Category Archives: Books

It’s Monday, What Are You Reading, Yo?

Mon Reading Button PB to YAI’ve had this book sitting on my shelf for some time now. The red’s been calling to me. The scrawl on the front cover, meant to look like some rotten student wrote on my book, says:  “Baby the first thing I need to know from you is do you believe I killed my father?”

 

Today I while searching for book trailers to show my kids on Friday, I came across this Audiobook excerpt. Take the time to listen. You’ll feel the chill, too, and you’ll think VOICE. Oh, my, gosh, what a great way to get my students to think about voice.

 

I am forever searching for books that will engage my reluctant readers, especially my boys. Maybe part of the problem with getting them to give a book a try is because they cannot hear the narrator’s voice. I doubt–for those of us who are readers–we think about that much, but imagine you struggle with fluency. Your reading is slow and laborious, so the meaning gets muddied. Honestly, I haven’t thought about that much. I need to do a better job at helping my struggling kiddos understand that the voice in the book can be as real as someone reading in their ear.

So, it’s Monday, and I want to read this book before I get it into a student’s hand. I’m reading:  UPSTATE by Kalisha Buckhanon. Do you know of other titles that might appeal to my reluctant boy readers?

It’s Monday. What are You Reading? – Spring Break on the Horizon

Mon Reading Button PB to YA

A critical role all teachers should play for their students is one of a book guide. Students desperately need adults in their life who will talk about, promote, and encourage them to further develop their reading skills.  – Yes, I am aware that I said ALL teachers. I don’t care if you teach math or music, you can still talk about books! This week, the week before spring break is a critical time for book guides. Before you send your students  on a week long retreat from all sound educational reasoning, take a minute and encourage them to make a plan to squeeze some time in for reading over spring break.

Books I read (or am still reading):

Into the Wildinto the wild

So, I’m still reading this book. Yes, I know it is just over 200 pages and I should have finished it already. The way I see it, I’m just trying to savor every moment… 🙂

Books I’m reading (going to try to actually read) this week:

just one day

out of the easy

divergent

Reel Reading: Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your A**

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Gritty. Real. Not to mention a killer title. Exactly what my students like and want to read. Check out today’s book trailer for Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass by Meg Medina.

If you’re new to Reel Reading for Real Readers, here’s the low down:

What:  Weekly posts of book trailers of our favorite and most student-engaging YA books.
Why:   Visual images can intrigue the most reluctant and even hostile readers.
When: Thursdays so you can find the book in preparation for showing the trailer on Fridays. (We might get some traction with weekend readers here.)
How:  We’ll post ours. You post yours, using the meme Reel Reading for Real Readers. Leave us a comment with your blog link, so others can add to their book trailer libraries.
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Teachers and YA book lovers, we’d love for you to join us.

It’s Monday, What are You Reading?


Mon Reading Button PB to YA

Recently, a student held a book to her chest and asked if I had any more books by Jo Knowles. My answer was no, and this girl walked away sad. I knew I needed to read the one Knowles’ book I had in my classroom library.

See You at Harry’s is not what I expected. It is more about unconditional love than anything, and it has left an indelible impression on my heart. 12384984

I have added Jo Knowles’ other books to my classroom shelves. Her descriptions are vivid, and her characters are real.

So, this Monday, and this week, I am having a Jo Knowles’ bookfest. My student, Raquel, can have them when I’m done!

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Reel Reading– Zombie Lovers Beware

20130207-190708I hate a love/hate relationship with zombies. I love the man and boys in my house who love “The Walking Dead;” I kind of hate that the whole zombie deal has infected their thinking as to what makes good entertainment on Sunday night. Nevertheless, my guys love it, and I spend the evenings on the downstairs couch with a good book, usually about anything but zombies. Usually.

Then, I got this zombie-project idea from a colleague, and I must admit, I am a bit fascinated. My students are, too. Two book trailers that got our attention this week? The Enemy by Charlie Higson and Rot and Ruin by Jonathan Maberry.

http://www.schooltube.com/video/84a36b25d5924352a77c/

Do you know of other zombie books students love?

It’s Monday. What are You Reading? – Invoking My Reading Rights

Mon Reading Button PB to YA

So if you have been actually following what I am reading, you will know that a few weeks ago I wrote a bit of a rant about how I hate books in a series. And yet, now you will soon find out that I am going to contradict myself because two books I mention are in fact part of a series.  What does the Reader’s Bill of Rights say? The right to read what you want…. Well, I’m invoking my rights!

Books I read:

Perfect Scoundrelsperfect scoundrels
I’m sure like most people, my calendar is full. I have meetings and appointments from now until the end of time, and I use my calendar on my phone to make sure I don’t forget these important dates. Unlike most people I am sure, you will also find on my phone some VERY IMPORTANT dates — book release dates. I have had Perfect Scoundrels on my calendar for a while now and thankfully it didn’t disappoint.

Katarina, who usually spends her time pulling off different heists around the world, must now put her skills to the test as she tries to uncover a mystery that might possibly put her boyfriend, Hale, in real danger.

What makes Carter’s books in a series (this one Heist Society but also the Gallagher Girls) so successful is that although she continues to develop the story of her characters, each book has a unique story line. For me, this means that more than half of the book isn’t wasted on recap of the previous book.

Books I’m reading this week:

cinderA few weeks ago I had the opportunity to go to dinner with the author, Marissa Meyer. Horribly embarrassed that I hadn’t already read her book (although I think I pulled it off ok) I am making it up to her.  — I am not, however promising that I will continue in the series even though I know I will probably get sucked in!

into the wild

While it wasn’t even on my To Be Read List, I’ve moved it to the top of my reading list for the week because I’m working with a teacher who is about to embark on a unit of study with her students. So far it has been great (three chapters in), but I did just find out that there was a movie about it a couple of years ago…  🙂

Reel Reading– Todd Strasser Books for Reluctant Readers

20130207-190708.jpgEvery Friday I show book trailers in class with the hope of getting kids interested in a weekend read. Sometimes I am more successful than others. I hit paydirt today with these book trailers for two of Todd Strasser’s books: Can’t Get There From Here and Give a Boy a Gun. I showed the trailers, one right after the other, and I sat the books on the whiteboard rail. Both were signed out within five minutes–one by a boy who “hates to read.”  Me = smiling.

Join us in Reel Reading for Real Readers:

What:  Weekly posts of book trailers of our favorite and most student-engaging YA books.
 
Why:   Visual images can intrigue the most reluctant and even hostile readers.
 
When: Thursdays so you can find the book in preparation for showing the trailer on Fridays. (We might get some traction with weekend readers here.)
 
How:  We’ll post ours. You post yours, using the meme Reel Reading for Real Readers. Leave us a comment with your blog link, so others can add to their book trailer libraries.
 
 
Mini-lesson Tip:  tone, setting, characters
 
 
Mini-lesson Tip: notice the last frame; make connections to real events
 
Have you read these or other books by Todd Strasser? Tell us about them.

It’s Monday. What are You Reading, Love?

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When my children were young, I started a tradition during the week of Valentine’s Day, and we celebrated LOVE WEEK. The children got new books that centered on loving thoughts and themes. They got little treats that were meant to remind them to Be Sweet. They delighted at the pink milk and the pink mashed potatoes and the pink everything foods we ate.

Now, my children are all grown. The last of my seven turned 18 last October. I can hardly stand it. It really is true: they grow up so fast. I am learning to deal.

While I am dealing, I am focusing my mothering on being grand– the grandmother of one tiny little girl named Linden.

So, what am I reading during the week of love? Books on love that are perfect for this Little Miss.

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Reel Reading – The Fault in Our Stars

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What?! You chose The Fault in our Stars to kick off our Reel Reading for Real Readers meme? Heather, my friend, you read my mind once again. Now, let’s share our thinking with other like-minded book-loving teachers and invite them to share along.
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What:  Weekly posts of book trailers of our favorite and most student-engaging YA books.
Why:   Visual images can intrigue the most reluctant and even hostile readers.
When: Thursdays so you can find the book in preparation for showing the trailer on Fridays. (We might get some traction with weekend readers here.)
How:  We’ll post ours. You post yours, using the meme Reel Reading for Real Readers. Leave us a comment with your blog link, so others can add to their book trailer libraries.
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Have you read this book? Leave us a reflection on it and a suggestion as to what we should read next.

Can’t Get Students to Write? Try These Mentor Texts for More Engagement


I had a dream the other night where I was in a conversation with my principal about student engagement. Of course, I’d just spent the day in Internal Rounds at one of the other high schools, specifically looking for and analyzing data that was supposed to show if students were engaged in their learning– not compliant, maybe committed,  and hopefully, taking ownership. In my dream I felt exasperated. I struggled, and I probably hit my husband in the head. I finally threw up my hands and said, “I can’t do it! You’ll have my resignation tomorrow!” and I huffed out the door.

What the heck?

Yes, student engagement. Those seem to be the buzz words I keep hearing lately. Well, those or student apathy, the ugly step-sister. I’d rather at least try to stay positive.

I teach 9th grade English. I try to teach students how to write. Sometimes I want to beat my head against the wall because I have so many kids who just don’t get into what I try to get them to do. I imagine this sounds familiar to some of you–at least I hope I’m not alone here.

In my search for ways to get students engaged, I’ve discovered a few texts that serve as friendly mentors to help me get my students to care about what they have to say and how they say it. These mentors have interesting text structures or themes–or, hey, they are short, which goes over well with my kids.

I shared a few of these during my presentation at TCTELA in Dallas last week. The Prezi posted two weeks ago called “Reading Writing Workshop in High School? Yep, the Shoe Will Fit” has images of the book covers, and the handouts have some excerpts and ideas from some of my favorite mentors: The Book of Awesome by Neil Pasricha, The Dictionary of High School B.S. by Lois Beckwith, Six Word Memoirs from SMITH Magazine, and  The Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life by Amy Krause Rosenthal. I’ve used excerpts from all of these and have had great success in getting students to take interest and ownership of their writing. We read the mentor, analyze the author’s craft–specifically looking for the moves he makes, and then we write our own version or addition to that text. Sometimes I require certain devices like metaphors or alliteration or parallel structure or whatever; sometimes not. Always I allow for student choice in the subject matter. I get the best student writing this way.

At the end of that presentation at TCTELA, I asked the audience to contribute ideas for mentor texts that they’ve had success with in getting students to write. Take a look at these fun books; you’ll see the value in how these can work to give students choice in what they write, while you give them say in how they write it.

(Thanks, Goodreads.com, for the synopsis and book cover images.)

Thank you Notes by Jimmy Fallon

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Thank you, slow walking family walking in front of me on the sidewalk. No, please, take your time. And definitely spread out, too, so you create a barricade of idiots. I am so thankful that you forced me to walk on the street and risk getting hit by a car in order to pass you so I could resume walking at a normal human pace.Jimmy Fallon has a few people and a few things to thank. In this brand-new book, the very first to come from his show, he addresses some 200 subjects in need of his undying “gratitude.” Each page will feature one note and a photograph of its recipient.
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World’s Shortest Stories by Steve Moss
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Murder. Love. Horror. Suspense. All this and much more in the most amazing short stories ever written each one just 55 words long! Consider for a moment 55 words. It’s an absurdly tiny number. No, it’s an impossible tiny number. It’s what O. Henry might have conjured up if he’d only had the back of a business card to write upon. You’ll find murder and suspense, horror and intrigue, love and betrayal, plus distant worlds and inner demons.
All in a measly 55 words.
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Devil’s Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce
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A virtual onslaught of acerbic, confrontational wordplay, The Unabridged Devil’s Dictionary offers some 1,600 wickedly clever definitions to the vocabulary of everyday life. Little is sacred and few are safe, for Bierce targets just about any pursuit, from matrimony to immortality, that allows our willful failings and excesses to shine forth.

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Lover’s Dictionary by David Levithan  [This one fits the list appropriately after the last one. I read this book in one sitting. It’s tender and sweet, and the cover is AWESOME!]
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How does one talk about love? Do we even have the right words to describe something that can be both utterly mundane and completely transcendent, pulling us out of our everyday lives and making us feel a part of something greater than ourselves? Taking a unique approach to this problem, the nameless narrator of David Levithan’s The Lover’s Dictionary has constructed the story of his relationship as a dictionary.

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Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen427920
This first batch of Chicken Soup for Teens consists of 101 stories every teenager can relate to and learn from–without feeling criticized or judged. This edition contains important lessons on the nature of friendship and love, the importance of belief in the future, and the value of respect for oneself and others, and much more.
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Grammar Snobs are Great Big Meanies: A Guide to Language for Fun and Spite by June Casagrand
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What do suicidal pandas, doped-up rock stars, and a naked Pamela Anderson have in common? They’re all a heck of a lot more interesting than reading about predicate nominatives and hyphens. June Casagrande knows this and has invented a whole new twist on the grammar book–a laugh-out-loud funny collection of anecdotes and essays on grammar and punctuation, as well as hilarious critiques of the self-appointed language experts.

Do you know of any more fun texts to use as writing mentor texts? Please leave your suggestions in the comments.