The Spring Book Fair is coming very soon and we need LOTS of help! The students love the book fair, but we need help from parents in order to make it through the week! If you could volunteer just a bit of your time, it would be greatly appreciated and you get a FREE book when you volunteer! Click on the link below to sign up:
http://www.signupgenius.com/go/10C0B48A5AB2BAB9-spring
Thanks in advance for supporting the library, the book fair and McGowen!
Literature, Learning, Technology Integration and Innovation
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
New Picture Books - LOVE!
I Will Not Read this Book by Cece Meng Illustrated by Joy Ang
If you have a hesitant or emerging reader, then this is the book for you! A young boy comes up with all these things he must do before he can read a book (such as flossing his teeth, feeding his fish, scratching his nose...) He will find any excuse NOT to read! He would rather be hanged upside down over a cliff than read a book. In the end, he decides that he will read the book as long as there's a safe person to read the book with him.
The Terrible Plop by Ursula Dubosarsky Pictures by Andrew Joyner
Little rabbits are lazily munching on carrots and cake when they suddenly hear a PLOP in the pond. They must run away from the terrible PLOP! There are rabbits and monkeys and cats that run out of the forest to escape the PLOP. But what IS the plop? Read this book to find out what the animals were so afraid of. Great book to review inference:)
Monday, January 23, 2012
Great New Reads in the Library!
Ruth and the Green Book by Calvin A. Ramsey
When Ruth and her parents take a motor trip from Chicago to Alabama to visit her grandma, they rely on a pamphlet called "The Negro Motorist Green Book" to find places that will serve them.
I had never heard of a "Green Book" until I read this book. The book is fictional, but there are lots of facts about The Green Book at the back of the book.
Back of the Bus by Aaron Reynolds
From the back of the bus, an African American child watches the arrest of Rosa Parks.
The child's innocent viewpoint personalizes the well-known historical event, while Cooper's oil paintings-show...stunning portraits. (Booklist)
These Hands by Margaret H. Mason
An African-American man addresses his grandson a gently told story, repeatedly bidding him to "Look at these hands, Joseph." Gracefully segueing between present and past, the grandfather mentions feats he once performed ("Did you know these hands used to tie a triple bowline knot in three seconds flat?") and what his hands accomplish now ("Well, I can still help a young fellow learn to tie his shoes—yes, I can"). Narrative and art then flash back to a time when "these hands" were not allowed to mix dough in the Wonder Bread factory, but instead swept floors and loaded trucks. Yet that changed after many hands joined together to sign petitions and carry protest signs, and now "any hands can mix the bread dough, no matter their color." An author's note provides historical context. It's a moving study of multigenerational relationships and triumph over discrimination. (Publisher's Weekly)
Check out any of these or many other amazing books at the McGowen LMC!
When Ruth and her parents take a motor trip from Chicago to Alabama to visit her grandma, they rely on a pamphlet called "The Negro Motorist Green Book" to find places that will serve them.
I had never heard of a "Green Book" until I read this book. The book is fictional, but there are lots of facts about The Green Book at the back of the book.
From the back of the bus, an African American child watches the arrest of Rosa Parks.
The child's innocent viewpoint personalizes the well-known historical event, while Cooper's oil paintings-show...stunning portraits. (Booklist)
An African-American man addresses his grandson a gently told story, repeatedly bidding him to "Look at these hands, Joseph." Gracefully segueing between present and past, the grandfather mentions feats he once performed ("Did you know these hands used to tie a triple bowline knot in three seconds flat?") and what his hands accomplish now ("Well, I can still help a young fellow learn to tie his shoes—yes, I can"). Narrative and art then flash back to a time when "these hands" were not allowed to mix dough in the Wonder Bread factory, but instead swept floors and loaded trucks. Yet that changed after many hands joined together to sign petitions and carry protest signs, and now "any hands can mix the bread dough, no matter their color." An author's note provides historical context. It's a moving study of multigenerational relationships and triumph over discrimination. (Publisher's Weekly)
Check out any of these or many other amazing books at the McGowen LMC!
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Bluebonnet Voting
Attention 3rd, 4th and 5th graders,
Bluebonnet voting will take place on Monday, January 30th and Tuesday, January 31st. If you read 5 (that's right, just 5!!) of this year's Bluebonnet books, you are eligible to vote. Make sure you are logging which books you read on your reading log. That will be your "ticket" into the library for voting:)
Here is a list of this year's nominated books:
http://www.txla.org/sites/tla/files/groups/TBA/docs/TBA_Nominees_2011-2012.pdf
Here is a copy of the reading log, in case you need another copy:
Student Reading Log
http://www.txla.org/sites/tla/files/groups/TBA/docs/TBA_Nominees_2011-2012.pdf
Here is a copy of the reading log, in case you need another copy:
Student Reading Log
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




