Author Archive for Ashley R.

Teaching VA History with Children’s Literature: Chesapeake ABC

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The book Chesapeake ABC is a entertaining rhyming book that discusses animals and objects found in the Chesapeake Bay. David Aiken is the illustrator and the pictures are really colorful and easy to identify the main idea on the page. Each letter is presented very large for students to read easily. This book can be used to incorporate learning the ABC’s as well as learning the importance of the Chesapeake Bay. Chesapeake ABC also teaches young kids new words as well:

” E is for egret,

So feathery and fair.

E also stands for eel,

Who slithers here and there.”

There are also other books in this series called Chesapeake 1-2-3 and Chesapeake Rainbow from Priscilla Cummings as well as other books that involve animals found in the bay. They can be viewed at her website.

Curriculum Connections:

Chesapeake ABC can be used to help students learn the letters of the alphabet and different aspects of the Chesapeake Bay. It discusses what animals live there, different types of boats, and even items found near the bay. It can be used to cover VA SOL VS.2.

Additional Resources:

Title: Chesapeake ABC
Author:
Priscilla Cummings
Publisher: Tidewater Publishers
Publication Date: 2000
Pages:
30
Grade Range:
K-1st
ISBN:
0870335251

Teaching Civics with Children’s Literature: The Flag We Love

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The book The Flag We Love is a great introduction for young children on learning about one of the important symbols of the United States, the American flag. This book discusses why it’s important, where it originated, and places where the American flag is seen.  It has beautiful pictures and is a rhyming book. There is extra information about the American flag at the bottom of each page that can be used with older children. With younger children the simple rhymes on each page can are sufficient enough to learn the basic concepts.

Curriculum Connections:

The Flag We Love can be used as a great introduction to the important symbols of our country. It can also be incorporated around holidays such as Memorial Day, Flag Day, and Veterans Day. This book can cover VA SOLs K.9 and 1.11.

Additional Resources:

  • Scholastic has a good lesson plan idea for children to learn about the American flag and recite the book as a class for parents.
  • Pam Munoz Ryan has a page devoted to math activities that can be used with the book The Flag We Love
  • Apples4theteacher has some great pages devoted to the American flag. This page includes many different American flags that can be colored online and then printed easily by children.

Title: The Flag We Love
Author:  Pam Munoz Ryan
Publisher:
Charlesbridge Publishing
Publication Date
: 1996
Pages: 32
Grade Range:
K-1st
ISBN:9780881068450

Teaching Geography with Children’s Literature: There’s a Map on My Lap!

                                                                                                         

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The book There’s a Map on My Lap! by Tish Rabe is a great introduction to maps using Dr. Seuss and his catchy rhyming phrases. This book introduces children to a compass rose, a globe, scales, types of maps, directions, and even population. Each topic is covered over a few pages and this book can be split up into different lessons. Key definitions are given on pages where a new mapping term is used and also in the back of the book in the glossary. Kids will enjoy learning about all aspects of mapping with Dr. Seuss as they learn reasons why maps are used and how to use them.

Curriculum Connections:

There’s a Map on My Lap can be used as a great introduction book to many different aspects of maps such as scales, types of maps, making a map, making a legend, etc. The book can be used to cover certain topics at a time instead of reading it all the way through as well. This book covers VA SOLs K.4, 1.4, 1.5, and 2.6.

Additional Resources:

  • The National Geographic website has a page devoted to lesson plan ideas for teachers and they are split into grade levels. The lesson on “Neighborhood Services: Where they are and why?” can be used with this book as students explore their neighborhood and create a map of their own.
  • Global Alliance has a lesson plan where teachers create a map of their room and school with the students. This can work well  with young children entering a new school so they can learn where different rooms are and where everything is in relation to each other.
  • KidsGeo is a website devoted to different aspects of geography for kids. There are different sections devoted to teaching kids about scales, legends, why maps are useful, etc. There are also geography games for children to play.
  • BrainPopJR gives kids great information about the different aspects of a map and some activities parents and teachers can use with kids using maps.

Title: There’s a Map on my Lap!
Author:
  Tish Rabe
Publisher:
Random House
Publication Date
: 2002
Pages:
45
Grade Range:
K-2nd
ISBN:
9780375810992

Teaching Economics with Children’s Literature: The Great Tulip Trade

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The book The Great Tulip Trade by Beth Wagner Brust, is part of a series called Step Into Reading. It is a level 3 book for grades 1-3. The story begins in Holland on Anna’s eighth birthday and she visits her dad out in the field tending to their tulips. She begs her dad for tulips for her birthday and even though tulips are very valuable in Holland during this time period, he lets her pick eight. Anna plants the tulips in the window of her house but throughout the day merchants stop by her house and want to trade their goods for her tulips. Anna has to make decisions about whether she will trade her precious tulips. By the end of the day, Anna is left with her favorite tulip, the Semper Augustus which she did not trade, even for a gold necklace, gold coins, a diamond bracelet, and a big house.  However, Anna has traded the other seven for pots and pans, a table, a painting, a puppy, a bed, a rug, a cabinet, a cow, two lambs and six chairs. In this story Anna learns the importance of bartering her tulips for items that her family can use and need, but also to keep what is so special to her.

Curriculum Connections:

The Great Tulip Trade can be used as an introduction to a history unit covering regions where bartering is used to collect the items you need. It can also be used in a unit covering money or trading and the importance of saving for what you want and need.  This can be used to cover VA SOL 1.8 and 2.8.

Additional Resources:

  • Brainpopjr has a great page devoted to helping children learn about needs and wants. It has activities you can do in the classroom and at home to help children learn about the value of money and how to be a smart consumer.
  • Hands on banking is a great website for children and adults of all ages to learn about money, budgeting, and how to save for what you want. For kids, with the help is Zing the alien they are able to learn about basic concepts of saving.
  • LearnNC has a good lesson plan activity to help children see the importance of bartering to get what you need/want.

Title: The Great Tulip Trade
Author:
  Beth Wagner Brust
Publisher: Random House
Publication Date
: 2005
Pages: 48
Grade Range: K-2nd
ISBN:
9780375925733

Teaching Earth Science with Children’s Literature: Seasons

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The book Seasons comes from a great series called eye-like, which I purchased at BJ’s Wholesale Club. The book goes through each season, describes what is happening to plants, what animals are changing(frog, butterfly), and what animals and plants are present in each season. The book is complete with vibrate real photographs and each page is written in a short poem to remember what is going on. In the corner of each page there is a symbol (one denoting each season) so that even the kids can look at the book later and know what is going on.

Curriculum Connections:

Seasons can be used as a great introduction to learning seasons and how things change in the world through out time. It can also be used to show children how plants and animals change throughout the year. It gives kids a great visual representation to the different seasons and it will help them to remember what happens in each. This can be used to cover VA SOL 1.7 and 2.7.

Additional Resources:

  • TLS Books has a cute maze children can do that also asks questions about hibernation.
  • Time for Kids has a worksheet where children look at the seasons cycle and place pictures in the appropriate space to represent each season.
  • Boggles World has worksheets students can complete on each season where they can practice writing and sharing information they know about each.

Title: Seasons
Author:
  N/A
Publisher:
Play Bac Publishing
Publication Date
: 2009
Pages:
64
Grade Range:
K-2nd
ISBN:
9781602140837

Teaching Life Science with Children’s Literature: From Seed to Pumpkin

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From Seed to Pumpkin is a great story that will answer kids questions about where pumpkins come from and it integrates science with a seasonal theme. The story begins with the farmer planting seeds in the spring and takes you through an entire year of the life of a pumpkin. Throughout the story there are explanations describing how the seeds are growing and what the needs of the plant are. It explains how flowers bloom on the vines and after they wither away they turn into tiny fruits that begin to grow. The book also explains some uses of pumpkins as jack-o’-lanterns and for pumpkin pie for fall holidays. At the end of the story it is spring again and the farmer is out planting more pumpkin seeds. This book will give children a great understanding of the needs of plants and how they grow throughout the seasons of the year.

Curriculum Connections:

This book is a great tool to use for a unit on plants and living things, pumpkins or Halloween.  It discusses the needs of plants(air, water, light, place to grow) and the parts of the plant(seed, stem, roots, leaves, stem, flower buds). For Virginia, this covers Life Processes SOLs K.6 and 1.4.

Additional Resources:

  • First School has a good worksheet students can practice the letter P and sequences with a pumpkin unit.
  • Busy Teacher Cafe has a great pumpkin unit and different ways you can use pumpkins in math, science, and writing. It has ideas for bulletin boards, crafts, and even some pumpkin poems.
  • The Pumpkin Circle has a great informational page that discusses lots of questions about pumpkins from how to grow then to when should they be picked.
  • Education World has a good lesson for predictions with pumpkins where kids get to count the seeds of different size pumpkins and then graph the results.

Title: From Seed to Pumpkin
Author:  Wendy Pfeffer
Publisher: Harper Collins Publishers
Publication Date: 2004
Pages:
33
Grade Range:
K-1st
ISBN:
9780064451901

Teaching Physical Science with Children’s Literature: The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip

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Another great book in the Magic School Bus series, The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip, takes Ms. Frizzle’s students through the concepts of electricity in an exciting field trip. The field trip begins when the power goes out at school and Ms. Frizzle takes the student on a journey to find out the problem. Power lines are down in the streets and the students begin their exploration at a power plant. The students travel through steam and a turbine and enter into power lines. From there they travel to the library, explore inside a light bulb, continue on to a restaurant and Phoebe’s house, and then return back to the school. Throughout the storm many topics on energy are covered such as: how to make an electromagnet, different sources of energy, how a motor works, how a TV works, how a switch works, how steam works, and how to make a mini-power plant. It also discusses electrons and atoms.

Curriculum Connections:

The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip can be used to cover a wide range of science topics in regards to energy in grades 3-5.  The book covers  information on different sources of energy, magnetism, electrons and atoms, and explains the science behind how many things work. In Virginia, this would correlate with SOLS 4.2 and 4.3 under Force, Motion, and Energy. VA SOL 6.2 could also be covered with the examples of non-renewable energy sources good for the environment.

Additional Resources:

  • The Florida Project Learning Tree has a great resource for teachers to use with The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip on electricity. The packet includes discussion questions, vocabulary words,  vocabulary practice worksheets, comprehension questions, sequencing practice worksheets, and writing exercises.
  • Scholastic has some good activities on electricity, one is an experiment where students learn how the history of electricity and they learn how an electric light works.
  • Hotchalk has a good three week unit for students to learn about electricity. Topics include: renewable energy, wind turbines, testing electric currents, and energy resource.

Title: The Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip
Author:
  Joanna Cole
Publisher:
Scholastic Press
Publication Date
: 1997
Pages:
48
Grade Range:
3rd-5th
ISBN:
9780590446822

Teaching Process Skills with Children’s Literature: Millions to Measure

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Millions to Measure is part of a great series of books by David Schwartz that deals with measurements in length, weight, and volume. It explores how the metric system came about and explains how to measure using the metric system. This book is a great visual reference for children to see equal measurements and to see why a standard measurement had to be created. It shows how nonstandard units are more difficult to measure with. Schwartz’s other book, How Much is a Million explores the concepts of how much a million, billion, and trillion are and If You Made a Million explores the concepts of money.

Curriculum Connections
This book can be used in many different grades as an introduction to basic measuring and as an advanced lesson in measuring in the metric system and the standard English system. Some SOLS it can be used for are:

  • VA SOL 1.1:  measuring length, volume, and mass using standard and nonstandard units.
  • VA SOL 2.1: length, volume, mass, and temperature measurements are made in metric units and standard English units.
  • VA SOL 3.1: volume measurements(ml and l), length measurements (cm)

Additional Resources

  • Scholastic has a great resource for a lesson plan and worksheet for students to explore nonstandard units of measurement to measure different items in the classroom.  It also checks their understanding of what unit to measure length, volume, and  weight with.
  • ABC Teach has a fun book for students to create and take home where they measure different parts of their body. I believe it would work best with a partner so they can help each other get an accurate measurement. If will help them practice writing the correct unit of measurement as well.
  • ABC Teach also has a worksheet students can use to measure different objects with a nonstandard and standard unit of measurement.
  • Gamequarium has a lot of great interactive games for kids to practice measurement. There are games using inches, centimeters, and ounces.

Book: Millions to Measure
Author:
David Schwartz
Publisher: Harper Collins Publishers
Publication Date: March 2003
Pages: 40 pages
Grades: K-5
ISBN: 978-0688129163

Money Resources - 2nd Grade

These resources will help you to teach money to 2nd graders, utilizing great on-line interactive websites, lesson plans, and a variety of books. Money is an essential concept for children to learn and for them to be able to recognize how combining different denominations of coins can equal each other.

In regards to money, there are a lot of great books that teach the concept and incorporate how money is made, allowance, what you can buy with money, and how different coins added together equal others. I found these books to be the most useful for the classroom:

making-cents.jpgMaking Cents- By Elizabeth Keeler Robinson, illustrated by Bob McMahon

This book is a story about children trying to save up to build a clubhouse and along the way they earn money in a variety of ways. It not only incorporates great pictures of coins and dollar bills, but it also tells who is on the face of each dollar bill. The book explains what you can buy with each coin denomination and dollar bills as well as visually showing children how many different ways you can make certain amounts, such as $1.00.

if-you-made-a-million.jpgIf You Made a Million - By David M. Schwartz, illustrated by Steven Kellogg

This book is a great visual representation of money equilvalencies and can really get children to understand how there are many ways to make $1.00 such as 100 pennies,20 nickels, 10 dimes, 4 quarters, or 1 dollar bill. It explains what you can buy with each amount as you earn it throughout the book and goes all the way up to 1 million. The concept of putting money in the bank to gain interest is also explored.

the-coin-counting-book.jpgThe Coin Counting Book- By Rozanne Lanczak Williams

This is a rhyming book on money and talks about trading coins for other coins. It explains coin equilvalencies and each money value is represented in words, pictures, and numbers. The book uses grouping to count the coins and also works a little on counting by tens in pennies to get to $1.00.

one-cent-two-cent-old-cent-new-cent.jpgOne Cent, Two Cents, Old Cent, New Cent: All About Money - by Bonnie Worth, illustrated by Aristides Ruiz and Joe Mathieu

This is a great Dr. Seuss rhyming book that starts with where money came from and how it was used in ancient times in bartering. The story goes on to how coins were gradually made by metal and how coins were different in different countries. It talks about United States currency and shows pictures some of the coins and of each of the dollar bills and whose face is on them.

the-penny-pot.jpg The Penny Pot- By Stuart J. Murphy, illustrated by Lynne Cravath

This story begins at a school fair and one little girl, Jessie, really wanted to get her face painted and didn’t have 50 cents to do so. Throughout the book other kids come to the table to get their face painted and the book shows each coin they put in the jar. When they have more than 50 cents, they put the change in the penny pot. At the end of the story, with Jessie’s money and the money in the penny pot she finally has enough money to get her face painted, with a few pennies left over. This book shows different ways to get 50 cents and uses numbers and visual representations of counts to count.

Web Sites
I found a lot of great websites for kids to learn about money and explore the concept of counting. My five favorites are below.

Hands on Banking: This website is made by Wells Fargo Bank and through the help of an alien, walks kids through what money is, how you make it, and what banks do. It talks about buying items as well.

Toon University: This website gives kids a numeric money value at the top of the page and has coins at the bottom of the page. Kids drag coins into the cup to get to the appropriate amount. This gives kids a great opportunity to explore the easiest way to get to a larger amount instead of using smaller coins.

Superkidz: This website allows kids to pick which person they want to shop with at the store. For each problem, there are 3 items shown with the amount they cost. Kids figure out the problem by subtracting the amount of the item they bought from their initial amount. It not only gives kids a great way to practice counting money based on the picture of the coin, but it gives them great subtraction practice.

Cash Out: This is a great interactive game for kids to play and they are the cashier. They help customers make purchases and the customer tells them the amount of the item, how much they are paying with, and the change they need back. The kids choose the correct coins to give the right amount of change back to the customer.

Memory Game: This game is on the governments website and it allows kids to correctly match coins by front and back. It is just like a regular memory game but with coins.

Additional Resources

Printable Money- These are great visual models of real coins that can be printed and used as manipulatives in the classroom.

Berenstain Bears Lesson Plan - This lesson plan not only incorporates money and savings, but it is also a good lesson on economics for students using the book, ”The Berstain Bears Trouble with Money.”

Changing Face of Money - This lesson plan gives children the opportunity to evaluate what they think has been used as a form of money and what has not. It explains how the face of money has changed a lot over time and in the end they should be able to describe a few changes that have taken place over the years with money.

US Mint for Teachers - This government website gives teachers tons of resources to use in the classroom to teach money. It has lesson plans, financial literacy, book lists, helpful websites, a glossary, and lots more.

MegaPenny Project - This website is a great visualization for kids to see actually how much one thousand, one million, and up to one trillion pennies looks like. It gives kids a chance to see how much a big number is but it starts out with smaller amounts.