Showing posts with label Counting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Counting. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Very Hungry Caterpillar


The Very Hungry Caterpillar
Author:  Eric Carle


The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Genre: Picture Book, Fiction

Grade Level: Preschool and up

Published Date:  1981

Theme: Sequential, Days of the Week


Summary: The very hungry caterpillar is munching through the pages in this adorable tissue paper illustrated book.  As the caterpillar goes through the days of the week, each day has a numbered treat for him.  At the end we find out exactly why the caterpillar was so hungry.  He turns into a beautiful butterfly and the butterfly consists of all of the colors of the food he ate.

Pre-Reading Activity: Study the lifecycle of a butterfly.  

Post-Reading Activity: Talk about the different numbers and foods in the book.  You can have groups of 2 draw a food that they enjoy and make a classroom book.  For example, The Very Hungry Second Graders.  I would also have my students write a story about a butterfly and use this outline for a draft.
Reflection: I love this story and I love the other books by Eric Carle.  This story is so cute and even after I have red this story hundreds of times I just recently noticed that the butterfly at the end of the book is the color of all of the foods that the caterpillar ate throughout the book.


About the Author

Eric Carle
Eric Carle is acclaimed and beloved as the creator of brilliantly illustrated and innovatively designed picture books for very young children. His best-known work, The Very Hungry Caterpillar, has eaten its way into the hearts of literally millions of children all over the world and has been translated into more than 50 languages and sold over 33 million copies. Since the Caterpillar was published in 1969, Eric Carle has illustrated more than seventy books, many best sellers, most of which he also wrote, and more than 110 million copies of his books have sold around the world.


Interesting Things I Found:
 My cousin did this for her son's first birthday and she handed out these invitations...





Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Five Little Sharks Swimming in the Sea

Five Little Sharks Swimming in the Sea

Author: Steve Mezger
Illustrated By:  Laura Bryant




Genre: Fiction Picture Book, Comedy and Humor


Grade Level: PreK - Second Grade

Theme: Counting and Numbers, Early Learning, Animals


Summary: The popular "Monkeys Jumping on the Bed" rhyme is remained here with sharks misbehaving. The sharks bump into manatees, get stuck on the ocean floor, bang their tails, get lost playing hide-and-seek, and eat too much fish--all resulting in mother shark calling the doctor, time and time again. In the end, the sharks all return to health and swim happily in the sea.

Pre-Reading Activity: Sing the popular song, Five Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed, and ask the class if they think there can be any other stories that can be written using this idea. Talk about if monkeys really do jump on beds. Also ask, can monkey's really use telephones? Hold up the book Five Little Sharks Swimming in the Sea and ask predictions as to what trouble the sharks can get into in the sea.

Post-Reading Activity: Discuss if any of the children's predictions were illustrated in the story. Make a chart of what happened to all of the sharks or make a chart of all of the rhyming words. Pick seven children and have them come to the front of the room. Choose 5 to be sharks, one to be the mother, and one to be the doctor and act out the story in front of the class. You could even goes as far as bringing in an art project making doctor hats and shark fins.

Reflection: I really enjoy this book and really enjoyed sharing it with younger children. I have had children act it out and we would have to do it over and over so all children would get a turn. It is a real easy read and has great repetition so that even beginner readers can read this book. The one criticism that I have of this book is that although there is rhyming in it, the end sentence of the page does not rhyme so it is hard to get rhythm in the story when doing a read aloud. Below is an example...

Two little sharks playing hide-and-seek

One got lost and was missing for a week.

The mother called the doctor and the doctor said,

"No more sharks playing hide-and-seek!"

As you can see in the above excerpt from the book, the red words seek and week rhyme, while the blue words said and seek do not.
 


About the Author


Visit the Author Steve Metzer's Website at: http://www.stevemetzgerbooks.com

Image of Steve Metzger



Steve Metzger is the bestselling author of more than sixty children's books, including "Detective Blue" (starred review from School Library Journal), "The Mixed-Up Alphabet," and "Skeleton Meets the Mummy." He is a former teacher of young children and currently enjoys reading his stories during school visits. Steve had a typical 1950s childhood growing up in Queens, NY. He currently lives in Manhattan (not far from Central Park) with his wife, teenage daughter, and Biscuit, a talkative cat.