Reader’s Log
Picture Books
Eastman,
Peter A. (2007). Fred and Ted like fly.
New York: Random House
Children’s Books.
Gallaz,
C. & Innocenti, R. (1985). Rose
Blanche. Mankato, MN: Creative.
Selznick,
B. (2007). The invention of Hugo Cabret. New York: Scholastic.
Sendak,
M. (1988). Where the Wild Things Are.
Wisniewski,
D. (1996). Golem. New York: Clarion.
Reader’s Log: Brown, M.W. (1952). Christmas in the barn. New York:
Thomas Y. Crowell
Company.
Selznick, B. (2008).
Houdini. New York: Atheneum Books for
Young Readers.
Selznick, B. (2011).
Wonderstruck. New York: Scholastic.
Sis, P.
(2007). The wall/Growing up behind the
iron curtain.
New York:
Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
Raschka, C.
(2011). A ball for daisy. New York:
Schwartz &
Wade Books.
+Knots on a Counting Rope
Non-fiction
Freedman,
R. (1993). Eleanor Roosevelt: A life of discovery. New York:
Clarion.
Reader’s Log: NA
Poetry
Walker,
F. X. (2000). Affrilachia. Lexington,
KY: Old
Cove Press.
Reader’s Log: Silverstein, S. (2004). Where the sidewalk ends. New York:
HarperCollins
Children’s Books.
+What My Mother Doesn’t Know
Traditional & Multicultural Literature
Chase,
R. (1976). Grandfather tales. Boston:
Houghton
Mifflin.
Myers, W. D. (1999). Monster.
New York:
HarperCollins.
Reader’s Log: Osborne, M.P. (1989). Favorite Greek myths. NY:
Scholastic Inc.
Kimmel, E. (1989). Hershel and the Hanukkah goblins. New
York: Holiday
House.
Realistic Fiction
Angelou,
M. (1970). I know why the caged bird
sings. New York: Random
House.
Reader’s Log: Sachar, L. (1994). More sideways arithmetic from wayside
school. New York: Scholastic Inc.
Rawlings, M.K.
(1942). Cross creek. New York:
Charles
Scribner’s Sons.
Pfeffer, S.B.
(1988). Turning thirteen. New York:
Scholastic
Inc.
+Laugh Until you Cry
Historical Fiction
Lyon,
G. E. (1988). Borrowed children. New York: Watts.
Reader’s
Log: Cushman, K. (1994). Catherine called Birdy. New York: Harper
Trophy.
Fritz, J.
(1958). The cabin faced West. New York: Coward.
+Al Capone Does My Shirts
Fantasy
McKinely,
R. (1978). Beauty. New York:
HarperCollins Children’s Books.
Reader’s Log: Cooney, C.B. (1990). The face on the milk carton. New
York: Bantam
Books.
L’Engle, M.
(1969). Dance in the desert. New
York: Farrar,
Straus & Giroux.
Lowry, L. (2004).
Messenger. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Company.
Lowry, L.
(1993). The Giver. New York: Bantam.
Farmer,
N. (1994). The ear, the eye and the arm.
New York:
Orchard Books.
Kimmel, M.M.
(1975). Magic in the mist. New York:
Atheneum.
+Babe the Gallant Pig
Wiki Checklist*
Instructions:
Write the number of entries for each category you posted into on the Course
Wiki (requirement was four total posts,
in four different categories)
__3__ Social Studies
____ Science
____ Math
__2_ Music
__3__ Art
__3__ Reading/Language Arts
____ Physical Education
__1__ Other
*Because the MYP curriculum is intrinsically interdisciplinary and I made cross references in all my Wiki posts felt I had this covered.
In my observations at Whitley County High School in
the classrooms of Ms. Ashley Hensley and Ms. Amy Hess on April 17th, I saw reification of KY Standards 1, 2, 3, 4 through the meticulous and
creative ways they both conducted review for their Grade 10 English End of
Course Assessments. In the case of Ms. Hensley through our discussion of
various pedagogical topics including NCLB, classroom management, ‘with-itness’
to keep students on task and Kentucky’s shift to CCS with its “I can”
statements, I also encountered the expertise of a consummate and adept practitioner
of KY Standard 7.