formats enable my elementary school students to participate this year. We had been challenging ourselves to " Read Without Walls " so I introduced this book as a true story about someone who "thought without walls" and challenged himself to solve problems in his community.  We began by identifying different kinds of "communities" we might belong to: Ultimately we defined community as "A group of people that all participate, work together, do the same thing, and believe the same thing." We read the book together, pausing periodically to listen for the challenges in William's community. Challenges we identified included: No lights No rain No water No food No money No school With a working knowledge of what a "community" i

Spreading Kindness

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A team of teachers and I felt that we needed to spread a little kindness throughout our school. We planned school-wide activities and a team of students helped me bring kindness to our library as well. Students helpers traced their hands and cut out hands for our bulletin board: Students helped to create a "kindness tree" inspired by a volunteer. They painted the branches: In class, students were encouraged to hang the names of characters that are kind or books that show kindness: We celebrated as a school. We began by assembling as a school and reading Students were then encouraged to write down the kind deeds they saw. These were collected by Student Council members and were put in a giant "bucket." We pulled acts of kindness out of the bucket and shared these with the school throughout the week. Later in the week we assembled again and read We assembled a chain of compliments. Every student wrote a complime

Lisa Yee Comes to Visit

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Our wonderful independent bookstore, The Blue Bunny sends authors to our school periodically.  We recently were treated to a fabulous visit by Lisa Yee .  Lisa Yee knows how to talk to her audience, and she connected with 3rd-5th grade students and teachers alike.  We laughed, learned, and left a little more confident in ourselves after hearing her stories of childhood and how she became an author. Most importantly (to our students), Lisa Yee brought Peepy along for the ride and Peepy took a selfie with our lucky students (photo courtesy of Lisa Yee): She shared with us her writing and revisions - on paper and electronically. She shared secrets to her Super Hero High books and research.  Best of all, she demonstrated with her fabulous sword. In preparation for her visit I had students go to her wonderful website and investigate a number of ideas: A book that Lisa Yee wrote that I have read or would like to read is: A favorite book of Lisa Yee's that I have