G’day, mate! Did you
know that there is a huge area of Australia called the Outback? The area is so big, and the families living
there live so far apart that going to school is impossible. Kids might live hundreds of miles from their
teachers and their school! The only way
kids in the Australian Outback can experience school is through “distance learning”
like you are doing this week. Each
child has a computer and an adult helper nearby, usually a parent, and receives
lessons and schoolwork from teachers and then returns the work to teachers through
email. Then 3 or 4 times a year the kids
travel long distances to meet together for a week, kind of like a school
camp. Why don’t we pretend we are living
in the Australian Outback, and I will deliver your ‘library time lesson’ for
the week below? Isn’t that a grouse
idea? (In Australian slang ‘grouse’
means that you like something, like you think it’s a wonderful idea.)
So here goes the lesson for the week of March 16, 2020 for 5th grade:
I hope you have begun your Newbery Award or Newbery Honor
book and are thoroughly enjoying it.
Remember the book you chose was voted the BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR or a runner up to that honor
in the year it was published. Reading
just doesn’t get much better than that!
If we were in the library this week, I would give you free silent time
to begin your Newbery book and then give you the wordsearch puzzle below to do
for fun and to see how many Newbery titles you remember hearing about last week. I hope you will remember many of those titles
and will read them in middle school because you’ll find most of them on the
middle school side of the library, too.
Before you start reading and wordsearching, I want to share
a few facts from those amazing Weird But True books that you love so much:
Vanilla
is used to make chocolate.
An
elephant’s tooth is the size of a brick.
The
Statue of Liberty’s nose is almost 5 feet long, taller than you.
Chewing
gum can make your heart beat faster.
The 50
tallest mountains in the world are all in Asia.
There
are around 3 trillion (3,000,000,000,000) trees on Earth. (I wonder how many are cherry blossom trees.)
Isn’t it just amazing and so much fun to see what all you
can learn when you read!
Now…on to your Newbery reading and wordsearch
puzzle. Can you print it at home
and let the fun begin?
Newbery
Award and Honor Books Word Bank
Al Capone Does My Shirts A Wrinkle in Time Bud Not Buddy
Ella Enchanted Hatchet Hope Was Here
Rules Hoot The
Tale of Despereaux Wolf Hollow
A Long Way from Chicago A Year Down Yonder Crispin:
The Cross of Lead
Everything On A Waffle Holes Old Yeller
The
House of Sixty Fathers A Single
Shard The
Westing Game
Because of Winn Dixie Elijah of Buxton Flora and Ulysses
The War That Saved My Life Pictures of Hollis Woods The One and Only Ivan
Now…enough about Australia.
Let’s talk about Ireland, an island and part of the continent of
Europe. If you were in our library this
week, I would read you a story about the life of Saint Patrick and some of the
traditions and fun associated with Saint Patrick’s Day celebrated on March 17
each year, but since we are ‘distance
learning’ this week, please click here (kids.nationalgeographpic.com –
search St. Patrick’s Day) on a computer or iPad and read National
Geographic Kids’ short article on St. Patrick’s Day. It’s so interesting! Take the short quiz at the end to see what
you remember about St. Patrick.
Well, that was fun!
But now would you like to know even more about the real St. Patrick? And about why we wear green?
And what a 3-leaf clover has to do with anything? You must learn why the real St. Patrick went
to Ireland two times! Ask a grown-up to click
here (DouglasTalks.com Who
is St. Patrick?) to
watch the video and learn the answers. I
can hardly wait to see you again to discuss the life of this brave Christian
man and why he is still celebrated more than 1,500 years later! We can learn a lot about who God wants us to
be by learning about St. Patrick!
One more thing, knowing how much you LOVE the Weird But True books, I just have to share a few facts:
Vanilla
is used to make chocolate.
An
elephant’s tooth is the size of a brick.
The
Statue of Liberty’s nose is almost 5 feet long, taller than you.
Chewing
gum can make your heart beat faster.
The 50
tallest mountains in the world are all in Asia.
There are around
3 trillion (3,000,000,000,000) trees on Earth.
(I
wonder how many are cherry blossom trees.)
Isn’t it just amazing and so much fun to see what all you
can learn when you read!
So here goes the lesson for the week of March 16, 2020 for 3rd grade:
Now…enough about Australia. Let’s talk about Ireland, an island and part of the continent of Europe. If you were in our library this week, I would show you Ireland on a map and read you a story about the life of Saint Patrick and some of the traditions and fun associated with Saint Patrick’s Day celebrated on March 17 each year, but since we are ‘distance learning’ this week, please ask a grown-up to click here: (kids.nationalgeographic.com – search St. Patrick’s Day) on a computer or iPad and read National Geographic Kids’ short article on St. Patrick’s Day. It’s so interesting! Take the short quiz at the en to see what you remember about St. Patrick.
Well, that was fun!
But now would you like to know even more about the real St. Patrick? And about why we wear green?
And what a 3-leaf clover has to do with anything? You must learn why the real St. Patrick went
to Ireland two times! Ask a grown-up to click
here (DouglasTalks.com
Who is St. Patrick?) to
watch the video and learn the answers. I
can hardly wait to see you again to discuss the life of this brave Christian
man and why he is still celebrated more than 1,500 years later! We can learn a lot about who God wants us to
be by learning about St. Patrick!
One more thing, knowing how much you LOVE the Weird But True books, I just have to share a few facts:
Vanilla
is used to make chocolate.
An
elephant’s tooth is the size of a brick.
The
Statue of Liberty’s nose is almost 5 feet long.
Chewing
gum can make your heart beat faster.
The 50
tallest mountains in the world are all in Asia.
There are around 3 trillion
(3,000,000,000,000) trees on Earth.
(I wonder how many are cherry blossom
trees.)
Isn’t it just amazing and so much fun to see what all you
can learn when you read!
So here goes the lesson for March 16 2nd grade:
Now…enough about Australia.
Let’s talk about Ireland, an island and part of the continent of
Europe. If you were in our library this
week, I would show you Ireland on a map
and read you a story about St. Patrick’s Day which is celebrated on March 17
each year, but since we are ‘distance
learning’ this week, you can have a St. Patrick’s Day story read to you online
and see the pictures up really close, too.
Just ask a grown-up to click here (Pete the Cat – The
Great Leprechaun Chase). I hope
you enjoy this fun story about Pete the Cat trying to catch a leprechaun.
Well, that was fun!
But now would you like to know more about the real St.
Patrick? And about why we wear green? And what a 3-leaf clover has to do with
anything? You must learn why the real
St. Patrick went to Ireland two times!
Ask a grown-up to click here (YouTube
DouglasTalks.com Who is St. Patrick?) to watch the video and learn the answers. I can hardly wait to see you again to discuss
the life of this brave Christian man and why he is still celebrated more than 1,500
years later! We can learn a lot about
who God wants us to be by learning about St. Patrick!
I hope
you have a wonderful week and enjoy learning and reading about St.
Patrick! Will you read lots of books on
your bookshelves at home, too, and tell me about your favorite one when we see
each other again?
So here goes the lesson for March 16 for 3k,, 4k,, 5k, and 1st
Oh, how I wish I could read a story and sing a song with
you, but since we’re distance learning this week, I found a wonderful librarian
online to read and sing with you. Her
name is Sheneatha, and she works2 at the Brooklyn Public Library in New
York. When someone in your home has 15
free minutes, crawl up in that person’s lap and ask to click here (Go to Brooklyn Public Library Facebook page and locate their
virtual storytime with Sheneatha) on an iPad or tablet. You
will LOVE hearing Sheneatha read
Leonardo the Terrible Monster by
the wonderful Mo Willems and Pete the Cat and His Four Groovy Buttons by Eric Litwin. Remember when you
met Mr. Eric Litwin in our library before Thanksgiving and you got to hear him
sing and talk about his books? That was
so fun! You’ll think this library lesson
with Sheneatha is fun, too, especially the funny faces and songs she will share
with you. When you finish watching her
video, tell the person you are watching it with something that you remember
about Mr. Eric Litwin’s visit and his books about Pete the Cat or Groovy Joe or
the Nut family. Aren’t books just SO
MUCH FUN? I’m so glad and thankful that
I get to share great books with you each week.
Enjoy your time at home with reading lots of good books from your own
bookshelves right next to somebody you love!
Happy, happy Saint
Patrick’s Day!