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Thursday, February 28, 2013

The Trumpeter Swan


Here is a quick video with some information about the Trumpeter Swan.

I never realized what a magnificent, majestic animal the Trumpeter Swan is. I have been looking up information on this swan and I have found some interesting and informative links that you may want to check out as a family. (Remember to be safe when you are online - Make sure you get mom and dad's permission. Better yet, learn together by searching together!)

Did you know the Trumpeter Swan can stand at a height of up to 4 feet and their wingspan can be more than 7 feet? A full grown Trumpeter Swan can weigh up to 30 pounds! This makes the Trumpeter Swan the largest native waterfowl in North America!

Learn more about this fantastic animal at the following links:




 

 

One District, One Book Reading tips

Monroe Road Elementary School is gearing up for an exciting month of reading activities for National Reading Month. Beginning on March 1st, many community members, including students, teachers, and families will be participating in the One School, One Book project. We will be reading E. B. White's classic story, The Trumpet of the Swan.

Many parents have asked for some tips and tricks for reading aloud with their child. Here are ten tips for creating and fostering a love for reading.

Ten Tips for Reading Aloud

1. How to Choose a Book - Make sure you marry the right reading style with each book: Roddy
Doyle’s The Giggler Treatment (about dog poop) asks for a wry, arch, playful style - lots of enthusiasm; Scott O’Dell’s Island of the Blue Dolphins suggests a quieter, deadpan style - it’s a story about Nature, so let the prose do the work.
2. How to Make the Time - If reading aloud is important, you must prioritize: Sometimes this means
doing something else (the dishes, say) later; sometimes it means not doing something else (Monday
Night Football isn’t that good this week); and sometimes it means making something boring - say, waiting at the doctor’s office - interesting.
3. Punch Vocabulary - Make the language in a story more interesting for both you and your listener by choosing the most interesting word in each sentence, and doing something more with it: emphasize it, italicize it, underline it, enunciate it, whisper it, elongate it - bring it out to some (subtle) place of prominence and enliven the prose.
4. Pause - One of three tips that help re-set your child’s attention span and can be used to heighten
drama or suspense or emotional impact; in this case, pay special attention to every mark of punctuation: every comma and period, hyphen and parentheses. One word sentences are written that way for a reason.
5. Slow Down - Also re-sets attention span; and heightens drama, suspense, and emotion; but not the
same as pausing; slowing down means adjusting the pace of a sentence; or a paragraph; your listener
will notice immediately.
6. Whisper - Everyone knows the whisper effect, when you want to make someone pay even closer
attention; so this one also re-sets the attention span; heightens drama and suspense and - especially -
can make the most malevolent characters even more malevolent.
- Together, these three tips - Pause, Slow Down, Whisper - represent the pure heart of effective
reading aloud.
7. Accents and Voices - Borrow indiscriminately and shamelessly from everywhere to mimic different
voices; you kids don’t care how perfect they are, only that the voices in a dialogue are different and
distinct, bringing the characters alive. Also: give each character who talks a lot some identifying trait or mannerism to make it easier for you to trigger the voice (e.g. Draco Malfoy lords it over everyone - perhaps he drawls or sneers; Hermione Granger is a goody-goody - perhaps her voice is a little prissy.)
8. Ask Questions - Use the opportunity and pace reading a book give you to ask questions before,
during, and after a reading; to serve multiple purposes: rehearse or remember characters or plot
developments; explore moral or ethical questions; make associations with other books and media - film and otherwise.
9. Give ‘em a Quiz - Not to make reading like school, but as a memory cue; kids love showing off their knowledge, having a reason to pay even closer attention, owning a book or story thoroughly and in detail. Pretty soon, they’ll be asking you questions.
10. Permit an auxiliary activity - Kids will get distracted - for a good reason: because they’ve made an association and are pursuing it. When pausing and whispering and slowing down aren’t enough, it’s OK to let them color or draw or doodle - or braid their hair or wash the dishes - to let their restless minds refocus on your story.

One District, One Book



Reading aloud is widely recognized as the single most important activity leading to reading achievement. The four elementary schools in Bedford Public School District are interested in creating a community of readers. We will embark on an exciting project, a community-wide book club called One District, One Book. Everyone in our school community - families, teachers, bus drivers, secretaries, and administrators will read the same book during March’s National Reading Month.

Thanks to the very generous support of the Knights of Columbus, Bedford Lions Club, and the Bedford Parent Teacher Association, every family will receive a free copy of the children’s classic story, E.B. White’s The Trumpet of the Swan. This universal story teaches kids about individuality and can be enjoyed by younger readers and still captivate and stimulate older children. Families will read the book together using a daily reading schedule.

From the time your child boards the school bus each day, students and adults will participate in discussions, writing exercises, group projects, and trivia questions. Your child will take pride in knowing and appreciating the details of the story.

Monroe Road Elementary School will kickoff this exciting journey on Friday, March 1, 2013 with an assembly introducing the program and the book. Each family will receive a copy of The Trumpet of the Swan at this time.

We look forward to having conversations about the adventures of Louis, the Trumpeter Swan! When a whole community reads a book, there’s a lot to talk about! We hope that you will join us on this exciting journey and follow this blog, One School, One Book to see discussion questions and fun activities! Feel free to pick up a copy of the book and jump into the discussion by posting your comments and thoughts on our blog!

With your help, we can build a community of readers in Bedford!