Showing posts with label Books & Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books & Reading. Show all posts

Friday, March 17, 2023

School Age Storytime: St. Patrick's Day and Finding Treasure in Unexpected Ways

 

Jamie O'Rourke and the Big Potato: An Irish Folktale by Tomie De Paola. (Discussed meaning of folktale, compared retelling to game of "telephone.") Ireland's laziest man happens upon a Leprechaun and is given a potato that grows to huge proportions and creates humorous problems. 


That's What Leprechauns Do by Eve Bunting (Delightful illustrations from Caldecott medalist Emily Arnold McCully accompany a playful text written in a lilting Irish style about three leprechauns' mischief-making on their way to place the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.)

Speaking of looking for gold...

The Book of Gold by Bob Staake (Single name = author & illustrator.  Young Isaac Gutenberg isn't a curious boy . . . that is, until he meets an old shopkeeper who tells him about The Book of Gold. This special book, hidden somewhere in the world, holds all the answers to every question and turns to solid gold when opened. Isaac is determined to find the book and spends his whole life searching for it...discovering many other things along the way.

Another book celebrating the magic of discovery:

The Pink Refrigerator by Tim Egan ("Try to do as little as possible.” This was Dodsworth’s motto, until, one morning, on his daily trip to the junkyard, he discovers a pink refrigerator...)

Last, a book with no words...but a special kind of magic!


Chalk by Bill Thomson  (A rainy day. Three kids in a park. A dinosaur spring rider. A bag of chalk. The kids begin to draw...and then...magic! The children draw the sun, butterflies, and a dinosaur that amazingly come to life. Children will never feel the same about the playground after they experience this astounding wordless picture book and the power of the imagination.)

No time for:


If… by Sarah Perry (Imagine if cats could fly, leaves were fish, mice were hair, caterpillars were toothpaste, toes were teeth, or frogs ate rainbows…then imagine what else you can imagine!)  


Imagine a Day/Night/Place/World books by Sarah Thompson  (mind-bending images & poems)

Other books celebrating books, reading, and libraries: 
http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/search/label/Books%20%26%20Reading





Thursday, March 2, 2023

Read Across America - Celebrating Reading, Libraries, and Librarians - 2nd grade

 

Opened by asking fiction or non-fiction?

Library Lil
by Suzanne Williams
A formidable librarian makes readers not only out of the once resistant residents of her small town, but out of a tough-talking, television-watching motorcycle gang as well in this modern tall tale! 

Asked the same question again for:



Librarian on the Roof! by M.G. King
When RoseAleta Laurell begins her new job at the Dr. Eugene Clark Library in Lockhart, Texas, she is surprised that the children of the town think the library is for adults. She vows to raise the money for a children's section and spends a week living and working on the library roof, even surviving a dangerous storm. With the help of the entire town, RoseAleta raises over $39,000 from within the community and across the country.

Followed with another book based on a true story:

Nour's Secret Library by Wafa' Tarnowska 
Forced to take shelter when their Syrian city is plagued with bombings, young Nour and her cousin begin to bravely build a secret underground library. Based on the author’s own life experience and inspired by a true story, Nour’s Secret Library is about the power of books to heal, transport and create safe spaces during difficult times. 

Finished with the imagination-starter:


If by Sarah Perry
Take a fantastical journey through an inspiring world where anything can happen: leaves turn into fish, cats fly with wings, humans have tails, frogs eat rainbows, and dreams become visible. 

First published in 1995, Sarah Perry’s delightful picture book of “surreal possibilities” was the Getty’s first children’s title. Twenty-five years later it remains a visual feast that children of all ages enjoy.  

Booktalked:

Sector 7 by David Wiesner (a cloud takes a boy on a magical journey to the cloud factory in this wordless  book by this incredible author/illustrator)


Imagine a Day/Night/Place/World books by Sarah Thompson  (mind-bending images & poems)

Chalk by Bill Thomson (another magical wordless book)

More Than Anything Else by Marie Bradby (A fictionalized story about the life of young Booker T. Washington. Living in a West Virginia settlement after emancipation, nine-year-old Booker travels by lantern light to the salt works, where he labors from dawn till dusk. Although his stomach rumbles, his real hunger is his intense desire to learn to read.... )

Applemondo's Dreams and Aunt Chip and the Great Triple Creek Dam Affair by Patricia Polacco (celebrations of imagination and the power of books & reading by this great author-illustrator) 


Mr. Hogan's class Bedm 3/2/2023





Friday, March 4, 2022

Read Across America - 2022 - Books and Dreams - 4th grade

 


Read: More Than Anything Else by Marie Bradley (A fictionalized story about the life of young Booker T. Washington. Living in a West Virginia settlement after emancipation, nine-year-old Booker travels by lantern light to the salt works, where he labors from dawn till dusk. Although his stomach rumbles, his real hunger is his intense desire to learn to read. - Booker (great name, kids noticed!) was born into slavery, freed at age 9 with the end of the Civil War, age 16 walked 500 miles (equivalent of distance from Bedminster to Washington DC & back!)  to go to high school at Hampton Institute, later became a teacher and founder of the Tuskegee Normal School (a college for teachers) which later became Tuskegee University.)

Read: The Pink Refrigerator by Tim Egan (Dodsworth does as little work as he can, collecting items from a junkyard and placing them in his thrift store for sale, until he happens upon a pink refrigerator that spurs him to do much more with his life.)


Read: Appelemando's Dreams by Patricia Polacco (with the war raging in Ukraine, I wanted to share this book on the power of dreams from the renowned Ukrainian/Russian author illustrator Patricia Polacco. Also discussed how this author/illustrator of over 50 books had dyslexia and felt "stupid" as a child because she couldn't read didn't learn to read herself until 5th grade when a teacher figured out how to help her, a story she tells in her book, Thank You Mr. Falker. Urged the 4th graders to look for Ms. Polacco's books at the library because, though they are in the E/Picture Book section, they have long texts and are geared much more toward older students like them.)

Read: Imagine a Place words by Sarah L. Thomson ; paintings by Rob Gonsalves (Mind-blowing illustrations accompany poems that urge the reader to think beyond the ordinary - the same author/illustrator pair created Imagine a Day and Imagine a Night.)


Read: Sector 7 – David Wiesner (visual storytelling -- telling a story without words. Wiesner is an author/illustrator local boy, grew up in Bridgewater NJ, Caldecott Medal winner, fun wordless fantasy of a boy who goes on an adventure with a cloud and makes quite a stir at the cloud factory.  Did you know there really is a cloud machine? Here’s a video.)  – mentioned they can find this and other books by this talented illustrator  in the Picture Book section. 

Read: The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore by William Joyce (and a 2011 Short Film) -- view here: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x3yrl25 This is the story of a man and a magical library of flying books, and most of all, the power of stories in our lives. The film was awarded the Best Animated Short Film at the 84th Academy Awards. 

Read: If… by Sarah Perry (Imagine if cats could fly, leaves were fish, mice were hair, caterpillars were toothpaste, toes were teeth, or frogs ate rainbows…then imagine what else you can imagine!)  

No time for:

image

The Book of Gold by Bob Staake  (Isaac Gutenberg isn't a curious boy . . . that is, until he meets an old shopkeeper who tells him about The Book of Gold. This special book, hidden somewhere in the world, holds all the answers to every question and turns to solid gold when opened….)

Library Lil – Suzanne Williams (a librarian with superhero strength revitalizes the towns library even convincing the head of the town’s motorcycle gang to become an avid reader)


Aunt Chip and the Great Triple Creek Dam Affair by Patricia Polacco (A town has forgotten to read since the invasion of television...)



2022 Bedm, 4th grade Ms. Carlin's class

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Book Day!–Celebrating Books and Reading

Ages 3-6 and 7-12 in two groups: Children (and some adults) wore costumes celebrating characters from their favorite books

Opened by asking kids to tell what character/book they came from. Then said we were going to read a book about a superhero Librarian --

 

Read: Library Lil – Suzanne Williams (a librarian with superhero strength revitalizes the towns library even convincing the head of the town’s motorcycle gang to become an avid reader)

 

Sing: R.E.A.D. (lyrics here: http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2015/04/celebrating-libraries-books-and.html) (did the letters in sign language alphabet – could also do with full bodies – similar to Y.M.C.A.)


The Book with No Pictures(Age 7-12 only): The Book with No Pictures by B.J. Novak – read by the author here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cREyQJO9EPs (kids love this silly silly book!)

imageMiss Smith's Incredible Storybook by Michael Garland  When the teacher is late for school one day, all the storybook characters escape from their book!

Booktalked the sequel: Miss Smith Reads Again image

(3-6 only) Flannel: Just Use Imagination (lyrics here: http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2015/04/celebrating-libraries-books-and.html)

or Throw it Out the Window -- an action riff on nursery rhymes (lyrics here: http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2017/07/hands-across-world.html)

followed with:
Humpty Dumpty Sat on a Wall eating black bananas
Where do you think he put the skins? – Down the king’s pajamas!


Pirate Treasure Hunt by Jan Peck -- pajama-wearing pirates follow their captain in this rollicking action book

Action Song: I'm Being Swallowed by a Boa Constrictor (or Big Alligator) <– I had a green scarf so did the former

 

 

(Ages 7-12 only) Asked whether the first book we read was true or fiction – then showed the following title and asked the same question – kids astonished, this one is true!

Read: Librarian on the Roof: a TRUE story – M. G. King (librarian spends a week on the roof of the library to raise funds for a children’s room - now that is my kind of hero!)

 

 


Sing
: Joe Scrugg’s “Read a Book” (lyrics here: http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2015/04/celebrating-libraries-books-and.html)

 

 

(Ages 3-6 only) Read: Reading Makes You Feel Good by Todd Parr

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore

(Ages 7-12 only) Book: The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore -- William Joyce (story that inspired this Academy Award-winning short film: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJvSXQwBBQg, also any iPad Ap)

Then taught silly Humpty Dumpty variant:

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Eating black bananas.
Where do you think he put the skins? Down the king’s pajamas!

(refreshments inspired by books were served afterwards)

Muslim Homeschooling Co-op 3/29/2018

More ideas here: http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/search/label/Books%20%26%20Reading

 

Bedm SRC 2018 – K-2, selections differed. Found giving them two selections for each book & having them vote worked well!  Librarian on the Roof, Flying Books, Throw it Out the Window (action + Humpty Dumpty black bananas) and Book with No Pictures did well. 

Saturday, October 28, 2017

School Age Storytime: Stepping Out (of Your Comfort Zone)

A K-4 storytime celebrating curiosity and a willingness to try new things -- with a nod to books and reading, the beauty of this country and the world around us, and the power of possibilities....

image

The Book of Gold by Bob Staake Isaac Gutenberg isn’t interested in anything, until an old bookseller tells him the legend of a book of gold which contains answers to everything and, when opened, turns into solid gold.  Eager for riches, he opens every book he finds – and gradually starts reading what is inside…he’ll need patience and fortitude…and eventually finds them both at the NY Public Library.

image

On this Spot: An Expedition Back Through Time by Susan E. Goodman (J974.71 GOO)  (Non-Fiction – uncommon core!) --  A brilliant tour-de-force tracing NYC from the present back in time 540 million years…lots of mathematical comparisons (e.g.if all the 8 million people in NYC today were laid end to end would reach to California and back, 350 years ago New Amsterdam had 1500 people = about the population of 3 schools today), fascinating historical trivia (e.g. pigs and chickens roamed NYC streets 175 years ago, the Lenape path to winter grounds is now today’s Broadway) and scientific information (the rise and fall of mammoths, ice age glaciers*, dinosaurs, lakes, mountains, and seas).   Text is long so I point out highlights.)  *mentioned our gorgeous local Buck Garden was carved by a mile high glacier.

This Land is Your Land by Woody Guthrie, Paintings by Kathy Jakobsen (J782.42 GUT)

image

The Man Who Walked Between the Towers by Mordicai Gerstein (also DVD)-- The Caldecott-winning evocation of Phillippe Petit's 1974 tightrope walk between the world trade towers.

image

The Pink Refrigerator by Tim Egan  -- Dodsworth leads a very dull life until a rusty old refrigerator filled with different supplies each day opens his eyes to amazing new possibilities.

See also:

http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2014/10/school-age-storytime-on-this-spot-new.html 

http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2016/05/school-age-storytimeimagine.html

http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2015/04/school-age-storytime-earth-day-heroes.html

 

Bedm 10/2017

"How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world." ~ Anne Frank (1929-1945)

“No pessimist ever discovered the secret of the stars, or sailed to an uncharted land, or opened a new doorway for the human spirit.” ~ Helen Keller

"The future depends entirely on what each of us does every day." ~ Gloria Steinem

"I figure if a girl wants to be a legend, she should go ahead and be one."~ Calamity Jane (1852-1903), American frontierswoman

Friday, April 3, 2015

Celebrating Libraries, Books, and Reading–When Classes Visit the Library or for National Library Week


A program for when K-4th grade classes visit – usually paired with a library tour -- adapted for Summer Reading Visits for the theme "Every Hero Has a Story" (2015)
Also a Pre-School Storytime below for National Library Week or National Book Week.
 

 
Play as they arrive:  “We’re going down to the Library” from Tom Chapin’s  album  MoonBoat
 
Read: Library Lil – Suzanne Williams (a librarian with superhero strength revitalizes the towns library even convincing the head of the town’s motorcycle gang to become an avid reader) or Aunt Chip and the Great Triple Creek Dam Affair – Patricia Polacco (modern fable about a town which forgets what books are for)
 

 

Sing: Joe Scrugg’s “Read a Book”  (lyrics below)
 
Ask whether the first book read was true or fiction – then show the following title and ask the same question – kids astonished, this one is true!
 
Read: Librarian on the Roof: a TRUE story – M. G. King (librarian spends a week on the roof of the library to raise funds for a children’s room - now that is my kind of hero!)
 
Sing/flannel: “Throw it Out the Window” (lyrics below)
 
 
 

If time, can read any or all:
 
Jack Prelutsky Poem: “I Met a Dragon” or “Books Fall Open” (both in Good Books, Good Times! -811.5 GOO) or  “Please Bury Me in the Library” (from the book by that title by J. Patrick Lewis 811.54 LEW) or “Reading for Pleasure” (from Winter Lights: A Season in Poems and Quilts by Anna Grossnickle Hines 811.54 HIN)
 
Sing: R.E.A.D. (lyrics below) (can do the letters in sign language alphabet or with full bodies – similar to Y.M.C.A.)

Tour the library or tell the details of  the Summer Reading Program (feel free to email  me if you want my script).
 
(Could use: Winners 2015 Reader's Theater of A Library Book for Bear by Bonny Becker.)

5.2015



SRC 2015 "Every Hero Has a Story" School Visits:
Visited schools  dressed in red "Be Super" T-shirt, introduced myself as "SuperLibrarian," showed "Superdog" sidekick and SRC mascot (stuffed dalmatian in red mask and cape)

Introduced Summer Reading Clubs -- 3 Components: Reading, Prizes, Programs
All reading counts -- books (ink & paper), comic books, magazines, ebooks, audiobooks (CDs & e-audio)...can check out e-books/e-audio and download to your electronic devices -- great if you are away.

Speaking of electronic devices, new this year, record your minutes online anywhere you have an internet connection...even if you travel to India, China, or Iowa!    Bookmark with details.

Prizes -- grand prizes, reading minutes prizes, weekly contests (Find Buddy, Trivia)

Programs (showed flyers) -- hero themed, plus dance parties, Lego, retro games, carnival
Showed sample hero books -- famous heroes (MLK, kid heroes -Malala, superheroes, animal heroes, nursery rhyme heroes - Gingerbread Man Superhero by Dottie Enderly*, and, my favorite superheroes: Librarians!

Showed Library Lil -- asked fiction or non-fiction?  (fiction -- cover pix Lil is holding a motorcycle over her head!), then asked same about Librarian on the Roof -- kids astonished to find out non-fiction.  Read or told (depending on time available).  Substituted Gingerbread Man Superhero with classes that had visited the library this Spring and heard this book already.

Ended with Queen rap "We Will We Will Read Books" -- lyrics below.

Also did at Bedminster School 40 min each group so read all three of the books above & added variously:
songs: "Throw it Out the Window" and "R*E*A*D*
books: Wedgieman to the Rescue by Charise Mericle Harper and/or  The Book with No Pictures by B.J.Novak

6/15

Preschool Storytime Celebrating Children’s Book Week
 
 
Dinosaur vs. the Library
 
Play as they arrive:  “We’re going down to the Library” from Tom Chapin’s  album  MoonBoat
Read: Book, Book Book – Deborah Bruss  (Wild about Books didn’t hold their attention.)
Singable Book: Wheels on the Bus – Paul O. Zelinsky
Read: Dinosaur vs. Library  - Bob Shea
Flannel: Throw it out the window (lyrics below)
Read: Otto the Book Bear – Katie Clemenson
Sing: Joe Scrugg’s “Read a Book”  (lyrics below)
Read: The Extraordinary Gift – Florence Langlois
Flannel: “Just use imagination” (lyrics below)
DVD:  Reading Rainbow: Alistair in Outer Space
Optional:  Sing/sign: R.E.A.D. (lyrics below)

5.12 BWL

next time add: A Library Book for Bear -- Bonny Becker

Celebrating One Million Minutes Read at Bedminster School 5/2016
a fun and funny storytime celebrating reading!
(only a few classes because 2nd grade had their Meadow display)

How to Read a Story by Kate Messner -- Reader's Theater scripts in Judy Freeman’s 2016 Winners.

It's a Book by Lane Smith -- You mean you don't need to plug it in?

The Book with No Pictures by B.J Novak --  Always brings down the house!

Miss Smith's Incredible Storybook by Michael Garland  When the teacher is late for school one day, all the storybook characters escape from their book!

Flannel: Throw it Out the Window -- an action riff on nursery rhymes (lyrics to this and other songs below)

Free Fall by David Wiesner -- a boy's quilt morphs into a magical kingdom in Wiesner's Caldecott-Honor winning magnificent wordless fantasy

Booktalk if no time to read: The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore by William Joyce (gorgeous video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ad3CMri3hOs)

Warning: Do Not Open this Book by Adam Lehrhaupt -- or the monkeys may get you!

Action Song: I'm Being Swallowed by a Big Alligator

Pirate Treasure Hunt by Jan Peck -- pajama-wearing pirates follow their captain in this rollicking action book

Song: R.E.A.D.

Reading Makes You Feel Good by Todd Parr



Other good read-alouds celebrating books & reading & libraries:
 
It’s A Book – Lane Smith
Walter’s Magic Wand-Houghton
Bats at the Library – Lies (M. Draghi favorite –esp storytime scene)
Wolf – Bloom
Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Book -- Lauren Child
Stella Louella's Runaway Book -- Lisa Campbell Ernst
Beverly Billingsley Borrows a Book -- Alexander Stadler
Our Library – Bunting (library is due to be closed, lots of challenges to overcome)
Born to Read – Judy Sierra
What Happened to Marion's Book? - Brooke Berg
D.W.'s Library Card - Marc Brown
Book!Book!Book! - Deborah Bruss
The Library Dragon - Carmen Deedy
I Took My Frog to the Library - Eric Kimmel
Edward and the Pirates - David McPhail
Edward in the Jungle - David McPhail
Richard Wright and the Library Card - William Miller
Tomas and the Library Lady - Pat Mora
Wild About Books - Judy Sierra
The Book with No Pictures – B.J. Novak
Charlie Cook’s Favorite Book – Donaldson
Walter’s Magic Wand – Houghton
The Library – Steward (also DVD)
Maybe a Bear Knows
Read It, Don’t Eat It – Schoenher
Best Book to Read – Bloom
Maybe a Bear Ate It – Robbie Harris
Reading Makes You Feel Good – Parr
Ron’s Big Mission  – Rose Blue (Ron Aldar, astronaut, denied library card initially as kid)
Library Mouse – Kirk (mouse author leaves clues – great for meet the author day)
Chloe & the Library – Barnett (Winners 2013 p.6 – lots of ideas)
Gift Days – Kari-Lynn Winters (a girl in Uganda desperately wants to learn to read)
Amanda and her Alligator – Willems
Miss Dorothy and her Bookmobile – Houston
That Book Woman - Henson
Hands around the library – (how the libry of Alexandria was protected during Egyptian revolution)
Can I Bring Wooly to the Library Ms. Reader – Grambling
Biblioburro: a true story from Columbia – Winter
My Librarian Is a Camel – Ruurs
A Book --Mordecai Gerstein  (the tale of one little girl's search for her own story)Redwoods --Jason Chin (After a boy opens an abandoned book about redwoods, he finds himself in the very forest described in the book)
Miss Brooks Loves Books  (& I don’t )  Bottner (for book week, every kid presents a book – Shrek references!)
Clever Jack takes the Cake – Fleming (bringing a cake for the princess, ends up with a story)
It’s a Book – Smith
Winston the Book Wolf / Marni McGee
Wonderful thing about hiccups – Meng b&t
Boy who was raised by librarians – Morris
Incredible book eating boy – Jeffers B&T
Dog Loves Books – Yates (charming!)
Please Bury Me in the Library Poems – Lewis
Incredible Book Eating Boys – Jeffers
We are in a Book – Willems (Elephant & Piggie, self-referential)
Calvin Can’t Fly – Bendis
Do Not Open This Book – Muntean
 
Dear Miss Breed – Oppenheim (letters to libn from Japanese Internment Camps)

 
 
 

 
SONGS:



Read A Book  from Joe Scrugg’ s album “Deep in the Jungle”

When you’re feeling kinda blue READ A BOOK
It’s the only thing to do READ A BOOK
When your mother’s gone to town
or the rain is coming down
READ A BOOK (3X)

When you’re all by yourself READ A BOOK
There’s a good one on the shelf TAKE A LOOK
When your friends have gone away
And there’s no one left to play
READ A BOOK (3X)

Feeling lonesome is a waste of time
Why don’t you read a book instead
You can be your own TV
With pictures in your head!

You can see a chimpanzee IN A BOOK
Sail across a shining sea IN A BOOK
On a map of foreign lands
Cross a desert?s burning sands
It?s all right there in a book!

There’s heroes from history
Royal Kings and Queens
Magic and mystery
And elephants with wings!

When you have some time to spare READ A BOOK
Just curl up in a chair WITH A BOOK
There’s puzzles and poems
Riddles games and jokes
Cowboys and Clowns
And other funny folks!

A world of fun and laughter
is waiting for you there
READ A BOOK (3X)!


 


Throw It Out the Window Song on Judy Freeman’s “Hi Ho Librario”
(Make up your own additional verses.)
Old Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard
To fetch her poor dog a bone.
But when she got there, the cupboard was bare,
So she threw it out the window…
                The window, the window,
                The second story window,
                High, Low, Low, High
                And she threw it out the window
Old King Cole was a merry old soul,
And a merry old soul was he,
He called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl,
And he threw them out the window…

Little Bo Peep has lost her sheep
And doesn't know where to find them.
But leave them alone-- when they come home
She'll throw them out the window...

OYankee Doodle went to town
A-riding on a pony
He stuck a feather in his cap
And threw it out the window…
(Continue with other familiar nursery rhymes…Jack and Jill, Jack Be Nimble, Mary Had a Little Lamb, Humpty Dumpty, Twinkle Twinkle…)

R*E*A*D lyrics by Carol Levin, tune L*O*V*E from Linda Arnold’s album
Happiness Cake

Chorus:  R*E*A*D:  Reading a book is fun for you and me
                R*E*A*D": You’ll find them at the library!

Reading is a skill
That will take you where you will
No matter where you go...
You can read just for fun
Or to make your model run
And see how much you grow!

CHORUS

You can read about the sun
Or a battle lost or won
You can read about a bird who sings...
You can read about a car
Or a place that’s very far
Or a fairy’s magic ring!

CHORUS
So no matter where you go
Or what you do and know
Don’t forget to read and read...
No matter where you look
You’ll find knowledge in a book
And kids who read succeed!

FINAL CHORUS (do it twice through)


We Will, We Will Read Books (tune: Queen's “We will Rock You”)  found in Rob Reid's  Twenty Four Creative Programs for All Ages (page 105):
Use stomp, stomp, clap (stomp feet) or slap, slap, clap (slap knees) rhythm


Wha'cha gonna do? Wha'cha gonna do?Wha'cha gonna do when the school year's through?
Gonna hang around the place? Stuffin' your face?
Bein' a slob & takin' up space? NO!


We will, we will read books! We will, we will read books!
Wha'cha gonna do? Wha'cha gonna do?
Wha'cha gonna do when the school year's through?
Gonna check out a book, Take a good look,
It's free, fast, fun, & easy to do.


SING IT! We will, we will read books! We will, we will read books!
Wha'cha gonna do? Wha'cha gonna do?
Wha'cha gonna do when the school year's through?
WE WILL, WE WILL READ BOOKS! 
(or substitute "Summer Reading Rocks You!)

Variation:Start by setting up a three beat rhythm (slap thighs twice - clap hands once, repeat throughout)

Slap slap CLAP
Slap slap CLAP
Slap slap CLAP
Slap slap CLAP

Chorus:  Books and Reading rock you...HUH!  (repeat)

(Notes:  When you grunt "HUH" pull elbow down across body toward opposite knee for emphasis.   If you want to get fancy, you can do the part which follows.  Keep the rhythm going throughout.)

Everybody gather 'round
Because you know the time has come
To have a really wonderful story time!
So find your space
Sit in your place
I'm gonna put a smile on your face

Chorus:  Books and Reading rock you.....HUH!  (repeat)


IF YOU WANT TO KNOW AN ANSWER...   (tune: "If You're
Happy")

If you want to know an answer, read a book! (2 times)
If you're wondering where the moon goes;
If you're wondering how the grass grows;
If you want to know an answer, read a book!

If you'd like to learn to draw, read a book! (2 times)
If you'd like to draw a dog,
Or a frog sitting on a log;
If you'd like to learn to draw, read a book!

If you'd like to learn to bake, read a book! (2 times)
If you'd like to make some candy,
Or a pizza that is dandy;
If you'd like to learn to bake, read a book!


JUST USE IMAGINATION (possible flannel, tune: "Yankee Doodle")

Reading can be lots of fun
Just use imagination,
I'm jumping with a parachute
I'm king of all creation!
I'm swimming cross the ocean wide
I'm riding on a turtle,
I'm flying high with butterflies
I'm jumping o'er a hurdle.
I'm dancing with a million stars
I'm painting my own rainbow;
I'm playing music on a harp,
A fiddle, and a banjo.
Reading can be lots of fun
Just use imagination,
I'm up in a hot air balloon
I'm king of all creation!




------------------------------------------------


Reading Cheers: (unless otherwise noted, source unknown)

L-I-B-R-A-R-Y (by Caroline Bauer)Where do you go for the poetry? L-I-B-R-A-R-Y
Where do you go for the history? L-I-B-R-A-R-Y
Where do you go if you're old and shy?
Where do you go to learn how to fly?
L-I-B-R-A-R-Y
That's how you spell it,
Whatcha gonna tell it?
It's been in your town for a hundred years.
Let's give the library three big cheers:
Hip-hip-hurray!
Hip-hip-hurray!
Hip-hip-hurray!
When I say 'library', you say "card":
Library (card) library (card)
I got one today, and it wasn't too hard.
Library (card) library (card)
Big brick building, how sweet it looks,
Takes me on to the land of books.

LET’S READ!
R-E-A-D   R-E-A-D (spell it out) You learn to read by going to school
Once you can read you're nobody's fool
R-E-A-D  R-E-A-D
If you need to know it,
A book is gonna show it.
R-E-A-D  R-E-A-D
Give me a R
Give me an E
Give me an A
Give me a D
What's that spell?
READ
What's that spell?
READ
Go to the library and get a book
Become a magician or a gourmet cook.
R-E-A-D  R-E-A-D
Reading books is really great
It helps you to communicate
R-E-A-D  R-E-A-D
Read poetry all day long
And perhaps one day you'll write a song
R-E-A-D  R-E-A-D
Fairy tales, scary tales, joke books, too.
What you read is up to you.
Now do it!
Go to it.
R-E-A-D  R-E-A-D


LET’S HEAR IT FOR THE LIBRARY
Clap your hands,
Stamp your feet,
The Public Library
Can't be beat!


Judy Freeman's book & CD "Hi Ho Librario" includes more songs, chants and stories.

See Also: http://carolsimonlevin.blogspot.com/2014/12/school-age-storytime-celebrating-books.html

Flannel: Storybook Friends

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

School Age Storytime: Celebrating Books and Reading

Open Your Eyes to the World -- either real or through the pages of a book
Pirate Treasure Hunt!

Book: Pirate Treasure Hunt! -- Jan Peck (chant and response -- treasure is a  box of books!)
Hello! Hello!

Book: hello!  hello! -- Matthew Cordell (girl discovers magical world outside when she puts down her electronics)
The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore

Book: The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore -- William Joyce (story that inspired this Academy Award-winning short film: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJvSXQwBBQg, also any iPad Ap)
The World Is Waiting for You

Book: The World is Waiting for You -- Barbara Kerley (Kerley's latest collaboration with National Geographic alternates photographs of children exploring their world with extraordinary photos of scientists and explorers.  Short biogs and great quotes in the back as well.)
H. O. R. S. E. : A Game of Basketball and Imagination

Book: H.O.R.S.E.: a game of basketball and imagination -- Christopher Myers (multicultural -- a great game of basketball and hyperbole!)
I'm Bored

Book: I'm Bored --Michael Ian Black (a girl, initially proclaiming "I'm bored" goes to great lengths to show a skeptical potato that kids are NOT boring!)

Bedm. K-3 6/13  K-3rd Summer Reading promo 2013


Other possibilities: The Book with No Pictures by B.J. Novak – read by the author here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cREyQJO9EPs
The Book with No Pictures

Goldie Takes a Stand – Barbara Krasner – true story of Golda Meir’s childhood campaign to raise money to buy school books for poor kids. (2014)
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