Monday, May 9, 2011

Tie-a-Bow Book

Tie-a-Bow Book
Written by: Fiona Watt
Illustrated by: Stephen Cartwright
Publishers: Usborne Publishing Ltd. In 2002, and 2007
Genre: Teaching Book
Readability Lexile: ?

Summary:
This book has a page for something different for a child to tie. It has Woolly’s bow, Sam’s shoe, Millie’s ribbon, Poppy’s apron, and Sam’s present. Each page asks the reader to untie and then tie it again. There are actual string and ribbon for the reader to untie and then tie again.

Evaluation:
This is a very good book for younger children. It teaches them to tie and untie things. It has actual string and ribbon for the reader to physically look at. This is a high literature book. It is very interactive and it teaches how to tie shoes. It is also very repetitious. It is a good starter book for children to learn how to read. The language seems natural.

Literary Elements:
-          Style- This book uses items to actually do what the book says. It has real ribbon and sting for the reader to tie. It has repetition and has the reader be a part of the book.
-          Theme- The theme of the book teaches the reader to tie things. I think that it teaching the reader to tie things is a way to teach readers how to tie their shoes since that is the main thing that young kids need to learn how to tie.

Mini Lesson:
I would use style to teach this book. I want to teach my students how to tie bows so I would do a mini lesson that would do this. I would teach students a way to tie and then I would have them practice on their own shoes and their neighbors.

Illustrations:
 The illustrations go with the story and are very colorful and standout. The have actual ribbon and string that the reader can tie. There is not much text in the book so the illustrations are important.

Target Audience:
Young children

Who’s making that Mess?

Who’s making that Mess?
Written by: Phillip Hawthorn and Jenny Tyler
Illustrated by: Stephen Cartwright
Published by: Usborne Publishing Ltd. In 2007, 2003, and 1994
Genre: fiction
Readability Lexile: ?

Summary:
This is a story about a girl and her dog trying to figure out who made the messes around their house. If you flip open a tab it shows an animal and the mess that they made. It then asks you to help them find something. They go through everything asking the same question. Who made that mess? At the end of the book it shows the girl and the dog with all the animals looking at them because they made the mess.

Evaluation:
It is a high literature book. It has repetition in it as well as rhyming, and questions that it asks the reader. It is very rare that you find all of these things in one book. It also has flaps for the reader to open and find more to read and more illustrations. It also has bubbles where the characters talk and say the same thing each time. It has a lot of things that help students to become better readers. The language is very natural and when you read it aloud you are able to hear the characters saying it. You are able to find out that the characters are not very clean and it helps you get to know them better.

Literary Elements:
-          Style- There is many different parts of the style in this book. There is rhyming, repetition, flaps to look under, the talking bubbles, and questions that are asked to the reader. It uses all of these things in just one book to make it a high literature book.
-          Theme- The theme of this book is being messy. The two characters are messy and they are trying to figure out who made all of these messed. They are trying to find things so that is why they made the messes.
-          Plot- The plot is about a girl and her dog trying to figure out who made the messes. It turns out that they did because they were trying to find things. The reader is asked to help them find them.

Mini Lesson:
I would use this book with the style to teach students about the talking bubbles. I would read this book to them and then have them draw a picture with the character talking using the talking bubbles.

Illustrations:
The illustrations in this book are really good. They are colorful and show what the text is trying to say. The illustrations also use talking bubbles and have flaps where questions are asked for the reader to help the characters find their missing things.

Target Audience:
Young children to early elementary

When My Name Was Keoko

When My Name Was Keoko
Written by Linda Sue Park
Publishers: Yearling in 2002
Genre: General Fiction/Historical Fiction/Multicultural
Readability Lexile: 620L


Summary:
This is a book about a young Korean girl in Japanese rule. It is during the time of WWII in the 1940’s. Her family and everyone else in Korea have to change their ways so they can be closer to what the Japanese are. The Japanese are trying to take away all of the Korean culture. They are forced to change their names, cut down their favorite tree, and change their way of life. They are also struggling financially. Keoko’s brother joins the army so his family can have better food clothes and rations. He volunteers for a special attack for a kamikaze plane to bomb American ships but because of cloud coverage they are forced to abort their mission. Her family thinks he has died, but they are so happy when he returns home.

Evaluation:
This is high literature. It is a story that many Korean Americans can relate to with this happening somewhere in their family. You do not usually hear this kind of story. You usually just hear about the Holocaust so people forget about what was going on in Korea. It is a very good book to teach students about what happened there even though it has fictional things in the book. It is also a good book because the chapters go back and forth between Keoko/Sun-hee and her brother telling their side of things about the same events. It has a really good plot and it draws the readers in by the story line. The author uses language good to where it is natural and keeps the reader to want to read more. When you read the book aloud you can actually hear the characters talking.

Literary Elements:
-          Characterization- In this book you are really able to figure out the personalities of the characters and their emotions. You are able to see what the two main characters think and two sides of things. They all have struggles and strength with what is going on with Japan taking over.
-          Point of View- This story is told from two points of view. They are two characters telling the story in alternating chapter. Here you are able to see the point view of both character and experience what goes on in their heads as well as their lives.
-          Plot- This story has a very good plot. You are able to figure it out easily what is going on and what are the main ideas and details of the book. It is about a Korean family that has been taken over my Japanese rule.


Mini Lesson:
I would do a mini lesson on point of view for this book. I would have the students take a previous paper that they already have written and then write the same story from two different points of view.

Target Audience:
Middle School

Hide-And-Seek Christmas

Hide-And-Seek Christmas
Written by: Finona Watt
Illustrated by: Lesley Danson
Designed by:Zoe Waring
Publishers: Usborne Publishing Ltd in 2007
Genre: Fiction/Holiday/Touch, Feel, and Flaps
Readability Lexile: ?

Summary:
This book is about what goes on in the North Pole for Christmas. The elves are making toys for the boys and girls, Santa is loading up his sleigh, the snowmen are playing with the animals, and then its Christmas day in someone living room where presents are under the tree. It is very interactive using questions to have children find a certain amount of things.

Evaluation:
This book can be controversial because it is about a Christian Holiday. Many students are not Christians so it might be difficult to have this in the classroom. I would say that this book can be a loud in the classroom as long as you have other religions holidays there too. This book is really good with getting the children involved and active with the book. It is a board book where you can feel the textures of the pictures and open flaps to find more text and pictures. It starts out asking a question to the reader if they can have a certain amount of something. The first questions asks the reader to find four things, the second asks for 3 things to be found, the third; two, and the fourth it asks to find one. This helps students learn numbers going backwards. When it asks questions it draws the reader in and makes them become involved. It is not only a fun book to read but it also teaches young students numbers.

Literary Elements:
-          Style- The style of the book is touch, feel, and flap book. It is an active book where the readers can touch the textures of the pictures and open flaps to see whats under.
-     Theme- Christams is the theme. It is about the make believe part that happens on Christmas Eve that many Christian children believe.
-     Setting- The setting of this story is in the winter time in the North Pole. You are able to tell what the setting is by whas going on and what the temperature looks like outside. It looks cold and snowy and that on ly happens in the winter.

Mini Lesson:
I would teach the students about the setting part about it being in the winter. I probably would not use this book to teach students unless I had other books to teach other religions also so it would be fair to all. If I were to teach this I would use it to teach about things that go on in the winter. I would have the students cut up paper and use it to make a picture of what things they do during the winter.

Illustrations:
The illustrations in this book are really good! They not only stimulate the senses by touch, but through the illustrations you are able to be interactive with the story. The illustrations show what is going on in the text.

Target Audience:
Young children to early elementary school

Biscuit

Biscuit
Written by: Alyssa Satin Capucilli
Illustrated by: Pat Schories
Genre: Bedtime Stories/Series 
Publishers: HarperCollins Publishers in 1996
Readibility Lexile: 190L
Summary:
Biscuit is a dog that is supposed to go to bed but he just wants to play. His owner feeds him, gives him drink, and reads to him but he still does not want to go to bed. She gets the blankets ready and gives him his doll, hugs him, kisses him, and turns off the light, but biscuit is still not ready for bed. He wants his owner to tuck him in again, one more kiss, one more hug. He wants to cuddle up with his owner. When he is by his owner in her room he is finally able to fall asleep.

Evaluation:
This is a really good book for emergent readers. It has a lot of repetition in it throughout the whole book. It also teaches children what to do to take care of your dog and put him to bed. It is a good book to use to teach children vocab words and spelling because of the easy words and the repetition. It is a fun book that most children who have dogs are able to relate to. The illustrations are fun and colorful that makes the book more fun to read. The text is in large print so it is easy to read since the letters are bigger.

Literary Elements:
-          Setting- The setting of this book takes place at night. It goes through the realistic time frame that getting ready for bed takes. It is realistic and something that all children can relate to because they all go to bed.
-          Plot- The plot of this book is about getting your dog ready for bed. It shows the steps that people go through to do this and that it is not always the easiest thing to do.
-          Theme- The theme of this book is bedtime. It is about getting ready for bed and going to sleep. Everybody goes to sleep so it is something realistic and something that students can r-relate to.
Mini Lesson:
For a mini lesson I would choose to do the plot. I would read this book to my students and them have them write a short paragraph about what they have to do to get ready for bed. This creates text-to-self moments and helps with students writing.

Illustrations:
The illustrations in this book are well done and you are really able to see the dogs personality through them. It creates visuals in student’s mind that get them more involved with the text. The picture demonstrates what the text is trying to say.

Target Audience:
Early Elementary

Waddle!

Waddle!
Written and Illustrated by: Rufus Butler Seder
Designed by: Raquel Jaramillo
Published by: Workman Publishing Company, INC.
Genre: Nonfiction/Scanimation
Readability Lexile: ?

Summary:
This is a book about what kind of movements that different animals make to get around. It has the animal in the picture and then the verb is highlighted in a color saying what the animal is doing. It says all the movements that these animals do so they can get away from the alligator at the end of the book. The last two pages ask if you can move like the animals can. It teaches you about how animals move and what they look like. The pictures show how the animals move.

Evaluation:
This is high literature. It not only teaches children but also shows them how the animals in the book move. It also teaches kids about verbs. Each verb saying what action/movement the animal is doing is highlighted so it emphasizes it. It also uses motion as the illustrations. As you turn the pages of the book the animals move too just like it says in the text. You are able to visually witness the verb occurring. Students are able to learn about the animals as well as hoe they move and what it looks like for them to move. It also asks the children a question at the end of the text which is another way to be interactive with the text. It is very interesting and intriguing for children to read and look at.

  Literary Elements:
-          Style- The style of this book is scanimation. It is a very cool new literature for children to be interested in. When you turn the page you are able to see the picture move. In books you usually are never able to see movement so this is something really cool to have in the classroom.
-          Theme- The theme of this book is animals and verbs. On each page a different animal is doing a different kind of movement to get around and the verb is highlighted so it standsw out to its readers.

Mini Lesson:
For a mini lesson for this book I would do the theme. I would use this book to teach verbs. It is a very good book to teach verbs since the colored words in the book are only verbs. They stand out to the students so they are able to recognize what each verb is. I would give students a worksheet and they would have to fill in the verb for an animal or an action in a sentence already created for them.

Illustrations:
The illustrations in this book are scanimation. It is a way of using motion in books. It is really cool because the movement in the pictures to show what the text is trying to describe through a verb.

Target Audience:
Early elementary

Swing

Swing
Written and Illustrations by: Rufus Butler Seder
Design by: Raquel Jaramillo
Published by: Working Publishing Company, INC.
Genre: Scanimation Picture Book
Readability Lexile: ?

Summary:
This book is about different activities children can do. It has a page for baseball, soccer, riding a bicycle, running, cart wheels, spinning on the ice, basketball, swimming, and then celebrating. It  gets children motivated to do activities. It also says the sounds that each thing makes while it shows a child doing it in actual motion.

Evaluation:
This is a high literature good. It has a great message to it about getting children up and active. It also says the noises each thing makes like what it sounds like when someone hits a ball with a bat. Every time you turn the page it shows that activity in action. At the end of the book it says all the things that you can do and then it tells you to celebrate for going them. It shows children that exercise is important in a fun way. It is a scanimations book so it is as if you are watching a film when you flip the pages. It is very visual and the color coordinates with the text.

Literary Elements:
                -Theme- The theme of this book is for children to get up and get active through activities and sports that are shown in the book. It is very worthwhile and by doing the things that the theme introduces it is a way to help children stay healthy.
                - Style- The style of this book is scanimation. When you flip the pages it activates something in the book to make the pictures turn to motion.
               
Mini Lesson:
I would teach the theme for this book. It is very important for children to stay active and healthy, so after reading this book we would go out on the school ground and do the things that it said in the book.

Illustrations:
The illustrations in this book were scanimation. When you turn the page it shows motion of what the text says. It shows the action of what the text explains.

Target Audience:
Early Elementary