Monday, May 20, 2013

Teaching with Tomie dePaola Books Part 4: Responding to Literature


Graphics by Lisa Parnello & Sonya DeHart 


As we transition to Common Core and implement new writing frameworks 
in my district our students are learning to use the writing piece of Thinking Maps  
to organize and plan their writing.  
Teaching students to write a response to literature has been our focus this quarter. 

After reading Strega Nona Meets Her Match we wrote a character analysis of 
Strega Amelia.  I asked my students which book and character we should choose and 
hands down it was this one! Guess why?  I wish I could say it was deeper than this, 
but it's because she dresses fancy and wears makeup! And they love that she's sassy!
They've noticed that many of Tomie dePaola's characters have little black dots for eyes.
Except Strega Amelia....  She has fancy blue makeup on! 
I guess you just never know what's going to make an impression!

We talked a lot about this character and reviewed her relationship with
Strega Nona.  We thought back to telling events from other stories in the series 
that might give us some insight into Strega Amelia's character.
In their journals, students made these maps describing the character and gave 
reasons for their word choices. 




As students shared their ideas I recorded them on a class chart.

Next, I had students fold a piece of  legal size paper into 4 parts and choose 
markers in 5 colors to color code each step. This is a 3-4  day process so 
I have students make a little tally mark in the top corner of the page with their colors so 
they remember which ones they should take out the next day. From here it is an
 "I do" then "You do" process. I first modeled each step then it was their turn.

This is the first time my second graders have written a character analysis so we started 
very simple.  I wrote a topic sentence that introduced the character then
 chose three adjectives I wanted to tell more about and recorded them in this map.
Students used their own  bubble maps and did the same. 
We added details under each description that we wanted to include 
in our writing. Lastly, we wrote a closing sentence that included a feeling,
 a personal connection, or an opinion about
the character. We color coded  these as we went along. 





 Next, we used the same color coding to write a rough draft. 
Here we added transition words and any changes.









I had originally planned for us to publish our writing in these little Strega Nona houses, 
but when my kiddos saw these they begged me to put our letters 
 to Tomie dePaola, written the previous week, inside Strega Nona's house
and mail them to him. So, that's just what we're going to do!



We've been publishing one piece of writing each quarter in these seasonal
trees from my September Writing Activities pack
to save for our end of year open house so we published our writing
 instead in these spring trees.

 I originally made different writing inserts for our Strega Nona houses but since we
were sending them to "our Tomie" as my one little sweetie 
refers to him, students instead wrote 3 wishes they have, things they noticed
during our author study, and their favorite Tomie dePaola book. 

Oh my gosh, these turned out so cute!  I really just wanted to keep 
every single one of them!  We hear that Tomie actually writes back to kids 
and my class is very worried that they'll be in third grade when he does. 
 I have solemnly sworn to gather them all up when/if (fingers crossed!) we receive a letter 
so we can all open it together! 







Well, this is the last piece of our Tomie dePaola author study.  
I hope you've enjoyed this series and found something you can use in your classroom!

You can find all the posts in this series by clicking the pictures below!


            
          

With the exception of Strega Nona's house, all of the activities in these posts can 
be found in my Tomie dePaola Author Study on 

You might also enjoy my Tomie dePaola board on Pinterest!

Thanks so much for following along and happy teaching with Tomie books, friends!

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Teaching With Tomie dePaola Books Part 3: The Strega Nona Series & A Linky



We're well into week three of our Tomie dePaola author study and knee deep 
in Strega Nona's world!  My class has fallen in love with the characters in these books.
Their folkloric quality, Big Anthony's bumbling, Bambolona's brusqueness and 
Strega Nona's endearing ways have captured them hook, line, and sinker!

We began this part of our study by reading Strega Nona and 
answering the question,  "What is a strega?" 
During our discussion my kiddos brainstormed examples and synonyms for the 
kindhearted "Grandma Witch". We then defined a strega with these pasta pot circle maps.



We've been comparing story elements along the way and one of the things my class noticed 
right away is that all of the Strega Nona books take place in Calabria, Italy.  
(Which is also the author's ancestal home.) We read Strega Nona's "biography", 
Strega Nona: Her Story, and  looked closer at some of the "settings within the setting".  

We talked about how Strega Nona's house and kitchen are key locations in many
of the stories.  My class decided this made perfect sense to them since
Strega Nona has many visitors come to her house and when company comes
where do you go?  The kitchen!

My kiddos pour over the illustrations in these books taking in all of the details,
and looking for the little visual extras and references to other stories that Tomie dePaola 
so often includes.One of the things I love from a teaching standpoint about his books 
is that the illustrations flow from picture to story directly supporting the text.

 We used a brace map to decompose the elements of this setting.




After reading Strega Nona: Her Story and Big Anthony: His Story we compared 
the childhoods, life stories, and character traits of the two main characters.  
We sorted them and some of my kiddos called these "sorting hats" 
just like in Harry Potter!




In many of his books, especially the Strega Nona series, Tomie dePaola includes 
lots of Italian words.


As we read through our books we collected these words and wrote them on sticky notes.
I forgot to prep any shapes for them to use so I pulled out my sticky note stash and it was a unanimous vote that we use the hearts! Of course it's because Tomie dePaola includes a little heart somewhere 
in many of his illustrations and my kiddos love to try to find it!



I reused our chart from last year by cutting off the artwork and gluing it to a new page.



During our literacy centers we made these little Italian dictionaries.


My very favorite book in this series is Strega Nona Takes a Vacation. I love 
seeing Strega Nona out of her element and my kiddos think the beach scenes 
with her in the old fashioned bathing suit are hysterical! 

After we read the book we talked about why Strega Nona might need a vacation
and what destinations she might choose.  The kids wrote in their notebooks about 
the kinds of things Strega Nona might do to relax on her trip and in our writing center 
they wrote postcards home to Calabria
 from Strega Nona's point of view. 






Strega Nona sent a postcard to remind Big Anthony to do his chores!

My kiddos love Big Anthony because he is such a goof!  I love him because he's a walking 
example of cause and effect! We made these little trifolds to show the causes and effects of 
the fact that Big Anthony NEVER pays attention!








Not only is Anthony a disaster waiting to happen but he is extremely forgetful!
We did this little writing activity and I took pictures of my class with a 
string tied around their finger.  I had to explain the meaning of 
"tie a string on your finger" to help you remember. They just couldn't get over the 
fact that anyone would do that rather than just setting a reminder on their phone! Ha!

"When you tell time, don't forget to look at the hour hand first and then the 
minute hand."


I can just hear this little one's mother saying, "When you cut something with a knife 
don't forget to put it away so your little brother doesn't cut his finger off!"


It's good to remember to always pay for your groceries!                  


We also did some pasta punctuation practice (How's that for alliteration?) in our literacy centers.


I wrote sentences on strips and found these little salsa pots at the Dollar Tree.

You can download a copy of this {HERE}.

We found a lot of patterns in story events during our study and one of my boys 
thought it was pretty cool that "things overflow a lot in Tomie books!"  
We had just been talking the day before about Big Anthony 
being "overwhelmed" by all of the love sick ladies chasing him after he takes 
Strega Nona's magic ring and "turned hansdsome".  I pointed out that both of those words 
began with the prefix "over" and that many of the events in these books are "over the top".   
It was music to my ears when they started coming up with these big words!
Next year, I definitely want to do more with this! 


We used this list to help us form analogies between events
and story elements.



This little friend piped up while sharing hers and said,
"The setting for these is OVERseas... well , except for Texas!"


I know this is the longest post ever, but before I go I wanted
to show you a little treasure I got this year.  It's the most beautiful
pop-up book!




And.....guess what??
I was looking around on the Barnes & Noble site and stumbled upon this...
A NEW Tomie book! Coming out in October! You can preorder
 it from Barnes & Noble {HERE}


If you'd like to do this author study with your class you can! All of this and 

       



Click on the links below to see the rest of our author study:
Teaching with Tomie dePaola Books Part 1: Little Grunt and the Big Egg
Teaching with Tomie dePaola Books Part 2:  The Art Lesson & Tony's Bread



Stay tuned for Teaching with Tomie dePaola Books Part 4:  Writing a Response to Literature

I'd love for you to link up and share how you teach with Tomie books in YOUR classroom!




Pin It button on image hover