And the winner is…

April 30, 2008

Dex: The Heart of A Hero won this year’s Georgia Book Award vote at Belmont Hills Elementary! Dex won by a landslide with 106 votes. Close Your Eyes came in second with 51 votes, and Alice the Fairy won third place with 46 votes. Check back Monday, May 12, to find out the winner of the Georgia Book Award for the whole state of Georgia!


Calling all library books!

April 14, 2008

The end of the year is fast approaching — which means it’s time to start thinking about due dates for all library materials. Please see below for a list of important dates. After May 9, the media center will be closed for inventory and end-of-the-year procedures!

DATE ACTION ITEM
May 9 All STUDENT books due
May 9 Teachers will receive their list of items checked out from the media center
May 9 Teachers begin returning materials and equipment not in use
May 9 Last day for instruction in media center
May 16 All TEACHER library materials and equipment due (including digital cameras, video cameras, and LCD projectors)
May 16 Work orders should be entered for all classroom equipment needing summer repair. Mark the equipment so that the technician can easily find it in the room

April’s Book of the Month – Hey You! C’MERE: A Poetry Slam

April 14, 2008

April is National Poetry Month, and we encourage you to celebrate by reading poetry to your students and encouraging them to explore the world of poetry themselves. Hey You! C’mere: A Poetry Slam is a collection of honest, silly poems that will get your students thinking about words and the way they combine to make a poem. After reading the book with your class, you might want to consider some of the following activities and host your own poetry slam in your classroom.

Hey You! C'MERE: A Poetry SlamAbout the book:
One summer morning in the sizzling city, seven kids gather on a street corner to share the power of poetry. As they move through the neighborhood, the kids transform their experiences — standing up to a tough kid, slurping spaghetti and ice cream, a good “hiccup cough sniff” cry — into a poetry slam celebrating the strength and energy of their own unique voices. Elizabeth Swado’s wonderfully aural work is given visual dimension by Joe Cepeda’s colorful, character-ful paintings. So come along and heed the call: Hey you! C’MERE!

Visualizing/pre-writing:
Use this activity as a pre-writing exercise to explore the importance of language and rhythm in a poem. Give each student a piece of paper and crayons. Without showing the students the pictures, read one or more of the poems to the class and ask each student to draw what he or she hears.

Brainstorming/writing:
After reading the poems in this book, get your students started working on their own poems by using some of the brainstorming activities below (from www.scholastic.com):

1. Word Play: Pick a word, any word, and think of all the words that rhyme with that word.

2. Object Observations: Pick an object — a pencil, a brick wall, a clock, a tomato — anything. Then write down everything you notice about that object.

3. Synonym Silliness: Think of an adjective, such as happy, soft, tall, or sleepy. Then write down all the words you can think of that have the same meaning as that adjective. This list will help a lot when you’re trying to describe things.

Now have your students write their own poems around the objects they selected, using their rhyming words and sentences to create their poem. Then invite your students to take part in a classroom poetry slam, sharing their creative ideas and images with each other!