All About Me

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Bonita Springs, FL, United States
I am 21 years old. I am currently a junior at FGCU. I am an elementary education major and hope to be a fourth grade teacher in the near future!

Twenty Minutes a Day

Twenty Minutes a Day

Read to your children

Twenty minutes a day.

You have time

And so do they.

Read while the laundry is in the machine.

Or read while the dinner cooks;

Tuck a child in the crook of your arm

And reach for the library books.

Hide the remote,

Let the computer games cool,

For one day, your children will be off to school!

“Remedial?” “Gifted?” You have the choice;

Let them hear their first tales

In the sound of your voice.

Read in the morning;

Read over noon;

Read by the light of

Goodnight Moon

Turn the pages together,

Sitting close as you’ll fit.

Till a small voice beside you says,

“Hey, don’t quit!”

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Author Study Gail Gibbons


Author Study Gail Gibbons -

Monday, July 12, 2010

Summer Reading Newsletter


NEWSLETTER_TEMPLATE -

Annotated Bibliography -

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

This came from my author who I am doing for the author study :Gail Gibbons

Some Fun Clues Before Reading!




Each fact comes from one of Gail Gibbons' books. Can you name the book for each fact?

1. They have different kinds of feet. Some have sticky toes for climbing. Some have pointed toes for digging. Others have webbed feet for swimming.

Frogs

2. The hottest temperature ever measured in the shade was 136 degrees Fahrenheit (58 degrees Celsius) in the Sahara in 1922.

Deserts

3. It is said that he got rid of all the snakes in Ireland. By beating his drum, he frightened them into the sea. Today there are no snakes in Ireland.

St. Patrick's Day

4. They may swim 40 miles a day in their search for food. The leatherback is the largest of the eight different kinds.

Sea Turtles

5. Before sandpaper was invented, people used this animals' skin to smooth and polish wood. Indians used the sharp, hard teeth for arrowheads and jewelry.

Sharks

6. 842 pounds were brought back by Apollo astronauts.

The Moon Book

7. The largest is the emperor. It can weigh about 90 pounds. The smallest is the little blue or fairy. It weighs about 3 pounds.

Penguins!

8. Now and then they accidentally swim onto a beach and become stranded Sometimes, people help them return to the sea so they won't die. One is so big that 50 people could stand on its tongue.

Whales

9. An early one was called the boneshaker. It was very uncomfortable to ride. The Tour de France is a very famous race. It last for 23 days and covers about 2200 miles all over France.

The Bicycle Book

10. When they hunt in snow, they walk in single file. They take turns making tracks for the others to walk in. Their howling can be heard from as far away as ten miles.

Wolves

11. They can have a wing spread of 3 1/2 inches. About a hundred million of them migrate each year.

Monarch Butterfly

12. Before you toss six_pack rings into the garbage, cut all the circles with scissors so animals and birds can't get caught in them. Instead of using paper towels, use cloth towels, which can be washed and reused again and again.

Recycle

13. There are 59 kinds in the world. The largest nest ever seen weighed about 2000 pounds, as much as a car. They live to be about 40 years old, and has no enemy except for people.

Soaring With The Wind (Eagles)

14. There are about 500 of these in the United States. The tallest one is in Japan and is 348 feet tall. The Statue of LIberty was the first one with electricity.

Beacons Of Light : Lighthouses

15. It's not true that they always fought with Indians. They had more in common with most Native Americans than they did with city people. The favorite hat is the Stetson.

Yippee - Yah! (Cowboys and Cowgirls)

16. There is no dry season so it is always green. A storm in these can drop as much as one inch of rain in 30 minutes.

Nature's Green Umbrella (Rain Forests)

17. When they find many of the same kind of tracks in one area, they know these traveled in herds. Footprints can tell how big it was.

Dinosaurs

I Can Read With My Eyes Shut - Dr. Seuss

I Can Read With My Eyes Shut!


I can read in red. I can read in blue.
I can read in pickle color too.
I can read in bed, and in purple. and in brown.
I can read in a circle and upside down!
I can read with my left eye. I can read with my right.
I can read Mississippi with my eyes shut tight!

There are so many things you can learn about.
But…you'll miss the best things
If you keep your eyes shut.
The more that you read, the more things you will know
The more that you learn, the more places you'll go.

If you read with your eyes shut you're likely to find
That the place where you're going is far, far behind
SO…that's why I tell you to keep your eyes wide.
Keep them wide open…at least on one side.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Apple Pie Fourth of July


For my reading lesson I will be reading Apple Pie Fourth of July by Janet S. Wong. I feel that this book is a great book when teaching about the fourth of July and also to incorporate culture in the lesson. The book is about a young Chinese girl who is living in two cultures. In this story the young girl spends the 4th of July at her parents shop/restaurant wishing she could take part in the (american) parade. She feels that no Americans are going to want Chinese food on the 4th of July. After waiting hours people soon start popping in and ordering food to go. After her parents close up shop, she ends up going going to the top of her building to watch fireworks and finally got to eat Apple Pie. I hope you enjoy this book as much I did! :)

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

10 Most Banned Books in 2007



I thought this video was interesting because these are the books that were banned the year I graduated, 2007. I was eager to see if I read any of them and what do you know I did. One of my favorite books that kept me hooked was Gossip Girl. I think it's funny that it was banned and now a whole TV series have come out on that book. I would say Gossip Girl is one of the most watched TV shows for most teens, if it can be displayed on national TV, I don't understand why it is banned from the library?!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Fiction and Nonfiction Together

http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AW3sXdCtimolZDJ4NG05d18wZ2I1MmhoZDY&hl=en