Showing posts with label book fair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book fair. Show all posts
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Fun Summer Math Reading
So after starting that last post about our book project for the 2015 Author's Fair, I did some research, and found that our local library seems to have quite a good selection of funny and creative easy-reader and picture books to inspire our young authors. Here are some I found:
Conned Again, Watson! Cautionary Tales of Logic, Math, and Probability
Minnie's Diner
The Great Divide
Divide and Ride
Grandfather Tang's Story
The Warlord's Puzzle
Anno's Mysterious Multiplying Jar
Math Curse
Inch by Inch
The Wishing Club: A Story About Fractions
Lemonade for Sale
The Doorbell Rang
17 Kings and 42 Elephants
One Grain of Rice
Arthur's Funny Money
Measuring Penny
The library also has a lot of these well-rated "Sir Cumference" books--I'll definitely be checking some out!
I've read this one before--and it is a fun read: Spaghetti and Meatballs for All
Some of the books available at the library may not tell math stories, per se, but sound like really good additions (ha!) to a summer reading math unit:
Mathematicians Are People Too
G is for Googol
Millions to Measure
The Boy Who Loved Math
The library also has many of the Encyclopedia Brown books, which do not specifically deal with math but still require logical thinking for solving their mysteries--plenty of good inspiration there for the kids' own math mystery writing.
Then I have a few books here at home that anyone may borrow:
100 Pounds of Popcorn
The Adventures of Penrose the Mathematical Cat
Math Talk
Once Upon a Company
If you have any math tales of your own to recommend, please share the titles in the comments!
Announcing the 2015 Author's Fair Book Project!
Well, there parents! I know, I know. This is the last official day of school for a lot of us. You are not at ALL interested in thinking about next year already, certainly not thinking almost one year ahead to the next Author's Fair, when we just recently had the last one! Most of you have not even participated in the Author's Fair for the past two years, so why would I think you would be interested in thinking about it now?
Bear with me for a moment.
First of all, for those who did jump on into the fun and make a "Book of Months"--good for you! I loved seeing them on display at the Author's Fair. And a special shout-out to Emmy for her FIRST Author's Fair book! You did such a great job! Anyone who liked that project, but just could not pull it off this year--well, you can do it anytime you like, or not. The info will always be here on this site, if you want it. : )
Second of all, because not many families seem as interested in participating in the Author's Fair anymore, I was debating this Spring whether or not to just stop coming up with projects. I understand completely that some of our kids might be getting too old to enjoy the group projects--totally fine! If any of the parents of younger kids want to participate in a group project (which we could or could not work on together at Old School Mondays), just let me know and I will plan something if there is enough interest.
But otherwise, I think we will just do projects on our own--not books we make all together, but projects we can do our own way in our own time frame at home with our kids. I was not sure I would purposefully create projects for Vintage Homeschool families anymore--since it seems like perhaps most of you are not that interested--but then just this week, my kids have stumbled upon a FABULOUS and fun idea for next year. It's so flexible and has so much potential for engaging young author's in so many ways, so I just have to make it official.
So, ta-da! Here is the official Vintage Homeschool book project for 2014:
I know, I know: that sounds like the opposite of fabulous and fun, if you dreaded story problems as much as I did in math class throughout my elementary years. But WAIT--let me explain.
My eldest girl has gotten excited about writing a mystery that needs to be solved with math.
My second eldest is writing a very funny narrative that we started together, having to do with the cost of stamps and raising costs of stamps over long periods of time and the peaceful death of her parents. (See--don't YOU want to read it?!)
My youngest girl is not yet into the idea, but we will start by using a basic story problem we find in a book and adding to it and adding to it until we get a good story out of it. Then we can either be done, or she can decide to write another one completely from her imagination.
The titles of the stories will undoubtedly be exciting-sounding ones, like "Escape from The Castle of Doom: A Story Problem," or "To the Moon and Back Again: A Story Problem," or "The Mystery of the Missing Millimeter: A Story Problem."
(Don't those sound fun to read? How much more fun would they be to write?!)
This project will be another one that you do at home with your kids--or they do independently. It is perfect for any level or writer or mathematician. It can use any math concepts your children are already familiar with. And the story can be as long or as short as they want it to be!
There is only one requirement for the stories: they must show lots of math (completed math, not just throwing out math questions without answers). Your kids may choose to keep it simple and straightforward in the math sections and how they further the story (ala Encyclopedia Brown) or they may get crazy and add as much math as they can squeeze into the narrative (ala "Math Curse"). The math can even function as characters in the story (ala "The Phantom Tollbooth")!
You could use this project as a fun way to get your kids engaged with math over the summer, as they explore different math concepts and work out what elements they want in their stories. Brainstorming could end up leading to the viewing of lots of fun youtube math videos (I recommend Vi Hart! Even if she is usually over my head--the kids get glimmers of ideas, and that's often enough to set them excited about a math concept and what they could do with it creatively.)
And hey--you could use math stories from the library as inspiration for a Summer Reading Project! (Do it through somebody like Barnes & Nobel and you can even get free books for your kids' summer reading efforts!) I'll start a math books list in a separate post, which anyone can contribute to. : )
For my kids, this is going to be a Summer Writing Project--with the goal being to have the book done by the end of summer.
A summer project that involves reading, writing, and creatively engaging with math?
Now you know why I had to tell you about it this week. : )
Bear with me for a moment.
First of all, for those who did jump on into the fun and make a "Book of Months"--good for you! I loved seeing them on display at the Author's Fair. And a special shout-out to Emmy for her FIRST Author's Fair book! You did such a great job! Anyone who liked that project, but just could not pull it off this year--well, you can do it anytime you like, or not. The info will always be here on this site, if you want it. : )
Second of all, because not many families seem as interested in participating in the Author's Fair anymore, I was debating this Spring whether or not to just stop coming up with projects. I understand completely that some of our kids might be getting too old to enjoy the group projects--totally fine! If any of the parents of younger kids want to participate in a group project (which we could or could not work on together at Old School Mondays), just let me know and I will plan something if there is enough interest.
But otherwise, I think we will just do projects on our own--not books we make all together, but projects we can do our own way in our own time frame at home with our kids. I was not sure I would purposefully create projects for Vintage Homeschool families anymore--since it seems like perhaps most of you are not that interested--but then just this week, my kids have stumbled upon a FABULOUS and fun idea for next year. It's so flexible and has so much potential for engaging young author's in so many ways, so I just have to make it official.
So, ta-da! Here is the official Vintage Homeschool book project for 2014:
Story Problems
I know, I know: that sounds like the opposite of fabulous and fun, if you dreaded story problems as much as I did in math class throughout my elementary years. But WAIT--let me explain.
My eldest girl has gotten excited about writing a mystery that needs to be solved with math.
My second eldest is writing a very funny narrative that we started together, having to do with the cost of stamps and raising costs of stamps over long periods of time and the peaceful death of her parents. (See--don't YOU want to read it?!)
My youngest girl is not yet into the idea, but we will start by using a basic story problem we find in a book and adding to it and adding to it until we get a good story out of it. Then we can either be done, or she can decide to write another one completely from her imagination.
The titles of the stories will undoubtedly be exciting-sounding ones, like "Escape from The Castle of Doom: A Story Problem," or "To the Moon and Back Again: A Story Problem," or "The Mystery of the Missing Millimeter: A Story Problem."
(Don't those sound fun to read? How much more fun would they be to write?!)
This project will be another one that you do at home with your kids--or they do independently. It is perfect for any level or writer or mathematician. It can use any math concepts your children are already familiar with. And the story can be as long or as short as they want it to be!
There is only one requirement for the stories: they must show lots of math (completed math, not just throwing out math questions without answers). Your kids may choose to keep it simple and straightforward in the math sections and how they further the story (ala Encyclopedia Brown) or they may get crazy and add as much math as they can squeeze into the narrative (ala "Math Curse"). The math can even function as characters in the story (ala "The Phantom Tollbooth")!
You could use this project as a fun way to get your kids engaged with math over the summer, as they explore different math concepts and work out what elements they want in their stories. Brainstorming could end up leading to the viewing of lots of fun youtube math videos (I recommend Vi Hart! Even if she is usually over my head--the kids get glimmers of ideas, and that's often enough to set them excited about a math concept and what they could do with it creatively.)
And hey--you could use math stories from the library as inspiration for a Summer Reading Project! (Do it through somebody like Barnes & Nobel and you can even get free books for your kids' summer reading efforts!) I'll start a math books list in a separate post, which anyone can contribute to. : )
For my kids, this is going to be a Summer Writing Project--with the goal being to have the book done by the end of summer.
A summer project that involves reading, writing, and creatively engaging with math?
Now you know why I had to tell you about it this week. : )
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Book Week Pt 1: The FINAL Book of Months post
OK, so it is technically a school week. But mentally I'm finishing Spring Break! So in our house we are having a relaxing week, with a theme: Book Week.
The first part of Book Week is trying to finish up our Book of Months projects. Each of my girls is making one. The books may end up in the heirloom category--certainly for the amount of time the girls are spending on each highly detailed page of illustration! Even though we started this project about 16 months ago, the girls are FAR from being done. I'd say they are only 1/3 of the way through their illustrations, with even less of the writing done. This is with the project getting at least 30 minutes of work almost every school week since! I am so glad my girls are engaging with the project so fully, and that they are making such meaningful illustrations--but I refuse to let the project go on another year! Esp. because they have grown as people and artists over the course of the time we have worked on the project, so that they have started being dissatisfied with the drawings they made earlier and have then discarded them and started over. A fine artistic choice, but one that could well lead to this becoming a perpetual book project! So, forcing my children to labor over their drawings for hours at a time is the first goal of Book Week.
(Perhaps it is appropriate that we just finished learning about illuminated manuscripts and the monks that made them--the children can at least be thankful they have a warm room to work in, they don't have to grind up their own coloring agents, and they are allowed to speak while working. Heck, they can even suck on some Easter candy while they work. Whatever will keep them happily working on it!)
I hope those of you who are also working on a Book of Months project will have success motivating your kiddos to complete it in time! Don't forget--if they have it finished by next Monday they can come show it off at our Old School Monday gathering! That might be helpful incentive for some of you. : )
Originally I said I would provide materials for those who wanted to have a "book binding" party on Monday. But Shelley was the only one interested--and Shelley, you are WAY more crafty than I am (judging by what I've seen on facebook of your first year homeschooling ; ) so I will not plan on us "binding" as a group--instead, I'll just tell you how we are doing ours, and then you can run with that idea or do whatever else you think suits your project.
There's basically one super easy way I have been putting together books for our Vintage Homeschool projects:
--go to an arts supply store like Palace Arts and look at their selection of art paper pads (the various kinds intended for different mediums, with different weights and textures). Choose the paper texture and weight that you like, keeping in mind a heavier paper will make a sturdier back page to glue your child's artwork onto.
--Affix the artwork onto the pages as you and your child see fit. *Just be sure to leave a good left-hand margin for the binding.
--Use a heavy-duty hole punch to make holes in each page. You can make as few or many as you like (or have hand-strength for). If you want a lot of holes, then you could make a pretty "lace-up" or "sewn" binding with yarn or ribbon. If your finished book pages will be vertical, I would recommend at least four connection spots. If the finished book pages will be read horizontals, three or even two holes might suffice, depending upon where they are placed.
--You can use metal clips from Palace to hold the book pages together, as we have done in the past for our group book projects--this will make a very loose book, great for holding open on a lap. Or you can use ribbon or yarn and just tie bows--just don't tie them too tightly or the book pages will have difficulty turning easily.
There you have it!
Finally, you have two ways to get your book to the Author's Fair:
--Give it to me on Monday at our gathering
--Take it to the Author's Fair and deliver to the Ocean Grove Table (usually to the right of the center fountain, if you were coming in the main front mall doors).
I can't wait to see what your kids contribute to the Author's Fair, either one of our group projects or something they have done on their own!
The first part of Book Week is trying to finish up our Book of Months projects. Each of my girls is making one. The books may end up in the heirloom category--certainly for the amount of time the girls are spending on each highly detailed page of illustration! Even though we started this project about 16 months ago, the girls are FAR from being done. I'd say they are only 1/3 of the way through their illustrations, with even less of the writing done. This is with the project getting at least 30 minutes of work almost every school week since! I am so glad my girls are engaging with the project so fully, and that they are making such meaningful illustrations--but I refuse to let the project go on another year! Esp. because they have grown as people and artists over the course of the time we have worked on the project, so that they have started being dissatisfied with the drawings they made earlier and have then discarded them and started over. A fine artistic choice, but one that could well lead to this becoming a perpetual book project! So, forcing my children to labor over their drawings for hours at a time is the first goal of Book Week.
(Perhaps it is appropriate that we just finished learning about illuminated manuscripts and the monks that made them--the children can at least be thankful they have a warm room to work in, they don't have to grind up their own coloring agents, and they are allowed to speak while working. Heck, they can even suck on some Easter candy while they work. Whatever will keep them happily working on it!)
I hope those of you who are also working on a Book of Months project will have success motivating your kiddos to complete it in time! Don't forget--if they have it finished by next Monday they can come show it off at our Old School Monday gathering! That might be helpful incentive for some of you. : )
Originally I said I would provide materials for those who wanted to have a "book binding" party on Monday. But Shelley was the only one interested--and Shelley, you are WAY more crafty than I am (judging by what I've seen on facebook of your first year homeschooling ; ) so I will not plan on us "binding" as a group--instead, I'll just tell you how we are doing ours, and then you can run with that idea or do whatever else you think suits your project.
There's basically one super easy way I have been putting together books for our Vintage Homeschool projects:
--go to an arts supply store like Palace Arts and look at their selection of art paper pads (the various kinds intended for different mediums, with different weights and textures). Choose the paper texture and weight that you like, keeping in mind a heavier paper will make a sturdier back page to glue your child's artwork onto.
--Affix the artwork onto the pages as you and your child see fit. *Just be sure to leave a good left-hand margin for the binding.
--Use a heavy-duty hole punch to make holes in each page. You can make as few or many as you like (or have hand-strength for). If you want a lot of holes, then you could make a pretty "lace-up" or "sewn" binding with yarn or ribbon. If your finished book pages will be vertical, I would recommend at least four connection spots. If the finished book pages will be read horizontals, three or even two holes might suffice, depending upon where they are placed.
--You can use metal clips from Palace to hold the book pages together, as we have done in the past for our group book projects--this will make a very loose book, great for holding open on a lap. Or you can use ribbon or yarn and just tie bows--just don't tie them too tightly or the book pages will have difficulty turning easily.
There you have it!
Finally, you have two ways to get your book to the Author's Fair:
--Give it to me on Monday at our gathering
--Take it to the Author's Fair and deliver to the Ocean Grove Table (usually to the right of the center fountain, if you were coming in the main front mall doors).
I can't wait to see what your kids contribute to the Author's Fair, either one of our group projects or something they have done on their own!
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
The Author's Fair 2014
The Old School Mondays kids have a long standing tradition of collaborative book writing--and the books we have made together and presented at the annual Author's Fair have been some of my kids' favorite projects!
This year we have two book projects going on, for anyone who would like to jump in and participate: The Book of Months, and the "What Is It?" Book of Nature Riddles. It is not too late for you and your kids to do either or both!
The Book of Months features your family traditions and rhythms over the course of one year. All you need is one illustration and one page of description for each month. As always, you modify the project as needed to fit your child's abilities, so there can be as much or as little writing and parental involvement as necessary. Click on this link to read all the details for this project.
The Book of Nature Riddles is one page front and back; the front presents the riddle, and the back has the illustration and words that reveal the answer. Click here to read all the details for this project. This project involves more parental guidance up front--but the process can be fun, and once they get the hang of it they might very well want to keep writing more!
(I recommend when you click on each project link that you read the posts from oldest to newest, so you can follow the logical progression more easily.)
If you would like to participate in the Book of Months, just jump on in to the fun! All the info you need to make it happen is already up on the blog, except for the details about how to bind it, but that will come. You have more than 3 weeks for the project, and unless your children are uber-detailed and slightly obsessive illustrators (like mine are), that is plenty of time. You are invited to bring your completed books to our April 28 Old School Monday gathering for show & tell!
If you would like to participate in the Book of Nature Riddles, please RSVP in the comments below, and I will then plan on us having a "book binding" activity for our April 28 Old School Monday (the Monday before the Author's Fair). (I can also plan book binding for the Book of Months, if that is helpful--RSVP for that if you desire.)
Questions? Please ask them in the comments below so all may benefit from the discussion.
This year we have two book projects going on, for anyone who would like to jump in and participate: The Book of Months, and the "What Is It?" Book of Nature Riddles. It is not too late for you and your kids to do either or both!
The Book of Months features your family traditions and rhythms over the course of one year. All you need is one illustration and one page of description for each month. As always, you modify the project as needed to fit your child's abilities, so there can be as much or as little writing and parental involvement as necessary. Click on this link to read all the details for this project.
The Book of Nature Riddles is one page front and back; the front presents the riddle, and the back has the illustration and words that reveal the answer. Click here to read all the details for this project. This project involves more parental guidance up front--but the process can be fun, and once they get the hang of it they might very well want to keep writing more!
(I recommend when you click on each project link that you read the posts from oldest to newest, so you can follow the logical progression more easily.)
If you would like to participate in the Book of Months, just jump on in to the fun! All the info you need to make it happen is already up on the blog, except for the details about how to bind it, but that will come. You have more than 3 weeks for the project, and unless your children are uber-detailed and slightly obsessive illustrators (like mine are), that is plenty of time. You are invited to bring your completed books to our April 28 Old School Monday gathering for show & tell!
If you would like to participate in the Book of Nature Riddles, please RSVP in the comments below, and I will then plan on us having a "book binding" activity for our April 28 Old School Monday (the Monday before the Author's Fair). (I can also plan book binding for the Book of Months, if that is helpful--RSVP for that if you desire.)
Questions? Please ask them in the comments below so all may benefit from the discussion.
Thursday, May 9, 2013
The Author's Fair wrap-up
Well, you could hear the crickets chirping in here after my last post about the Author's Fair!
I understand. It was a busy Spring for most of us, and many of you intended to participate but then when the time came to do it you felt like you could not do one more thing. I get that--I felt that way this Spring too!
So this year our group book ended up being a two-family collaboration. And guess what? It still turned out adorable, and was a big hit at the fair! Read what my E.S. Terry sent me in an email after the fair, which another E.S. had sent to her:
The other E.S.'s family wrote:
I understand. It was a busy Spring for most of us, and many of you intended to participate but then when the time came to do it you felt like you could not do one more thing. I get that--I felt that way this Spring too!
So this year our group book ended up being a two-family collaboration. And guess what? It still turned out adorable, and was a big hit at the fair! Read what my E.S. Terry sent me in an email after the fair, which another E.S. had sent to her:
The other E.S.'s family wrote:
We all went to the Authors' Fair yesterday, and the kids were quite excited that people had read their works and left comments. We looked at some of the other books, and one was a book of riddles ending with "Who am I?" The kids have been busy writing their own riddles last night and this morning! M's I wrote into a tracing program, so I printed his riddles out with 'conventional spelling' : ) and we decided to use those for his copywork.
Thank you for encouraging the kids to take part in the authors' fair! Nothing else has come close to giving them the inspiration to write - both before and after the fair!
Now how cool is that? Our book was inspiring other kids to go home and think and write!
This fun anecdote was just what I needed to confirm in my mind what I already thought we would do for next year's group project: build the riddle book! This means that we have TWO projects going on for the Author's Fair of 2014, and you have ALL the information you need right now, a year in advance, to be working on them!
--The "What Is It?" Book of Nature Riddles (formerly called "Our Big Backyard") group project, where each child/family can submit one or more pages.
--The "Book of Months" family writing project. You parents are the bosses of this project, but I have provided suggestions and guidelines, and we can have a party where we come together and share these the month before the Author's Fair if you like.
So I encourage you interested families to start working on your Book of Months now, so your kids have plenty of time to really get into it if they want and you don't run up against the deadline next year and be frustrated. It would be a great summer project! But as always, these are just things you can do or not, depending upon what your kids needs and interests are.
I have updated the labels for these two book projects so you can just click on the label "Book of Months" and it will take you to all those posts, etc. : )
Monday, April 29, 2013
Author's Fair THIS Saturday--Final Details Here!
Last Monday we had our Old School Monday "book binding" party, where you and your kids could assemble their poems onto the book pages and be done. Judging by the number of families who showed up, I am guessing this has been a very full season for most of you, as it has been for us, and either you decided not to participate in the group book project or you ran out of time to get your family's pages done before the party. Either way, it's ok. If you have not finished (or started!) your pages for our group book this year, but wish you had, you still have time. Yes, it is down to the wire--the Author's Fair is this upcoming Saturday, May 4--but the pages are easy to do and I'll show you here how you can finish and still have them in our book at the fair, if you still wanted to participate.
In the last post, I gave you the details for formatting and printing your riddle--but I am amending instructions because I found our poems looked best with approx. 20 point font boldface. So that's a slightly larger font size than I said before. If you use the smaller font size, no big deal. But if you see this before you print out, great.
Also, minor detail that does not affect your work but which I wanted you to know: my girls and I decided to change the title of the book. We found in our riddle generating that while our riddles were celebrating the natural world, they were ending up all being very broad and not quite meeting the idea behind the title "Our Big Backyard." So we are changing the title of the book to "What Is It? A Book of Nature Riddles." So as long as your child's riddle is about something in nature, it will work perfectly.
If you still want your kids to participate in the book project:
--Bring your child's riddle printed out and the riddle answer printed out on a separate page to the Ocean Grove table at the Author's fair no later than 10:00 a.m.
(If you have multiple children making riddles, their answers can go on the same page, with plenty of spacing in between--you will be cutting them out, as you will see below.)
--Bring glue sticks. You can assemble your child's page there at the fair and add it to our book. I will have all the other supplies you will need to finish your page. Please do not bring regular glue--it will not dry in time. Tape might also work.
--In the past we have met at the Ocean Grove table and then given the kids a chance to present their book all together at the Author's Chair. If we do so this year, we will be meeting at 10:40 a.m., with the goal of presenting the book at 11:00. Those of you who want your kids to present the book at the Author's Chair, please RSVP to this post by leaving a comment. If no one is interested, I'd like to know so I don't hang around the mall unnecessarily. : ) If no one RSVP's, we will just pass on that this year.
Questions or comments otherwise? Please leave them in the comments too, so everyone may benefit from the answers.
Finally, here are my girls' pages, as examples of what the final pages will look like (click on the images to see them bigger):
The front side of each child's page will have the riddle, bordered with colored construction paper. Notice the poem is offset to the right, to allow for the holes we will add to complete the "binding."
The back side of each child's page will have the answer and illustration.
So as you read the book, each riddle's answer is revealed as you turn the page.
My girls had fun with these! They used the online "riddle generator" interactive I linked earlier just as a brainstorming tool, and then came up with their own riddle styles. You own child's riddle can be as elaborate or simple as you and he/she wants.
Special thanks to Kathy Oak and Lucy Hiatt, who generously donated some of their Ocean Grove funds to help purchase the papers needed for the Old School book projects last year and this year. Thank you ladies so much!
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Book "binding" party--NEXT Monday!
Ok, after a whirlwind Spring, culminating in the Abbey art show and STAR testing, I took a much needed mental Spring Break. Only to realize, yesterday, that in doing so I neglected giving you all the final details about our Author's Fair book project this year, "Our Big Backyard."
But I have a feeling most of you are like me, and are just now starting the project anyway. ; ) So if you have not started working on the project with your kids yet, it is not too late! But, um, you'd better jump on it now, since we are scheduled to have our binding party NEXT Monday at the April Old School Monday gathering. That gives you four days--so time to get busy! ; )
And please remember--this is meant to be a fun thing, not a huge hassle, so please keep that in mind as you help your kids with their pages. The art may not be amazing (hey, that's what the Abbey art show was for) and the riddles may or may not make much sense. ; ) But it's an opportunity for our kids to stretch their thinking, be creative, engage with words and ideas, and make art!
If you have not already read the first posts about this year's project, please start here and here.
Once you have read those, you know our theme and our writing style. Now let's talk details of art and format:
The ART
--The art can be in any two-dimensional style and medium your child chooses! I'm not going to direct my kids in a specific medium, but just encourage them to get out the markers and colored pencils. For our family, this is not the time to try to get all fancy.
--Your child's art must be made on a roughly 8" x 8" square.
The TEXT
--Please print out your child's riddle on a regular 8 1/2" x 11" piece of white typing paper.
--The text should be centered.
--The text should be approximately 16-18 pt. font (whatever fits and looks good).
--Your child is welcome to choose the color and font style, but please use boldface.
--The answer to the riddle should be printed out exactly the same font style and size and boldface, but on a separate piece of the same kind of paper.
(If you have several children submitting pages, you are welcome to print their answers on one page, as long as you leave lots of room in between them, as we will be cutting them out on Monday when we assemble the books.)
Does this all make sense? Am I forgetting something important? If you have questions, please leave them in the comments to this post, so everyone may benefit from the answers.
So, see you Monday, April 22 from 11-2 in the usual Vintage classrooms! *And bring your supplies! We will be using scissors, glue/gluesticks, and maybe pencils and markers.
But I have a feeling most of you are like me, and are just now starting the project anyway. ; ) So if you have not started working on the project with your kids yet, it is not too late! But, um, you'd better jump on it now, since we are scheduled to have our binding party NEXT Monday at the April Old School Monday gathering. That gives you four days--so time to get busy! ; )
And please remember--this is meant to be a fun thing, not a huge hassle, so please keep that in mind as you help your kids with their pages. The art may not be amazing (hey, that's what the Abbey art show was for) and the riddles may or may not make much sense. ; ) But it's an opportunity for our kids to stretch their thinking, be creative, engage with words and ideas, and make art!
If you have not already read the first posts about this year's project, please start here and here.
Once you have read those, you know our theme and our writing style. Now let's talk details of art and format:
The ART
--The art can be in any two-dimensional style and medium your child chooses! I'm not going to direct my kids in a specific medium, but just encourage them to get out the markers and colored pencils. For our family, this is not the time to try to get all fancy.
--Your child's art must be made on a roughly 8" x 8" square.
The TEXT
--Please print out your child's riddle on a regular 8 1/2" x 11" piece of white typing paper.
--The text should be centered.
--The text should be approximately 16-18 pt. font (whatever fits and looks good).
--Your child is welcome to choose the color and font style, but please use boldface.
--The answer to the riddle should be printed out exactly the same font style and size and boldface, but on a separate piece of the same kind of paper.
(If you have several children submitting pages, you are welcome to print their answers on one page, as long as you leave lots of room in between them, as we will be cutting them out on Monday when we assemble the books.)
Does this all make sense? Am I forgetting something important? If you have questions, please leave them in the comments to this post, so everyone may benefit from the answers.
So, see you Monday, April 22 from 11-2 in the usual Vintage classrooms! *And bring your supplies! We will be using scissors, glue/gluesticks, and maybe pencils and markers.
Friday, February 22, 2013
More on Book Project 2013: Our Big Backyard Writing
Ok, everybody. I shared a few weeks back about our topic for this year's Author's Fair book project, Our Big Backyard. Now I'm excited to tell you that I have settled on the writing style for the book--riddles!
So each child/family who would like to participate in the project will come up with a topic--like redwoods, or sea stars, or the Sierra Nevadas, or constellations, whatever they are interested in or whatever you are already learning about as a family--and then they will write a riddle "poem" to accompany it.
Best of all, I found a great interactive online that will help in the riddle-writing process!
ReadWriteThink riddle interactive
Write your riddles using the interactive, and you will be set!
More details on the size of the art and how you should format your writing for the book will come in later posts. : )
Questions? Please leave them here in the comments so that everyone may benefit from the discussion.
So each child/family who would like to participate in the project will come up with a topic--like redwoods, or sea stars, or the Sierra Nevadas, or constellations, whatever they are interested in or whatever you are already learning about as a family--and then they will write a riddle "poem" to accompany it.
Best of all, I found a great interactive online that will help in the riddle-writing process!
ReadWriteThink riddle interactive
Write your riddles using the interactive, and you will be set!
More details on the size of the art and how you should format your writing for the book will come in later posts. : )
Questions? Please leave them here in the comments so that everyone may benefit from the discussion.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Another Excellent Book of Months Example
When I made the post the other day about books your family might want to read to get ideas for our 2014 Book of Months writing project, I forgot to share one of our favorites:
The poetry in this book is wonderful, and while you can find it in many editions, the one illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman is our favorite. Her watercolor and ink drawings are beautiful, and really draw the reader into to the "feel" of each particular month, as much as Updike's words.
Just a taste:
I highly recommend this book for your family's bookshelves!
The poetry in this book is wonderful, and while you can find it in many editions, the one illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman is our favorite. Her watercolor and ink drawings are beautiful, and really draw the reader into to the "feel" of each particular month, as much as Updike's words.
Just a taste:
(click on the image to embiggen)
The facing November page, illustrating the "beauty of the bone."
I highly recommend this book for your family's bookshelves!
Friday, February 1, 2013
And now the Vintage Homeschool Kids' Book Project 2013: Our Big Backyard
If you read the last posts, you know we are starting the annual book project for 2014 a little early. But that does not mean we are not doing a project for this year! No, so many of you told me how much you and your kids enjoy this annual tradition of making a collaborative project and presenting it at the Author's Fair in May that I got up the gumption to do it again. ; ) (Seriously, though--thanks ladies for your encouragement. It is nice to know you are not just joining in the book projects because you feel like you would be a bad friend if you didn't, or because you would feel guilty or something. No one ever has to participate, but I'm glad to know those of you who do actually are glad to do so. : )
So here's the project for this year, to be completed in Feb and March and presented at the Author's Fair in May:
Our Big Backyard
The theme of this book will be God's grand creation. The world is our classroom! And it is also our big backyard, so your child can write about anything at all in nature--with one caveat: the child must be able to engage with that thing with his or her senses. So, this means your child probably should not choose to write about the Sahara desert. . . but of course he could write about Death Valley if he's been there recently and can remember it well. And exotic animals like Golden Lion Tamarins would not be the best topic. . . unless your family gets to observe them at a zoo. The best topics will be those that your children can experience as fully as possible, with as many of their senses as possible--tide pools, or banana slugs, or erosion, or mushrooms, or Salinas valley farms, or babies, or weather. . . you have so much room here to be creative with your topic, and choose a subject that fits your child's interests and experiences and your family's recent homeschool studies.
You can choose something you want to learn about with your kids for this project, or you can piggy-back this project with something you are already studying. Make the project fit with whatever works for your family and your homeschool schedule.
This year we will not do the art all together, so you and your child can decide what medium best suits his/her topic.
I'll write more on the specifics of the project later--this was just the heads up to get you all thinking about possible topics for your child's page.
But in the meantime, here are the important deadlines for the project, so you can figure those into your planning:
April 22, noon - 2:30: All pages complete, bring to Old School Monday gathering for binding party
May 4 : Author's Fair at Capitola Mall
Inspiration for The Book of Months project
I'll tell you how this project got started: my own Meredith decided about a week before the Author's Fair last year that since her older sister had two books to enter, she would like to write another book to enter as well. And the child labored for that whole week on detailed pencil drawings and pages of text--all her own "book of months" inspired by this family favorite:
If you know of other books that are similar in vein that you could recommend as creative thinking fodder for this assignment, please leave the titles in the comments.
Well, she barely got it done in time for the Author's Fair--no, really, I was sitting there after the fair had started on the mall floor with my back against some shop windows trying to shove her pages (some done vertically and some horizontally of course, and with text on both sides) into the clear plastic pages of a photo album our dear ES Terry had brainstormed as the solution to her binding dilemma. But she had put so much thought into it, and it was such a sweet idea, that I decided we would "do it right" for the next author's fair. And decided each girl could do her own. And then though, hey while we are at it, maybe the other Vintage Homeschool kids would like to join in the fun!
It really is a fun way to record not only the passing of time and the rhythm of a year, but also your own kids lives at this stage. I have a feeling if you and your kids do a really good job, you will end up with a book you want to hold on to and bring out year after year.
Here are some other books of months that you and your kids might enjoy reading while getting into the mood for this project:
We love this first one--gentle story about a little girl remembering with her mother what happens in a year's time.
This series has a book for each month, although I have not read them.
Ok, this last one won't be all that helpful with the project. But I loved this book when I was a kid! ; )
If you know of other books that are similar in vein that you could recommend as creative thinking fodder for this assignment, please leave the titles in the comments.
Our Vintage Homeschool FAMILY Book Project 2014--A Book of Months
Some of you remember that I was brewing up a book project for the annual Author's Fair that could be completed by families or individual kids, but would not be a collective project as we have done in the past. Well, I have finally figured out how we can do it and make it logical, easy, a great learning exercise for the kids, and potentially a great keepsake! (Even a great Christmas present for a family member!)
Our project is a Book of Months. The idea is for your child/children to capture the rhythm of a year in your family. Each month will have one page describing what your family traditionally does in that month, with one page of illustration (or your child can make more than one page for eventful months--that part is completely up to them/you). Some things that could be included are holidays, birthdays or other annual family celebrations, typical weather, favorite activities for that season, whatever you and your child(ren) think best captures your year.
Since we are just now starting the new year, and have completed our first month, this is the perfect time to begin this project. So anyone interested can make a time in the next week or so to talk about January and what they did as a family that month, what is special about that month, etc. Then have your children write/draw about it while the memories and sensory elements are fresh. Then at the end of each month, look back and do the pages for that past month. If we all do a little at a time, the project should not really impact our other schooling, and the kids will have time to get as involved with the writing/illustration as they would like. Ideally, the project itself will end up being part of the rhythm of this year!
Of course this project does not have to be done so systematically. There is absolutely no reason why you can't just do it whenever you remember, when you have room in your school schedule, etc. I could even see someone doing this project in two weeks--completing one month every day. So I am just setting out the project the way it could most organically be done, and those of you who want to participate can do the pages and art however/whenever you see fit.
My gift to you will be a reminder here on this blog at the beginning of each new month to look back on the past month and write about it while the memories are fresh. : ) The final goal will be for all the books to be completed this same time next year, and we will have a binding party at one of our Vintage Homeschool gatherings!
Since each family will be doing this project on their own, but we hope to show them all together at the Author's Fair in May of 2014, there will be certain simple parameters we will use to give overall cohesion to the project.
--Each child's writing and illustrations should be completed on 8 1/2 x 11 inch white typing paper.
--Only use one side of each piece of paper.
--The text and its illustration will be on separate pieces of paper.
--I strongly urge you to figure out in advance if your child(ren) wants to have the pages horizontal or vertical--we have learned already from experience with this project the sadness that occurs when some illustrations are one way and some are the other! Your author(s) can choose which they want--either is completely fine for this project, as long as their whole book is done the same way.
--The text will be typed out in black ink (unless of course your child believes there is a need for colored text). You can choose the font, but the size should be 14 pt (as long as that fits well on your page--of course you can change it if you think the text length warrants it).
--The text for each page will be centered on the page (both L to R and top to bottom).
--The style of illustration used is entirely up to you and your child as well. You could even practice different mediums on different pages, if you choose; however, I would recommend you choose one style and use it for the entire book, to keep the months having the same visual "weight." So if your child chooses watercolor, encourage them to use watercolor throughout the book.
--You may choose to make the book as a family and have different children do different aspects of the project, or each child may do his/her own book. This too is up to you and your children.
--Be sure to have a safe place to store this project over the year, so the pages are not bent and damaged. Our family started this project about 8 months ago, and some of the pages that the kids were storing themselves have been creased, a little wrinkled. . . not really a big deal, but if this ends up being a beautiful "keeper" book, then in the long run they may be sorry.
Remember, you should not worry about binding the book--we will do that all together next March or April.
If you have any questions, please feel free to ask in the comments below. I hope you are as excited about this project as I am!
Happy Writing, all!
Our project is a Book of Months. The idea is for your child/children to capture the rhythm of a year in your family. Each month will have one page describing what your family traditionally does in that month, with one page of illustration (or your child can make more than one page for eventful months--that part is completely up to them/you). Some things that could be included are holidays, birthdays or other annual family celebrations, typical weather, favorite activities for that season, whatever you and your child(ren) think best captures your year.
Since we are just now starting the new year, and have completed our first month, this is the perfect time to begin this project. So anyone interested can make a time in the next week or so to talk about January and what they did as a family that month, what is special about that month, etc. Then have your children write/draw about it while the memories and sensory elements are fresh. Then at the end of each month, look back and do the pages for that past month. If we all do a little at a time, the project should not really impact our other schooling, and the kids will have time to get as involved with the writing/illustration as they would like. Ideally, the project itself will end up being part of the rhythm of this year!
Of course this project does not have to be done so systematically. There is absolutely no reason why you can't just do it whenever you remember, when you have room in your school schedule, etc. I could even see someone doing this project in two weeks--completing one month every day. So I am just setting out the project the way it could most organically be done, and those of you who want to participate can do the pages and art however/whenever you see fit.
My gift to you will be a reminder here on this blog at the beginning of each new month to look back on the past month and write about it while the memories are fresh. : ) The final goal will be for all the books to be completed this same time next year, and we will have a binding party at one of our Vintage Homeschool gatherings!
Since each family will be doing this project on their own, but we hope to show them all together at the Author's Fair in May of 2014, there will be certain simple parameters we will use to give overall cohesion to the project.
--Each child's writing and illustrations should be completed on 8 1/2 x 11 inch white typing paper.
--Only use one side of each piece of paper.
--The text and its illustration will be on separate pieces of paper.
--I strongly urge you to figure out in advance if your child(ren) wants to have the pages horizontal or vertical--we have learned already from experience with this project the sadness that occurs when some illustrations are one way and some are the other! Your author(s) can choose which they want--either is completely fine for this project, as long as their whole book is done the same way.
--The text will be typed out in black ink (unless of course your child believes there is a need for colored text). You can choose the font, but the size should be 14 pt (as long as that fits well on your page--of course you can change it if you think the text length warrants it).
--The text for each page will be centered on the page (both L to R and top to bottom).
--The style of illustration used is entirely up to you and your child as well. You could even practice different mediums on different pages, if you choose; however, I would recommend you choose one style and use it for the entire book, to keep the months having the same visual "weight." So if your child chooses watercolor, encourage them to use watercolor throughout the book.
--You may choose to make the book as a family and have different children do different aspects of the project, or each child may do his/her own book. This too is up to you and your children.
--Be sure to have a safe place to store this project over the year, so the pages are not bent and damaged. Our family started this project about 8 months ago, and some of the pages that the kids were storing themselves have been creased, a little wrinkled. . . not really a big deal, but if this ends up being a beautiful "keeper" book, then in the long run they may be sorry.
Remember, you should not worry about binding the book--we will do that all together next March or April.
If you have any questions, please feel free to ask in the comments below. I hope you are as excited about this project as I am!
Happy Writing, all!
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
It's the Old School Monday FALL PARTY!
Photo credit
What: Homeschool Families Fall Party
When: Next Monday, October 22, 11-2
Where: Vintage Faith Church, our usual classrooms and the gym
We will start out with lunch, so please bring lunch for your families* and also one food item to share with everyone.
Then there are two special events planned:
--Share Displays. 12-12:30. Each child or family is welcome to create a display of something they want to share with the rest of us. It might be what they did over the summer, or something they have been learning about that excites them. All displays should have a writing element (which can be as simple as the child writing captions for photos, or as elaborate as descriptive paragraphs) and displays that utilize a math element (graph or chart, calculations, even simple addition that fits their topic) will receive special acknowledgement. Prizes will be given to all participating children! Children may set up their displays as they arrive, so families may look around and admire the kids' handiwork at any time, but we will set aside a half-hour starting at noon for the children to talk about their displays, if they wish.
--Fall Book Projects. 12:30-1:30. I will share our next book project for the 2013 Author's Fair so anyone interested can get a head start on it with your kids, and then I will lead the kids in a guided book project on the Bill of Rights. Any kids who are interested and who are school age are welcome to participate.
Throughout our time there, we will have plenty of time for chatting, catching up, sharing ideas, and letting the kids play! If any parent wants to lead a game in the gym before or after our other activities, please let me know!
This is all free, and any homeschool families are welcome to join us and participate. Please invite your friends too!
*Please remember to bring your own cups, plates, utensils, etc. We would like to make these events as waste-free as possible. Thank you!
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Author's Fair Details! Please RSVP
Ok, Moms, this is the moment your kids have been waiting for--the Author's Fair itself!
Just a couple of quick things:
1) They think they have LOTS of room available at the table, so please bring whatever books, lapbooks, writing projects, even first drafts you might have to share. A writing project in process is fine, just label it as such!
2) They need help staffing the Ocean Grove table, so please consider signing up for an hour. (My dear ES Terry, who is one of the teachers responsible for the fair, is very enviromentally sensitive, so the mall air is really bad for her--she and the other teachers really do appreciate parents volunteering, so they don't have to be there all day.) In past years my girls have loved walking around and looking at the books at other nearby tables, and the time went quickly. They also really liked reading the other OG books, and using sticky notes to leave encouraging comments. : ) I think the OG teachers might even have a little book-making activity at the table, which would make it fun for the kids to hang out. So, please think if you can help out in this way, and then let the teachers know.
3) The Vintage Homeschool kids will be presenting their book at the Author's Chair at 11:00, so everyone please be there a few minutes early. And please let us know you are coming--so we don't start without you--by leaving a comment below.
Ah, one of the highlights of my kids' school year! I can't wait to see what all your families contribute.
Here is the original email announcement from OG, just in case you missed it:
Hi All,
STAR has kept your Authors’ Fair Coordinators very busy, but now we are finished with STAR and can concentrate on something fun: The Student Authors’ Fair!
It is only 6 more days until The Student Author’s Fair! If you haven’t started yet, there is still time to make a simple book to demonstrate your child’s creativity at the Fair.
Step 1: Check out these sites:
1.http://www.bookmakingwithkids.com/?p=1351 (the grandmother of bookmaking for kids sites, filled with great ideas)
2.http://www.makingbooks.com/freeprojects.shtml (easy for kids)
3.http://www.instructables.com/id/Book-Making-for-Kids/ (just a few ideas here but they have great pictures of each step)
4.http://www.vickiblackwell.com/makingbooks.html (really easy and fun instructions for many different kinds of books)
5.http://familycrafts.about.com/od/homemadebooks/tp/Old-Book-Crafts.htm (re-using a book to create a new book)
Step 2: Email us the name and grade of your student(s)who will be participating. tcleary@ieminc.org
Step 3: Arrange to get the books to the Fair:
1. Bring or send it to one of us: Kim near UCSC, Terry in Aptos, Barb in San Lorenzo Valley (email for addresses).
2. Bring it to the Fair at the Capitola Mall on Saturday morning. We start setting up at 9am, and the Fair opens at 10.
Step 4: We would so appreciate your help during the Fair.During the following time slots we need an adult to sit at our table. Please let us know if you can help: the time you can help and your cell number so we can reach you on Saturday.
9:00 – 10:00 (Set Up)
10:00 – 11:00
10:30 – 11:30
11:00 – 12:00
11:30 – 12:30
12:00 - 1:00
12:30 – 1:30
1:00 – 2:00
1:30 – 2:30
2:00 – 3:00
2:30 – 3:30
3:00 – 4:00
3:30 – 4:30 (Includes Packing Up)
We do hope you will participate in the Fair. It is a wonderful opportunity for the children to share their writing and see what other children have created.
Terry, Kim, and Barb
Authors’ Fair Coordinators for OGCS
Just a couple of quick things:
1) They think they have LOTS of room available at the table, so please bring whatever books, lapbooks, writing projects, even first drafts you might have to share. A writing project in process is fine, just label it as such!
2) They need help staffing the Ocean Grove table, so please consider signing up for an hour. (My dear ES Terry, who is one of the teachers responsible for the fair, is very enviromentally sensitive, so the mall air is really bad for her--she and the other teachers really do appreciate parents volunteering, so they don't have to be there all day.) In past years my girls have loved walking around and looking at the books at other nearby tables, and the time went quickly. They also really liked reading the other OG books, and using sticky notes to leave encouraging comments. : ) I think the OG teachers might even have a little book-making activity at the table, which would make it fun for the kids to hang out. So, please think if you can help out in this way, and then let the teachers know.
3) The Vintage Homeschool kids will be presenting their book at the Author's Chair at 11:00, so everyone please be there a few minutes early. And please let us know you are coming--so we don't start without you--by leaving a comment below.
Ah, one of the highlights of my kids' school year! I can't wait to see what all your families contribute.
Here is the original email announcement from OG, just in case you missed it:
Hi All,
STAR has kept your Authors’ Fair Coordinators very busy, but now we are finished with STAR and can concentrate on something fun: The Student Authors’ Fair!
It is only 6 more days until The Student Author’s Fair! If you haven’t started yet, there is still time to make a simple book to demonstrate your child’s creativity at the Fair.
Step 1: Check out these sites:
1.http://www.bookmakingwithkids.com/?p=1351 (the grandmother of bookmaking for kids sites, filled with great ideas)
2.http://www.makingbooks.com/freeprojects.shtml (easy for kids)
3.http://www.instructables.com/id/Book-Making-for-Kids/ (just a few ideas here but they have great pictures of each step)
4.http://www.vickiblackwell.com/makingbooks.html (really easy and fun instructions for many different kinds of books)
5.http://familycrafts.about.com/od/homemadebooks/tp/Old-Book-Crafts.htm (re-using a book to create a new book)
Step 2: Email us the name and grade of your student(s)who will be participating. tcleary@ieminc.org
Step 3: Arrange to get the books to the Fair:
1. Bring or send it to one of us: Kim near UCSC, Terry in Aptos, Barb in San Lorenzo Valley (email for addresses).
2. Bring it to the Fair at the Capitola Mall on Saturday morning. We start setting up at 9am, and the Fair opens at 10.
Step 4: We would so appreciate your help during the Fair.During the following time slots we need an adult to sit at our table. Please let us know if you can help: the time you can help and your cell number so we can reach you on Saturday.
9:00 – 10:00 (Set Up)
10:00 – 11:00
10:30 – 11:30
11:00 – 12:00
11:30 – 12:30
12:00 - 1:00
12:30 – 1:30
1:00 – 2:00
1:30 – 2:30
2:00 – 3:00
2:30 – 3:30
3:00 – 4:00
3:30 – 4:30 (Includes Packing Up)
We do hope you will participate in the Fair. It is a wonderful opportunity for the children to share their writing and see what other children have created.
Terry, Kim, and Barb
Authors’ Fair Coordinators for OGCS
Friday, April 27, 2012
Quick note on formatting printed poems!
Hopefully some of you moms will see this. As I printed out the poems this morning, it occurred to me that some guidelines for formatting and printing your poems might be helpful. We can be flexible with the different ways you might print out your poem, but a few things would be helpful:
--remember to make sure each new line of the poem is capitalized
--Your child may or may not title the poem. But do make sure you include the date, time, and place the child did her sensory immersion. We are using that info for our poem titles.
--I would single space the poem, but use 14 pt font.
--I would leave the poem body left-aligned, but center the title and author
--I would leave two blank lines between the title and author, and then the author and first line.
--I would bold the title and author lines.
But if you end up with something different, that should work too--the only thing we really don't want is for it to take up too much room on the poet's page, so there will not be as much room for artwork.
Looking forward to seeing you all there today! If anyone needs to come a little early, I will be there hopefully by 11:30 but definately by 11:45.
--remember to make sure each new line of the poem is capitalized
--Your child may or may not title the poem. But do make sure you include the date, time, and place the child did her sensory immersion. We are using that info for our poem titles.
--I would single space the poem, but use 14 pt font.
--I would leave the poem body left-aligned, but center the title and author
--I would leave two blank lines between the title and author, and then the author and first line.
--I would bold the title and author lines.
But if you end up with something different, that should work too--the only thing we really don't want is for it to take up too much room on the poet's page, so there will not be as much room for artwork.
Looking forward to seeing you all there today! If anyone needs to come a little early, I will be there hopefully by 11:30 but definately by 11:45.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Book Project 2012: how not to do it example and other helpfulness
This moment at the beach--trying to get my kids to engage their senses and use their words--is silver,
The color of a dagger as it is thrust slowly into my right temple.
It feels like torture.
Like the whole expanse of God's grand creation laid before stubbornly unheeding minds.
It sounds like children silent, while I wait.
It smells like tears, gathering behind my tired eyes.
This precious moment with my children in nature makes me feel like
Going home and eating chocolate instead.
; )
Ok, thought you might like one last example that came to me yesterday, while my darlings and I were romping through nature, holding hands and soaking in all the amazing beauty of nature with all our senses.
Or not.
Ok, really, I wanted you all to get a chuckle, and remember that this does not have to be an idealized project! If your kids don't engage the way you want them to (even if, say, they absolutely love nature and are really creative and have LOTS of words and have already done this kind of poem twice before and can do it in their sleep) during the sensory immersion part of the poetry project, THAT'S OK. Run with it.
If you only have 30 minutes to write a poem and your baby is fussing and your kid can't come up with any better ways to describe the sky than "nice" and "blue"--FINE. Run with it.
Even if your young poet uses "cool" three times in the poem, and trying to get her to come up with a different descriptive is like pulling teeth. FINE Run with it.
Even if your child gives up after the senses and says he is done and runs off to whack his brother with a pillow and you can't get him back and refocused to finish that last line. FINE. It's done.
; )
SOME PRACTICAL ADVICE
--For that last line of the poem, where the poet should restate the subject--try having the child just describe where she is and what she is doing. (See examples below)
--Sarah F. said her kids have been using the thesaurus and enjoying it, so if your kids are having a hard time finding the words they mean, that's a great way to take the pressure off of them to generate their own words.
--It is TOTALLY FINE to feed your kid ideas. If she is really struggling with words, or with perfectionism, if you offer suggestion and she likes one of them, try to see if she can word it her own way, but if she just wants to write it the way you said it, FINE. Part of the learning process is listening to other people's imagery and descriptive words and evaluating their effectiveness. Your child is still learning! It is still a fine way to approach this project!
Let me just make this clear--there is no wrong way to do this poem.
Does that make some of you feel better?
So, don't have high expectations, be creative and encouraging and try your best to arrange a good time for your child to be focused and undistracted during the sensory immersion/writing, BUT if your best laid plans go awry, it's FINE. Don't let disappointment or frustration of diengaged kids, or tired little ones, or short amount of time, or whatever keep you from jumping in and trying!
I do feel differently about the overall book page, though. So the things I do want to be more consistent and have higher quality control about:
1. kids having watercolor paper in the colors they need for the art project Friday
2. kids making artwork that uses the colors they saw during their immersion
3. the poems being printed/typed out. No handwriting this time.
4. Don't forget to type the time, the date and the place too--it can be your poem's title, or a subheading, just make sure it is typed out on the page.
Can't wait to see you all on Friday! Don't forget to RSVP!
I'll leave you with the poems my two younger girls came up with yesterday (after editing):
April 24, 2012. 3:00 p.m. at New Brighton State Beach.
by Bronwyn
This sunny day at the beach is tan and blue and white,
The colors of sparkling sea water, and wood and foam washed up on the sand.
It feels like hot sand in my toes,
And cool, smooth water on my toes.
It sounds like waves throwing water onto the shore.
It smells like salt.
It tastes like onion.
Sitting in the hot sand, reaching my fingers into it, makes me feel lovely,
Like making a sand angel.
April 24, 2012. 3:00 p.m. at New Brighton State Beach.
by Meredith
This sunny afternoon at the beach is light and airy,
And deep murky blue,
The colors of pure sky and gentle whales.
It feels warm and joyful.
It sounds like waves rolling and crashing.
It smells salty, with a slight scent of pollen.
It tastes like cool, clean and fresh air.
Visiting the waves and hugging the sand makes me feel happy.
See, my kids clearly had a much more fun time doing this project yesterday than I did! ; ) Take a deep breath, Momma, smile and relax. The process is so much more important than the final outcome. : )
The color of a dagger as it is thrust slowly into my right temple.
It feels like torture.
Like the whole expanse of God's grand creation laid before stubbornly unheeding minds.
It sounds like children silent, while I wait.
It smells like tears, gathering behind my tired eyes.
This precious moment with my children in nature makes me feel like
Going home and eating chocolate instead.
; )
Ok, thought you might like one last example that came to me yesterday, while my darlings and I were romping through nature, holding hands and soaking in all the amazing beauty of nature with all our senses.
Or not.
Ok, really, I wanted you all to get a chuckle, and remember that this does not have to be an idealized project! If your kids don't engage the way you want them to (even if, say, they absolutely love nature and are really creative and have LOTS of words and have already done this kind of poem twice before and can do it in their sleep) during the sensory immersion part of the poetry project, THAT'S OK. Run with it.
If you only have 30 minutes to write a poem and your baby is fussing and your kid can't come up with any better ways to describe the sky than "nice" and "blue"--FINE. Run with it.
Even if your young poet uses "cool" three times in the poem, and trying to get her to come up with a different descriptive is like pulling teeth. FINE Run with it.
Even if your child gives up after the senses and says he is done and runs off to whack his brother with a pillow and you can't get him back and refocused to finish that last line. FINE. It's done.
; )
SOME PRACTICAL ADVICE
--For that last line of the poem, where the poet should restate the subject--try having the child just describe where she is and what she is doing. (See examples below)
--Sarah F. said her kids have been using the thesaurus and enjoying it, so if your kids are having a hard time finding the words they mean, that's a great way to take the pressure off of them to generate their own words.
--It is TOTALLY FINE to feed your kid ideas. If she is really struggling with words, or with perfectionism, if you offer suggestion and she likes one of them, try to see if she can word it her own way, but if she just wants to write it the way you said it, FINE. Part of the learning process is listening to other people's imagery and descriptive words and evaluating their effectiveness. Your child is still learning! It is still a fine way to approach this project!
Let me just make this clear--there is no wrong way to do this poem.
Does that make some of you feel better?
So, don't have high expectations, be creative and encouraging and try your best to arrange a good time for your child to be focused and undistracted during the sensory immersion/writing, BUT if your best laid plans go awry, it's FINE. Don't let disappointment or frustration of diengaged kids, or tired little ones, or short amount of time, or whatever keep you from jumping in and trying!
I do feel differently about the overall book page, though. So the things I do want to be more consistent and have higher quality control about:
1. kids having watercolor paper in the colors they need for the art project Friday
2. kids making artwork that uses the colors they saw during their immersion
3. the poems being printed/typed out. No handwriting this time.
4. Don't forget to type the time, the date and the place too--it can be your poem's title, or a subheading, just make sure it is typed out on the page.
Can't wait to see you all on Friday! Don't forget to RSVP!
I'll leave you with the poems my two younger girls came up with yesterday (after editing):
April 24, 2012. 3:00 p.m. at New Brighton State Beach.
by Bronwyn
This sunny day at the beach is tan and blue and white,
The colors of sparkling sea water, and wood and foam washed up on the sand.
It feels like hot sand in my toes,
And cool, smooth water on my toes.
It sounds like waves throwing water onto the shore.
It smells like salt.
It tastes like onion.
Sitting in the hot sand, reaching my fingers into it, makes me feel lovely,
Like making a sand angel.
April 24, 2012. 3:00 p.m. at New Brighton State Beach.
by Meredith
This sunny afternoon at the beach is light and airy,
And deep murky blue,
The colors of pure sky and gentle whales.
It feels warm and joyful.
It sounds like waves rolling and crashing.
It smells salty, with a slight scent of pollen.
It tastes like cool, clean and fresh air.
Visiting the waves and hugging the sand makes me feel happy.
See, my kids clearly had a much more fun time doing this project yesterday than I did! ; ) Take a deep breath, Momma, smile and relax. The process is so much more important than the final outcome. : )
Friday, April 20, 2012
Book Project 2012: The Art, and Book-Making Party! (RSVP)
This is a short post, really just a preview of what we will be doing to illustrate your children's poetry when we get together on next Friday, April 27, at noon-2:30 there in the usual classrooms at Vintage.
We're going to cut up our watercolored papers, and make pretty pictures that reflect the poems!
So, this is why you need to make sure you and your kids made paper in the colors that will suit their poems. But we will bring all the papers we have made, and we can share with each other too.
(When I had the girls make these a few years ago, I was not thinking of how to put them in the book, and it was a bummer to have them sideways and have to punch holes directly into the art. Which is why we are thinking things through this year, and the illustrations will be sized to fit onto larger, stiff pieces of paper, much like we did last year for the "What's Above, What's Beneath" book.)
Here is what you need to bring to the book-making party:
--The completed poems for each child, typed out.
Last year I had the children write their poems out neatly, since they were short poems. This year the poems are longer, and I want their words to take center stage, so all the poems must be typed/printed out. The font (even the color) is up to you.
--The watercolor papers you made with your kids.
If you do not make watercolor papers ahead of time and bring them, your children might be discouraged that there are no papers that fit the colors they need. This is one time we all have to plan ahead--it won't work to come unprepared.
(If your child realizes he needs a color of paper he did not anticipate, and no one else has it, we can use crayons to color paper there at the church. But this will work only in a pinch, and won't be as nice as watercolor.)
--Your Old School art kits!
Remember when we were meeting on Mondays and I told you all to bring your own glue, rulers, pencils, erasers, scissors, etc.? Now is the time to do it again! We can usually round up the supplies we need from the classrooms, but we can't count on it, so best bet is to bring your own!
Finally, please come on time!
We will have plenty to do, so will start in right away. If we get done early, then we can socialize! This year you moms (with your kids, to the degree you see fit) will be doing the cutting and measuring for your pages, but it will be much easier of a layout than last year's page. (Which was beautiful, but took a lot more measuring.)
This is going to be fun!
Questions or comments? Please leave a response to this post.
**And if you are planning on participating in this project, and are coming to the Book-Making party next Friday, would you please RSVP in the comments? Thanks!
We're going to cut up our watercolored papers, and make pretty pictures that reflect the poems!
So, this is why you need to make sure you and your kids made paper in the colors that will suit their poems. But we will bring all the papers we have made, and we can share with each other too.
(When I had the girls make these a few years ago, I was not thinking of how to put them in the book, and it was a bummer to have them sideways and have to punch holes directly into the art. Which is why we are thinking things through this year, and the illustrations will be sized to fit onto larger, stiff pieces of paper, much like we did last year for the "What's Above, What's Beneath" book.)
Here is what you need to bring to the book-making party:
--The completed poems for each child, typed out.
Last year I had the children write their poems out neatly, since they were short poems. This year the poems are longer, and I want their words to take center stage, so all the poems must be typed/printed out. The font (even the color) is up to you.
--The watercolor papers you made with your kids.
If you do not make watercolor papers ahead of time and bring them, your children might be discouraged that there are no papers that fit the colors they need. This is one time we all have to plan ahead--it won't work to come unprepared.
(If your child realizes he needs a color of paper he did not anticipate, and no one else has it, we can use crayons to color paper there at the church. But this will work only in a pinch, and won't be as nice as watercolor.)
--Your Old School art kits!
Remember when we were meeting on Mondays and I told you all to bring your own glue, rulers, pencils, erasers, scissors, etc.? Now is the time to do it again! We can usually round up the supplies we need from the classrooms, but we can't count on it, so best bet is to bring your own!
Finally, please come on time!
We will have plenty to do, so will start in right away. If we get done early, then we can socialize! This year you moms (with your kids, to the degree you see fit) will be doing the cutting and measuring for your pages, but it will be much easier of a layout than last year's page. (Which was beautiful, but took a lot more measuring.)
This is going to be fun!
Questions or comments? Please leave a response to this post.
**And if you are planning on participating in this project, and are coming to the Book-Making party next Friday, would you please RSVP in the comments? Thanks!
Book Project 2012, STEP TWO: Editing the Poems
At this point, you and your young poet are basically done with the writing!
You used the formula, and have your poem. The only thing to do now is talk with your child about his or her imagery and word choice. When I did this project with the Kimball girls and my own a couple of years ago, I found that if I sat down and talked with each girl one-on-one for a few minutes to help them think through their poem, they were very willing to chose the best words to say what they really meant, and the poems were so much more meaningful and beautiful.
The most important thing: ask questions about what your kid means, and don't let her just say, "I dunno."
Let's say your poet said "The backyard is green."
You might say, "Well, what specific part of the backyard are you talking about? What makes it green?"
She might say in response, "Here in the grass is green. It looks really green because it just rained and the plants look fresh."
Ah-ha! So, you might say, "So what exactly do you want your specific place to be, to describe for this poem? Let's be more specific than the backyard."
She says, "OK, then. My backyard after the rain is green."
You ask, "What kind of green?"
She says, "Grass green."
You say, "OK. So, you just said my backyard after the rain is grass green. Hmmmm. I can think of several different colors of grass green, since sometimes it is pale and sometimes its dark. Can you add another descriptive word to tell us what kind of grass green your backyard is after the rain?"
She says, "Baby grass. It's baby grass green."
You say, "Great! I can really see that! OK, so when you see that color, what else does it remind you of?"
She says, "Mmmmmmm. (pause) Hmmmmmmm."
You wait patiently.
She says, "Ummmmmmmm. (pause, looking out of window.) It makes me think of baby frogs."
You say, "Oh, baby frogs! I can see that. Nice job."
And there you have a fine, descriptive first two lines of the poem:
My backyard after the rain is baby grass green,
The color of baby frogs.
Keep on going, and get your child to add some specific imagery with good descriptive words. Go over the whole poem one time, clarifying and adding descriptive words.
Now if you want, you can talk to your child further about her word choice, or you can be done, depending upon how excited your child is to be doing this and what mischief your other children are getting into:
You say, "Honey, this is a great poem! Nice job thinking through your word choice to pick the words that best describe what your senses are telling you. You know, I'm looking at your poem, and I notice you used the descriptive word 'baby' twice. Most of the time when you are writing poems you don't want to repeat words, unless you really want to emphasize them. Is baby the word you want to describe both the grass and the frogs?"
She says, "Ummmm. I think the grass looks like baby grass because it looks new."
You say, "So, do you want to say My backyard after the rain is new grass green?"
She says, "Ok."
You say, "Is that what you want? Which best fits what you are trying to say? What you think that green is like?
And she says, "I think it is new grass green."
You say, "Ok, that sounds nice, and gives the same idea of fresh, like babies are fresh. Is there anything else you can think of that is like this green besides baby frogs? Do you want to add another mental picture to show your reader what kind of green you are talking about?"
She thinks, and says, "It makes me think of splashing in puddles."
Now, this is where you could get all public-school teacher and say, "Well, that's nice, but it does not really fit into the formula, so let's leave that out." HOWEVER, I would highly recommend that ANYTHING that your kid spouts in the throes of creativity and engagement with her senses and nature--and is appropriate to the idea of the poem--goes into the poem. Just add a line and stick it in there!
My backyard after the rain is new grass green,
The color of baby frogs.
It makes me think of splashing in puddles.
And then you just jump back into the poem formula and continue on!
If you moms take a few minutes after the poem is written--back when you are home and have a few minutes of quiet, uninterrupted time, so both you and the child can now engage with the words and really hear them--to talk through word choice with your young writers, you will be so surprised sometimes how creative and observant they are!
If you can get your kid to volunteer more than one descriptive for each sense, great! But if they just want to do one, great!
The only tricky thing that you really need to talk your kids through is the rewording of the subject in the last line. In our example we have going above, rewordings might be:
My wet backyard
Standing in the wet grass
Here in my wet, green backyard
At this moment after the rain
Right now in my backyard
With my bare feet in the cool grass
Do you see how any of those phrases can plug into the formula to refocus the reader on where and when the poem is taking place? If you need specific ways to help your child reword the poem's subject, ask her to consider another way of saying where she is and what makes this moment special from another moment in Spring. *Remember, that's the overall topic of the book--This Moment In Spring.*
I can't wait to see what your kids come up with!
You used the formula, and have your poem. The only thing to do now is talk with your child about his or her imagery and word choice. When I did this project with the Kimball girls and my own a couple of years ago, I found that if I sat down and talked with each girl one-on-one for a few minutes to help them think through their poem, they were very willing to chose the best words to say what they really meant, and the poems were so much more meaningful and beautiful.
The most important thing: ask questions about what your kid means, and don't let her just say, "I dunno."
Let's say your poet said "The backyard is green."
You might say, "Well, what specific part of the backyard are you talking about? What makes it green?"
She might say in response, "Here in the grass is green. It looks really green because it just rained and the plants look fresh."
Ah-ha! So, you might say, "So what exactly do you want your specific place to be, to describe for this poem? Let's be more specific than the backyard."
She says, "OK, then. My backyard after the rain is green."
You ask, "What kind of green?"
She says, "Grass green."
You say, "OK. So, you just said my backyard after the rain is grass green. Hmmmm. I can think of several different colors of grass green, since sometimes it is pale and sometimes its dark. Can you add another descriptive word to tell us what kind of grass green your backyard is after the rain?"
She says, "Baby grass. It's baby grass green."
You say, "Great! I can really see that! OK, so when you see that color, what else does it remind you of?"
She says, "Mmmmmmm. (pause) Hmmmmmmm."
You wait patiently.
She says, "Ummmmmmmm. (pause, looking out of window.) It makes me think of baby frogs."
You say, "Oh, baby frogs! I can see that. Nice job."
And there you have a fine, descriptive first two lines of the poem:
My backyard after the rain is baby grass green,
The color of baby frogs.
Keep on going, and get your child to add some specific imagery with good descriptive words. Go over the whole poem one time, clarifying and adding descriptive words.
Now if you want, you can talk to your child further about her word choice, or you can be done, depending upon how excited your child is to be doing this and what mischief your other children are getting into:
You say, "Honey, this is a great poem! Nice job thinking through your word choice to pick the words that best describe what your senses are telling you. You know, I'm looking at your poem, and I notice you used the descriptive word 'baby' twice. Most of the time when you are writing poems you don't want to repeat words, unless you really want to emphasize them. Is baby the word you want to describe both the grass and the frogs?"
She says, "Ummmm. I think the grass looks like baby grass because it looks new."
You say, "So, do you want to say My backyard after the rain is new grass green?"
She says, "Ok."
You say, "Is that what you want? Which best fits what you are trying to say? What you think that green is like?
And she says, "I think it is new grass green."
You say, "Ok, that sounds nice, and gives the same idea of fresh, like babies are fresh. Is there anything else you can think of that is like this green besides baby frogs? Do you want to add another mental picture to show your reader what kind of green you are talking about?"
She thinks, and says, "It makes me think of splashing in puddles."
Now, this is where you could get all public-school teacher and say, "Well, that's nice, but it does not really fit into the formula, so let's leave that out." HOWEVER, I would highly recommend that ANYTHING that your kid spouts in the throes of creativity and engagement with her senses and nature--and is appropriate to the idea of the poem--goes into the poem. Just add a line and stick it in there!
My backyard after the rain is new grass green,
The color of baby frogs.
It makes me think of splashing in puddles.
And then you just jump back into the poem formula and continue on!
If you moms take a few minutes after the poem is written--back when you are home and have a few minutes of quiet, uninterrupted time, so both you and the child can now engage with the words and really hear them--to talk through word choice with your young writers, you will be so surprised sometimes how creative and observant they are!
If you can get your kid to volunteer more than one descriptive for each sense, great! But if they just want to do one, great!
The only tricky thing that you really need to talk your kids through is the rewording of the subject in the last line. In our example we have going above, rewordings might be:
My wet backyard
Standing in the wet grass
Here in my wet, green backyard
At this moment after the rain
Right now in my backyard
With my bare feet in the cool grass
Do you see how any of those phrases can plug into the formula to refocus the reader on where and when the poem is taking place? If you need specific ways to help your child reword the poem's subject, ask her to consider another way of saying where she is and what makes this moment special from another moment in Spring. *Remember, that's the overall topic of the book--This Moment In Spring.*
I can't wait to see what your kids come up with!
Friday, April 13, 2012
Book Project 2012: More Poetry Examples
(Double-click to enlarge)
From another poetry project earlier than the Redwood poetry project. You see, this little poem format is so easy to use, and your kids' ideas will end up so creative and beautiful!
Book Project 2012, STEPS TWO and THREE: Immerse in Nature, and Write Poetry About It!
OK, this part of the book project is also so much fun, and should be equally pleasurable for parents and kids. (At least it was when I did it with my girls and the Kimball girls last year for our Redwood poetry book--oh, to be out in Creation, breathing deeply all the fragrances of the outdoors, purposefully slowing down and really looking, listening, noticing, enjoying. I can't wait to do it again with the girls in a new setting for this project!)
--Pick your spot
So, talk with your kids and get their ideas on where it would be fun to use all their senses to explore one moment in one spot in the world.
In theory, this can be ANYWHERE. There are lots of different spaces easily available to us here on the Bay that would be fantastic for sensory immersion: at the beach, in the redwoods, at a park, in a garden, in a field, at a farm. But don't think you have to drive somewhere specific to participate in the project--just go to your own backyard! The beauty of this project is that it only needs to be as much of an adventure as you want it to be--and even if every single kid writes about his or her backyard, the book will still end up with a big variety of poems, since the look and feel of every yard will be different, and will be interpreted differently by the young poets.
That said, of course it will be fun if you do some exploring too, so if you feel like being even a little adventuresome, go for it!
Some people could even opt for an urban setting! So if a child wants to go downtown Santa Cruz and soak in the colors and textures and sounds and smells (ew) of our own local cityscape, that can make a fantastic experience and resulting poem. (Although personally, from an art perspective, I don't think watercolor would be the right medium for the urban experience--a collage of newspaper and wrappers and something more along the lines of Ezra Jack Keats seems better suited for capturing the feel of the urban setting. That's just my opinion though--get creative and if you want to try this experience in the cityscape, go for it! I'm perfectly fine with a watercolor and newspaper collage, or any combinations that use other materials in conjunction with watercolor paper.)
--Document your moment
It is VERY important that you remember to take paper and pencil with you when your kids head out to immerse their senses in their chosen spot(s) in nature. You may also take the poem template and just do the poem while you are there! But at the very least, be sure to record the following while you are there:
1. The date, the time, the place
2. The sounds, smells, colors, textures, emotional and literal "feel" of the place, and tastes, if there are any (get those kids to use their imaginations!)
3. How your child verbalizes he or she feels about that moment, in that place.
If you write down just these things, you will have enough to work with writing the poems when you get home. BUT I strongly urge you to sit down and write the poems as soon as you can after the sensory immersion, while the feelings and observances and ideas are all still fresh. This one thing can make a huge difference in the quality of the final poem, and the ease of the whole project.
Here is your poem template:
____________________________________________________________________
Five Senses Poem
Title
___(your subject/place)___ is ___(descriptive)___ ___(color)___,
The color of ___ (descriptive)___ ___(thing)___.
It (they, whatever fits) feels _________.
It sounds like _________.
It smells like __________.
___ (your subject/place)___ tastes like __(descriptive)__ __(thing)___.
___(reword subject)___ makes me feel __________.
Hmm, looks like MadLibs poetry, doesn't it?! So, just in case that looks confusing, let me give examples--you will immediately understand not only the specific parameters of each line, but also how much you can deviate to meet your child's own writing and topic without losing the construction of the poem:
Five Senses Poems
#1: Woods
by Katie
These woods are cloudy green,
The color of bumpy lichens.
They feel cool.
They sound like Spring.
They smell like rich soil.
These woods taste like cloves.
They are beautiful and make me feel so warm.
#2: Sunlight in the Woods
by Claire
Sunlight in the woods is pale green,
The color of morning.
It feels cool and dancing.
It sounds like twittering birds.
It smells fresh and damp.
Sunlight in the woods tastes like moist herbs.
This spot of bright light makes me feel joyful.
#3: Clearing in the Woods
by Meredith
The clearing in the woods is new green,
The color of Spring.
It feels cool.
It sounds like birds singing tweet, tweet, tweet.
It smells like fresh air.
The clearing tastes like watery cucumber.
This calm clearing in the woods makes me feel
Happy deep inside.
#4: Afternoon in the Redwoods
by Gwynneth
This afternoon is green,
The color of Spring,
Fresh and majestic garden green.
It feels still, slightly stff, and prickly.
It sounds like twittering birds and trickling water.
It smells like life, like rich dark soil,
Pepper-spice cool.
The afternoon tastes like sour grass, garden herbs,
Cloves and fresh water.
This quiet afternoon makes me feel so small,
Yet calm.
Those poems were all written at the same moment, in the same place--but look at how each girl interpreted it differently!
Some more helps:
Title ---This is your poem's subject. Can be the name of the place where you are (i.e. "Seacliff Beach"), or a description of the place (i.e. "A Clearing in the Woods"), and can include mention of when you are there ("The Beach at Low Tide," or "A Moment in My Backyard," or "Afternoon in the Redwoods"). Or, since our overall focus is Spring, the title can even be something like "This Moment in Spring." **Make sure your child has the title/subject very firmly in mind as he does the sensory immersion, so he knows how to focus his senses for each line of the poem.**
Even if your child is old enough to record her own ideas, you might consider taking notes for her, so she can close her eyes and really immerse her senses in that moment, in that place, and really pin-point everything she is experiencing.
And no matter the age or ability of your child, it works well to guide the poetry by asking the child line by line what it feels like, sounds like, etc.
If you are not planning on doing the actual poem while in your spot, be sure to take good notes. You could even consider taking a few photos to help your child remember what it was like later while writing.
When you are done with these two steps, you should have something that already sounds like a great poem!!! It needs only a little more crafting to be finished, and with your kids involved, it is a great way to practice all kinds of good school things, like punctuation, spelling, proofreading, etc. But more on that in the next installment of this series. : )
--Pick your spot
So, talk with your kids and get their ideas on where it would be fun to use all their senses to explore one moment in one spot in the world.
In theory, this can be ANYWHERE. There are lots of different spaces easily available to us here on the Bay that would be fantastic for sensory immersion: at the beach, in the redwoods, at a park, in a garden, in a field, at a farm. But don't think you have to drive somewhere specific to participate in the project--just go to your own backyard! The beauty of this project is that it only needs to be as much of an adventure as you want it to be--and even if every single kid writes about his or her backyard, the book will still end up with a big variety of poems, since the look and feel of every yard will be different, and will be interpreted differently by the young poets.
That said, of course it will be fun if you do some exploring too, so if you feel like being even a little adventuresome, go for it!
Some people could even opt for an urban setting! So if a child wants to go downtown Santa Cruz and soak in the colors and textures and sounds and smells (ew) of our own local cityscape, that can make a fantastic experience and resulting poem. (Although personally, from an art perspective, I don't think watercolor would be the right medium for the urban experience--a collage of newspaper and wrappers and something more along the lines of Ezra Jack Keats seems better suited for capturing the feel of the urban setting. That's just my opinion though--get creative and if you want to try this experience in the cityscape, go for it! I'm perfectly fine with a watercolor and newspaper collage, or any combinations that use other materials in conjunction with watercolor paper.)
--Document your moment
It is VERY important that you remember to take paper and pencil with you when your kids head out to immerse their senses in their chosen spot(s) in nature. You may also take the poem template and just do the poem while you are there! But at the very least, be sure to record the following while you are there:
1. The date, the time, the place
2. The sounds, smells, colors, textures, emotional and literal "feel" of the place, and tastes, if there are any (get those kids to use their imaginations!)
3. How your child verbalizes he or she feels about that moment, in that place.
If you write down just these things, you will have enough to work with writing the poems when you get home. BUT I strongly urge you to sit down and write the poems as soon as you can after the sensory immersion, while the feelings and observances and ideas are all still fresh. This one thing can make a huge difference in the quality of the final poem, and the ease of the whole project.
Here is your poem template:
____________________________________________________________________
Five Senses Poem
Title
___(your subject/place)___ is ___(descriptive)___ ___(color)___,
The color of ___ (descriptive)___ ___(thing)___.
It (they, whatever fits) feels _________.
It sounds like _________.
It smells like __________.
___ (your subject/place)___ tastes like __(descriptive)__ __(thing)___.
___(reword subject)___ makes me feel __________.
Hmm, looks like MadLibs poetry, doesn't it?! So, just in case that looks confusing, let me give examples--you will immediately understand not only the specific parameters of each line, but also how much you can deviate to meet your child's own writing and topic without losing the construction of the poem:
Five Senses Poems
#1: Woods
by Katie
These woods are cloudy green,
The color of bumpy lichens.
They feel cool.
They sound like Spring.
They smell like rich soil.
These woods taste like cloves.
They are beautiful and make me feel so warm.
#2: Sunlight in the Woods
by Claire
Sunlight in the woods is pale green,
The color of morning.
It feels cool and dancing.
It sounds like twittering birds.
It smells fresh and damp.
Sunlight in the woods tastes like moist herbs.
This spot of bright light makes me feel joyful.
#3: Clearing in the Woods
by Meredith
The clearing in the woods is new green,
The color of Spring.
It feels cool.
It sounds like birds singing tweet, tweet, tweet.
It smells like fresh air.
The clearing tastes like watery cucumber.
This calm clearing in the woods makes me feel
Happy deep inside.
#4: Afternoon in the Redwoods
by Gwynneth
This afternoon is green,
The color of Spring,
Fresh and majestic garden green.
It feels still, slightly stff, and prickly.
It sounds like twittering birds and trickling water.
It smells like life, like rich dark soil,
Pepper-spice cool.
The afternoon tastes like sour grass, garden herbs,
Cloves and fresh water.
This quiet afternoon makes me feel so small,
Yet calm.
Those poems were all written at the same moment, in the same place--but look at how each girl interpreted it differently!
Some more helps:
Title ---This is your poem's subject. Can be the name of the place where you are (i.e. "Seacliff Beach"), or a description of the place (i.e. "A Clearing in the Woods"), and can include mention of when you are there ("The Beach at Low Tide," or "A Moment in My Backyard," or "Afternoon in the Redwoods"). Or, since our overall focus is Spring, the title can even be something like "This Moment in Spring." **Make sure your child has the title/subject very firmly in mind as he does the sensory immersion, so he knows how to focus his senses for each line of the poem.**
Even if your child is old enough to record her own ideas, you might consider taking notes for her, so she can close her eyes and really immerse her senses in that moment, in that place, and really pin-point everything she is experiencing.
And no matter the age or ability of your child, it works well to guide the poetry by asking the child line by line what it feels like, sounds like, etc.
If you are not planning on doing the actual poem while in your spot, be sure to take good notes. You could even consider taking a few photos to help your child remember what it was like later while writing.
When you are done with these two steps, you should have something that already sounds like a great poem!!! It needs only a little more crafting to be finished, and with your kids involved, it is a great way to practice all kinds of good school things, like punctuation, spelling, proofreading, etc. But more on that in the next installment of this series. : )
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