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Dear Arizona Promising Practices Subscriber,
Welcome
to another online addition of the Arizona Promising Practices forum. For those
new to this service, each issue, which will now be sent to you on a regular
basis, will focus on:
(1)
Recommended National Educational Websites; and (2) One promising
practice article in condensed form. We welcome your recommendations for
improvement to this forum or suggestions on future topics (these will be wide
ranging so if nothing in this update interests you, hold on for future editions!) The Arizona Promising Practices Forum and website, www.azpromisingpractices.com
is a FREE resource of the Arizona Department of Education.
Mary
Urich, ACPE Director murich@ade.az.gov
In
this issue we bring to you part two of strategies to help children
read and discover books over the Summer Vacation. Brought to you by
Reading is Fundamental, these strategies may be shared with families and other
teachers to help children continue to grow and learn over the Summer break.
National
Website of Importance – If you
are looking for a comprehensive research and activities site, feel free to
check out the Gateway. This website host numerous topics on
multiple subject areas and provides helpful activities for students. http://www.thegateway.org/
Promising Practice Research and
Teaching Tips
10
At Home Vacation Ideas
1.
Read a book that takes you to another part of the country.
Experience
another region of our country with the help of a good book. Look at a map of the
United States with your child and talk about the parts of the country he or she
might want to visit someday. Use our state-by-state booklist to help your
child choose a book. Then search online or visit your local library to
learn more about that region. Reading about National Parks, historic
sites, and museums can make the region come alive for your family.
2.
Visit a local Museum.
Whether you live in a city or a rural area, local museums are always a popular
tourist destination. To get in the mood for a visit to a museum big or
small, your child could read one of the following books: The Field Mouse and
the Dinosaur Named Sue by Jan Wahl, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs.
Basil E. Frankweiler by E. L. Konigsburg, or The Explorabook: A Kid's
Science Museum in a Book by John Cassidy. Visit a favorite museum or a
local museum youve always wanted to try. Check your hometown newspapers weekend
listings for information about museums and exhibits near you.
3.
Visit an historical site.
Is there a historical destination in your area you haven't visited with your
family? Check out the National Register of Historic Places at your
local library to find a historic site near you. Then look at our
state-by-state booklist or visit your local library to see if you can find a
book about historic times. The Magic Tree House series, and the American
Diary series are both popular collections, which tell engaging tales about
the past. Learning about the past is another way to leave the everyday world
behind while still in town.
4.
Plan a day of fun or relaxation.
Nothing
says vacation more than a relaxing day or two where you sit around and enjoy
life. Pick something to do that's pure summer fun like spending the day at
a local pool or swimming hole, an amusement park or a local sporting event.
Pack a picnic lunch, make sure to bring summery refreshments like lemonade, and
don't forget your blanket. Read Tar Beach by Faith
Ringgold, a book about a girl who manages to get away from it all even though
summer escape is the tar roof of her very own building.
5.
Enjoy the great outdoors.
What
better time than summer to take a day trip to hike, swim, catch fireflies, look
at birds or plants, and enjoy the great outdoors? Even if you're not going
away, you can still enjoy all that nature has to offer near to you home.
Is there a state park, city park, or arboretum nearby? Some books to get
your family in the mood for an outdoor adventure are: Pet Bugs: A
Kid's Guide to Catching and Keeping Touchable Insects by Sally Kneidel; DK
Nature Encyclopedia by Dorling Kindersely Publishing; and Animals on
the Trail with Lewis and Clark and Plants on the Trail with Lewis and
Clark by Dorothy Hinshaw Patent or visit your library to find nature guides
specific to your part of the country. For a different kind of wilderness
story an older child could read My Side of the Mountain by Jean
Craighead George.
6.
Summer evening storytelling.
In most
parts of the United States, summer nights are long and warm --perfect for trying
out that great summer tradition storytelling. You don't need a campfire to plan
a time when the whole family can be together outdoors in the evening. Decide how
long each story should be. Should it be 10 minutes each? Five
minutes each? Have each person in the family think of his or her own story
idea. Give everyone time to think of their story and then take turns
telling your stories. For inspiration read a book by one of the country's
regional storytellers. Try The Day it Snowed Tortillas: Folktales told
in Spanish and English by New Mexico storyteller Joe Hayes, The Jack
Tales by North Carolina storyteller, Ray Hicks, or listen to a CD by
Vermont storyteller Odds Bodkin.
7.
Travel to the stars.
To some
people, summer vacation means sitting outdoors in the evening and looking at the
stars. If you live in a place where you can sleep outdoors in the backyard, then
pitch a tent in your backyard, look up at the stars, and tell stories late into
the night. Even if you live in the city, you could visit a local
planetarium, see the full moon, or see a few stars on a clear moonless night.
And of course, you can get away from it all and take a trip to the stars with
your family with the help of a good book about the planets and the stars.
Try Find the Constellations by H. A Rey; Destination Space by
Seymour Simon (about the discoveries of the Hubble Telescope); and the DK
Space Encyclopedia by Nigel Henbest.
8.
Read aloud tales from around the world.
Summer
nights offer a great opportunity to read aloud together as a family. If
you have younger children then you'll be doing most of the actual reading.
If you have older children then everyone in the whole family can take turns.
What better way to experience new places than to choose a selection of folktales
from around the world? Read from your family's favorite folktale
collection or try one of these suggestions: Maid of the North: Feminist Folk
Tales from Around the World by Ethel J. Phelps and Lloyd Bloom; Nelson
Mandela's Favorite African Folktales by Nelson Mandela; and One Grain
of Rice: A Mathematical Folktale by Demi.
9.
Make a time capsule.
Leave
your day-to-day routines behind by reading about time travel and then making a
time capsule. Suggest your child read or listen to A Wrinkle in Time by
Madeline L Engel, Moon Window by Jane L. Curry, or another book about
time travel. To make the time capsule, first, select the container for the
capsule itself. Have your child pick the items to put in the capsule. Ideas
include: a newspaper; drawings; a list of favorite music, movies, or books; and
some photographs. Talk about whom the time capsule is for. (It could be for your
child to open in ten years, for some unknown person in the distant future).
Your child could write a letter to his or her future self or to someone else in
the future to include in the capsule. Make a label for the outside of the
capsule -- Not to be opened until 2014. When finished, put the time
capsule someplace no one goes, like the attic or the top of an out of the way
closet.
10.
See a play or a movie based on a book.
There
are many plays and movies appropriate for children based on children's classics.
Check your local listings for children's theater and movies in your area.
Some choices currently on DVD or in theaters include: James and the Giant
Peach and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, The
Voyages of Dr Doolittle by Hugh Lofting, and Ella Enchanted by
Gail Carson Levine. First have your child select the book. Your child can
read it himself or you can read it aloud over a week or so. When you are
finished with the book, go to see the play or watch the movie. Talk about
the differences between the book and the movie with your child.
www.rif.org
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