Practickle: Where Reading Is Made Run!

First Reading: The Dark

To allow the brain to focus on the information in the illustrations, this reading will look only at the illustrations and the information they provide to the reader. There are no right or wrong answers in this reading. Enjoy the questions we have provided and feel free to create your own. If the pages are not numbered, page 1 is the first page of text.

Pages 1 – 10:

Look at the series of pages 1 – 10:

~The author doesn’t use much color in his illustrations. What kind of feeling is he trying to create?

~Look at the boy’s face. How do you think he is feeling? Explain.

~What is strange about this setting? (No other people seem to be in the house. No furniture in the house.)

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About This Book And Then It’s Spring

ABOUT THIS BOOK: AND THEN IT’S SPRING

by Julie Fogliano

As I sit wrapped in a blanket listening to the howling wind sending Minnesota temperatures to -40 degrees, I think that I should be writing about A Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats. That classic story is about a little boy content to be outside in the snow all by himself, having a wonderful time. The setting of And Then Its Spring moves to the very end of winter. This little boy is, also, content to be outside by himself. The only other characters accompanying him are his silent animal friends. Ms. Fogliano uses sparse poetic text with one continuous sentence to convey peace, anticipation, and hopefulness. A sample page:

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Third Reading: The Dark

The focus of this reading is to read the story and talk about new vocabulary. There will be opportunities in this reading to connect the information in the illustrations to the information in the text.

*Read the pages before you ask the questions.

Pages 1 – 11:

~On page 2, now that we know that Laszlo is afraid of the dark, use the look on his face to infer whether the sun is rising or setting. (It must be setting because Laszlo looks afraid.)

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Second Reading: The Dark

The focus of this reading is to read the story and talk about new vocabulary. There will be opportunities in this reading to connect the information in the illustrations to the information in the text.

*Read the pages before you ask the questions.

Pages 1 – 11:

~On page 2, now that we know that Laszlo is afraid of the dark, use the look on his face to infer whether the sun is rising or setting. (It must be setting because Laszlo looks afraid.)

(more…)

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About This Book The Dark

ABOUT THIS BOOK: THE DARK
by Lemony Snicket

“The voice of the dark was as creaky as the roof of the house, as smooth and cold as the windows..…”

Lemony Snickett personifies the dark in this creative children’s book as he tackles the common childhood fear of darkness. The main character, a boy named Laszlo, lives in the house, and the dark lives in the basement. However, one night, when his night-light fails, the dark comes to Laszlo’s room. The dark helps Laszlo overcome his fear of darkness, and Laszlo stops being afraid.

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Third Reading: The Boy Who Loved Math

The purpose of this reading is to bring everything together: the text, the vocabulary, and the illustrations. The discussion and activity options focus on analyzing the main idea, theme, character traits, setting and how all of the story elements fit together.

During this reading your child and you will read the story all the way through. Three ways that you can add fun and improve recall during this reading are:

~You may switch roles and become the listener and questioner as your child “reads”(retells) the story to you.

~Your child and you may alternate the pages you read to each other.

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Second Reading: The Boy Who Loved Math

The focus of this reading is to read the story and talk about new vocabulary. There will be opportunities in this reading to connect the information in the illustrations to the information in the text.

*Read the pages before you ask the questions.

Pages 1 – 5:

~On page 1, mathematician: an expert in math.

~On page 1, notice that Ms. Heiligman uses ellipses (. . .) frequently. Remember to make a long pause at an ellipsis to think, “What could the big problem be?”

~On page 3, infinity: without end. The mathematical symbol for infinity is in pink. Do you think that Paul’s mother being a math teacher helped him to be an expert in math? Discuss.

~On page 4, Fräulein: a title of respect for an unmarried German woman. What rules might Paul have hated?

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First Reading: The Boy Who Loved Math

To allow the brain to focus on the information in the illustrations, this reading will look only at the illustrations and the information they provide to the reader. There are no right or wrong answers in this reading. The pages in the book are numbered.

There is so much math information in the illustrations that you won’t be able to cover it all. Whatever observations about the math that your child makes are wonderful. Each time you look at the pictures, you’ll notice more.

Since improbable is a vocabulary word in the title, we’ll cover it in this reading.

(improbable: unlikely to happen, not usual) We’ll be looking to see what made Paul’s life improbable.

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About This Book The Boy Who Loved Math

ABOUT THIS BOOK: THE BOY WHO LOVED MATH
by Deborah Heiligman

This month Practickle is reviewing a biography. Paul Erdös(AIR-dish), known as The Magician of Budapest, is one of history’s great mathematicians. At the age of four, Paul would ask someone the date of his/her birth. In his head he could calculate the number of seconds the person had been alive.

Even as a child, Paul was eccentric. (Great vocabulary word that you will be using during the Third Reading!) He grew up in Budapest, Hungary during World War I. At an early age, he loved numbers and people. However, he hated rules. So, with the help of a loving nanny, his mother home-schooled him. At a young age, Paul could accomplish great mathematical feats. Yet, as an adult, he couldn’t do simple tasks like cooking or driving because Paul was always thinking about math. “Paul thought about math whatever he was doing, wherever he was.”

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Third Reading: Mr Tiger Goes Wild

The purpose of this reading is to bring everything together: the text, the vocabulary, and the illustrations. The discussion and activity options focus on analyzing the main idea, theme, character traits, setting and how all of the story elements fit together.

During this reading your child and you will read the story all the way through. Three ways that you can add fun and improve recall during this reading are:

~You may switch roles and become the listener and the questioner as your child “reads”(retells) the story to you.

~Your child and you may alternate the pages you read to each other.

(more…)

Read more...
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