Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Dancing with Manatees

Dancing With Manatees
By Faith McNulty
Nonfiction

This is a true story about Faith, the author, and her dive to go see the endangered manatees along the coast of Florida. She talks to a biologist, Woody, about the manatees' life and how they mature. She also talks to him about why they are endangered and the problems the manatees' face due to humans.

This book would be a good one to use to talk about animal life cycles since it talks about manatees from birth to when they mate. It would also be a good book to use to talk about endangered animals and what us as humans can do to help prevent the population of endangered species to continually decline.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

A Mother's Journey

A Mother's Journey
by Sandra Markle
Nonfiction

This story follows a mother penguin as she lays her egg and then leaves her mate to tend it while she joins the other females as they travel for five days in search of food. She swims for days collecting fish and watching for out for dangers such as seals and hunters. The mother penguin returns home to her mate just in time for the egg's hatching.

When talking about penguins, this would be a good book to use because it shows the different roles in the community of the penguins. It also talks about the dangers that the penguins have to face such as humans and seals so you could talk about a food chain since seals eat penguins.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Everyone Has a Bellybutton

Everyone Has a Bellybutton
by Laurence Pringle
Nonfiction

Everyone has a bellybutton, but how come? This book explains how everyone starts off as a cell in their mothers womb and develops into a baby. It describes each different stage of development and uses the proper scientific terms. Then the scientific terms are described so the students are able to understand them. It all comes back to why we each have a bellybutton and the beautiful gift our mother and father gave us: life.

In 5th grade, students learn all about the reproductive system. This book will not help explain exactly where babies come from, but it does explain the development after the baby is born. It explains what happens through each stage of development and how you are born, which then explains why everyone has a bellybutton.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The Talented Clementine


The Talented Clementine
by Sara Pennypacker
Realistic Fiction

Clementine is a third grader who is not all together. The teacher announces that the third and fourth graders will be putting on a talent show. Clementine panices because she doesn't have a talent. She can't sing or dance or play an instrument, so she opts not to participate in the show. But on the day of the show, the teacher running it suddenly has to leave to attend to her daughter who is having a baby. So what will they do? Clementine steps in to be the assistant of the show, which becomes her talent for the night.

I would use this to teach that everybody has a talent, some just have to try a little harder to find it. It also teaches diversity and celebrating the different talents of all students. It can also be used in a Literature Circle setting for some of the higher readers in a class of third graders or a lower level of readers in fifth grade. It is a good book to generate discussion and practice comprehension.