This Year’s Favorite Picture Books

Every year children vote on their favorite chapter reading book.  Charlotte’s Web is the clear winner most years.  This year we voted on our favorite picture books as well.  That was a big challenge for children as we read at least one, and maybe two or three picture books a day.  You do the math: 180 school days. That’s a lot of books!

Of course we often read books multiple times.  Good books are meant to be read over and over again.

Here are the picture books children voted as their favorite:


This is a true story of a whale who got lost in the San Francisco bay and swam the wrong way, heading up the Sacramento  River.  As the river narrows Humphrey somehow swims under a small bridge and becomes trapped.  He won’t survive long in fresh water.  Scientists come up with a clever plan to make Humphrey turn around and swim back to the ocean, but the danger is far from over.  The illustrations bring to life the geography of the Golden Gate Bridge, and the pathway of ocean to bay to river.

 


Bear lives alone and likes it that way.  A family of rabbits build a house next door and try to be friendly and neighborly with Bear.  Bear wants nothing of it and refuses their kind gestures of honey, firewood, and books.  The pesky rabbits keep trying, even ignoring Bear’s welcome mat that reads Go Away.  Then one day…. you’ll have to read the book.

 


Helen Bannerman wrote this story in India in 1899.  You may remember the classic tale of Little Black Sambo, and tigers who run around a tree and melt into butter – unfortunately a rather racist version.  This book is the restored original story, the way it was written in 1899.  The repeated words of, “Little Babaji I’m going to eat you up” and the tigers dressing up in his clothing delight the reader.  Children enjoyed the book so much that we put on a play performance for families.  We even had a pancake maker.

 


The beautiful illustrations in this book bring a favorite song to life.  Looking at mountains, prairies, the Statue of Liberty, and a parade of firefighters and police officers is what children enjoy seeing about America.  Did you know that Irving Berlin wrote this song because he felt that “The Star-Spangled Banner” was too difficult, and therefore disliked the song?

 


Woody Guthrie listened to “God Bless America” on the radio as he drove across America.  He disliked the song, and was inspired to write his own song about America – “This Land is Your Land”.  The book has been a favorite for the entire school year, inspiring the children to design and create a quilt.

 


Bruce is a grump.  He doesn’t like rain, he doesn’t like sun, and he doesn’t like cute baby animals.  What he does like is eating eggs, and when his eggs accidently become baby geese, he unfortunately becomes a mother.  The humor in this book has children and teachers belly laughing.

 


Harry is a white dog with black spots who hates a bath.  After burying the scrubbing brush in the backyard and running away from home, he plays in the dirt and becomes a black dog with white spots.  How will he convince his family that he is really Harry, a white dog with black spots?

 


One day a lion shows up in the library.  As long as he follows the rules he is allowed to stay.  He becomes beloved to the children at story hour, and helpful to Miss Merriweather.  When an accident happens, the lion has to roar- which is breaking the rules, of course.  Will the lion ever return?

 


A good book never gets old, and after eighty years (yes, eighty!) this story continues to delight children.  Mike Mulligan is sad when steam shovels are no longer needed and give way to modern shovels, yet he won’t part with Marianne, his hardworking steam shovel.  When a job to build a new town hall is advertised, Mike boasts that Marianne can dig the cellar in a day.  Can she?  The illustrations help children to understand digging roads, tunnels, and canals through the obstacles of land and nature.

I applauded the children for voting on these outstanding books.

Jennie

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The Presence of Wonder

The sky is always changing.  Look away for a minute and there is a new canvas of beauty. School ended yesterday, and now I have more time to delight in the constant beauty that Mother Nature provides, from my porch and backyard.  Yes, E.B. White, I am always on the lookout for the presence of wonder.

Jennie

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Smorgasbord Posts from Your Archives #PotLuck – Childhood and Summer, Then and Now by Jennie Fitzkee

Sally shares my stories and memories of summer camp, thunderstorms, singing, and more.

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A year of Chapter Reading

This is the newsletter I sent to parents on chapter reading – the single most important thing that makes a difference in teaching children:

Chapter Reading
June 11, 2019

Chapter reading is one of our treasured moments of the day.  We bring to life the imagination, the world, and the past.  The anticipation of ‘what happens next’ stirs excitement every day.  Children listen and think.  They ask questions.  Ask your child, “At chapter reading where do you make the pictures?”  You will hear your child say, “In your head.”

When we finish a good book and then start a new one, emotions run high and low.  The end of a good book is so satisfying and pleasant, yet…it is over.  That is the wonderful roller coaster of reading.  And, with each chapter book we read, we ride that roller coaster again and again.

We are nearly through reading Little House on the Prairie, and it is thrilling; from Jack the dog, to building a house, to Indians in the house.  Pa and his neighbor Mr. Scott dug a well, and we learned about the bad gas deep inside the earth (Pa had to save Mr. Scott) that only a candle can detect.  Of course I told children about my grandfather in the nines and his childhood portrait wearing a miner’s hat with the same candle. Laura and her family had fever ‘n’ ague (malaria), an illness that people thought came from eating watermelons.  Their neighbor Mr. Edwards actually met Santa Claus and helped to deliver their presents.

We encourage you to finish reading the book aloud to your child.  There is much more ahead, from A Scream in the Night, to Fire on the Prairie.  There is also fear of Indians, which I treat as an opportunity to discuss diversity and prejudice- ‘Gloria’ helps with that.  If your child wants to continue the series, the next one, Farmer Boy is about Laura’s husband when he was a little boy.  I recommend the following one, On the Banks of Plum Creek, which begins their next journey after the prairie.

We voted on our favorite chapter books this year.  Charlotte’s Web was the clear winner with 12 votes!

These are the chapter books we have read this year.  Good books are meant to be read over and over again.  We encourage you to revisit these wonderful books with your child:

Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White

My Father’s Dragon by Ruth Stiles

The Story of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting

Mr. Popper’s Penguins by Florence and Richard Atwater

Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder

Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The fundamental constant that gives children the tools to succeed in school is languageThe more words that children hear, the better they will do in school.  Reading aloud to children is far more than an enjoyable experience.  It increases their language development!  In kindergarten through grade four, the primary source of instruction is oral.  The more words that a child has heard, the better s/he will understand the instruction, and the better s/he will perform in school, in all subjects.  Therefore, we will always campaign to read aloud.

A wonderful guide to book recommendations and to understanding the importance of reading aloud is the million-copy bestseller book, The Read-Aloud Handbook.  I have used the book since my children were little.  The author, Jim Trelease, visited the Aqua Room and GCS.  We are featured in the new seventh edition of the book.

Jennie, Heidi, Naomi, Katy

Posted in books, chapter reading, children's books, Early Education, Imagination, Inspiration, Jim Trelease, reading aloud, reading aloud, Teaching young children | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 50 Comments

Quotations on Imagination

Outstanding quotations from Charles French.

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“Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were, but without it we go nowhere.”

                                                                  Carl Sagan

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(portrait by Maurice Quentin de La Tour)

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“The world of reality has its limits; the world of imagination is boundless.”

                                                                 Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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“Love what you do and do what you love. Don’t listen to anyone else who tells you not to do it. You do what you want, what you love. Imagination should be the center of your life.”

                                                                 Ray Bradbury

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The End of the School Year

My dining room table has been a jumble of children’s work collected throughout the year.  I have put on the finishing touches.  Parents will get their child’s Portfolio – the full collection – next week.  I’ll be there, looking over their shoulder as they walk through the school year with their child.  Tissues needed.

Children have been saying goodbye in many ways.  Some are crying, some are glued to my side.  We’re reading all their favorite books, from Humphrey the Lost Whale, to Mother Bruce, to Harry the Dirty Dog, to Those Pesky Rabbits, and This Land is Your Land.  We’re just hanging out together.  Gloria has been well loved and also very needed.

My Book Bears reading group at the library had their final meeting.  Here is a letter to me from Jared:

Dear Jennie, Thank you for being the head of Book Bears.  My favorite book that we read was Two Dogs in a Trench Coat.  You are the best preschool teacher.  When I started in Book Bears I was below reading grade level. Now I am above grade level.  I wrote a fairy tale in school and thought you would like it so I gave it to you.

The fairy tale is The Three Little Chipmunks and the Big Bad Giant.  It’s wonderful!

I was invited to the high school graduation of a former preschooler in my class.  What an honor to be included in such a special event!  How many preschool teachers have this opportunity?  Not many!

It is a roller coaster, a flurry of emotions, moments that are fleeting that I wish could be locked in time.  I want to rewind and play it back again.  But of course that cannot be.  I must settle for the memories.  And that is really all I need.

Jennie

Posted in behavior, books, children's books, Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, Inspiration, Kindness, Love, Teaching young children, wonder | Tagged , , , , , | 81 Comments

Smorgasbord Posts from Your Archives #PotLuck – How to Teach a Child to Become a Superhero by Jennie Fitzkee

Thank you, Sally Cronin, for sharing my blog post on teaching children to become a superhero. They can change the world!

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D-Day and Young Childen

I am in awe of the soldiers and sailors who are back in Normandy today, 75 years later.  I always bring patriotism into my class, and a certain page in a picture book that I read all the time helps me bring D-Day into the lives of preschoolers.

This is the cemetery in Normandy.  D-Day.  It is a page from Peter Spier’s book, The Star-Spangled Banner.  I have been reading this well-loved book to children for decades.  The words read, “Oh, thus be it ever when free men shall stand.”

Whenever I got to this page in the book I would talk about Arlington Cemetery in Washington, DC.  Then I saw the movie “Saving Private Ryan” and I immediately recognized the scene in Normandy to be exactly this illustration.  I nearly jumped out of my skin.  After that I had a whole new understanding and respect for this page, this cemetery.

Here is what happens when I read this page:

I stop.  I don’t say a word.  Children need to look and take in the images.

“Jennie, is this a sad page?”

“Yes.  It’s a sad page.”

“What are those white things?”

“They are crosses to mark the graves of the soldiers who died.”

Long silence.

“This is a cemetery.  It’s in Normandy.  Many brave young men died here.  They were fighting for our freedom.”

More silence.  I knew they were absorbing my words and the illustration.  Their heads were spinning.

“Do you see the American flag?  It is flying halfway down the flag pole.  That’s called a flag flying at half mast.  In a cemetery or a national place, flags are halfway down when it is sad.  And Normandy is a sad place.”

We talked about the crosses, and the ones with stars.  We pulled out our big map book and found Normandy.  We imagined the trip there by boat.

I told children about the boats that landed, how they had a “tailgate” that dropped down so the soldiers could go ashore.

Most importantly, we talked about doing what is right, even if it is hard and you’re scared.  Peter Spier understood this.  His book of the song is a classic!

Never forget.

Jennie

Posted in America, Book Review, books, children's books, Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, reading aloud | Tagged , , , , , | 54 Comments

Dr. Seuss

Thank you Dr. Seuss for saying the most important words.  I thought I knew you well, and today you inspired me yet again with your wisdom.

And now I find that the tables are turned.  I must write words of wisdom, Dr. Seuss words, to children.  It has become a popular custom for parents to have their child’s teachers – all teachers from preschool through high school – write a message in the book, Oh, the Places You’ll Go! by Dr. Seuss.  The book is then given to the child as a high school graduation gift.

I have the privilege of being the first teacher to open that new book and pen words to a child.  Those words won’t be read for fourteen years.  I always think I need to carefully plan what I say, but… I just say it.  I write from the heart.  I told Vivian she would do great things, because she is already doing that now.  I told Jackson to follow his heart, because when he does the world opens up.

Writing those words is a tremendous thing.  I hope reading them in fourteen years will be a tremendous thing for the child.

Thank you, Dr. Seuss.

Jennie

 

Posted in books, children's books, Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, Imagination, Inspiration, Love, picture books, preschool, Quotes, Teaching young children, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , | 52 Comments

Quotations on Education

Excellent quotations on education from Charles French.

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“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”

                                                                     Nelson Mandela

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“The mind once enlightened cannot again become dark.”

                                                                     Thomas Paine

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“He who opens a school door, closes a prison.”

                                                                     Victor Hugo

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