Author
|
Phillip
Hoose
|
Title
|
Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice
|
Illustrator
|
NA
|
Readability
Score
|
GLE
6.8
Lexile
Measure: 1000
|
Genre
|
Nonfiction
|
Subgenre
|
Biography
|
Theme
|
NA
|
Primary
and Secondary Characters
|
NA
|
Award(s)
date of publication
|
2009
Newbery Honor Book
Robert F. Sibert Award Honor YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction Finalist Jane Addams Children’s Book Award, Honor ALA Best Book for Young Adults |
Publishing
Company
|
Melanie
Kroupa Books
|
ISBN
Number
|
0-374-31322-9
|
Brief
Summary
|
Claudette
Colvin was an unsung heroine of the Montgomery County Bus Boycott. Nine months prior to Rosa Parks’ monumental
bus ride, fifteen year old Colvin decided to take a stand and refused to give
up her bus seat to a white woman.
Unlike Parks’ refusal, Colvin’s was unplanned and inspired solely by
her own bravery. Also unlike Parks’
refusal, Colvin was dragged off the bus by two police officers and eventually
shunned by her classmates and community.
After her arrest, Colvin became involved with the NAACP, where she met
and became acquaintances with Parks.
However, the NAACP chose not to use Colvin as the spokesperson for
their bus boycott because of fear that she would be viewed as an “emotional
and uncontrollable” teenager. However,
she was called upon to testify during the bus boycott lawsuit initiated after
Parks made the news for refusing to give up her seat. Even in light of her testimony, Colvin did
not receive the same recognition or historical figure label as Parks.
|
Picture
of book cover
|
|
Description of how you would use book with
students
|
I
would use this book with high school students as part of a text set for the
Civil Rights Movement. With Colvin
being the age of a typical high school freshman, this book will encourage deep
discussions about her actions and the impact those actions had on her life.
|
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Chapter Book 11
Chapter Book 10
Author
|
Diane
McWhorter
|
Title
|
A Dream of Freedom: The
Civil Rights Movement from 1954 to 1968
|
Illustrator
|
NA
|
Readability
Score
|
GLE
10.5
Lexile
Measure: 1220
DRA: 70
Guided
Reading: Z
|
Genre
|
Nonfiction
|
Subgenre
|
Expository
|
Theme
|
NA
|
Primary
and Secondary Characters
|
NA
|
Award(s)
date of publication
|
2004
|
Publishing
Company
|
Scholastic
|
ISBN
Number
|
0-439-57678-4
|
Brief
Summary
|
A
Dream of Freedom describes several influential events that occurred during
the Civil Rights Movement as African Americans journeyed toward obtaining
equal rights. Author Diane McWhorter
details the struggles of many African American during this time period.
McWhorter describes the beginning of segregation, lynchings, the origins of
Jim Crow Laws, Brown Vs. Board of Education, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the
Little Rock Nine desegregation of Central High School, Sit-Ins at lunch
counters by local college students, the Freedom Rides, the Sixteenth Street
Church Bombing, and the formation of the Black Panther Party for
Self-Defense. McWhorter also explains
President John F. Kennedy’s impact on the Movement by passing the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 before his assassination.
Chock full of photographs from the era, McWhorter sheds a bright spotlight
on a dark period in our nation’s history.
|
Picture
of book cover
|
|
Description of how you would use book with
students
|
I
would use this book with upper middle school students to encourage further
research of specific events that occurred throughout the Civil Rights
Movement. Students would select one
event that most interests them and complete I Search papers after completing
further research based on questions generated about the events.
|
Chapter Book 9
Author
|
Siena
Cherson Siegel
|
Title
|
To Dance: A Ballerina’s
Graphic Novel
|
Illustrator
|
Mark
Siegel
|
Readability
Score
|
Lexile
Measure: 610 L
|
Genre
|
Biography
|
Subgenre
|
Memoir/Graphic Novel
|
Theme
|
This
book encourages hard work and determination to accomplish goals and dreams.
|
Primary
and Secondary Characters
|
Siena,
Sienna’s mother, Sienna’s father, Adam, doctor, Mister B, Mrs. Alcalde,
Madame Tumkovsky
|
Award(s)
date of publication
|
2006
|
Publishing
Company
|
Atheneum
Books for Young Readers
|
ISBN
Number
|
0-689-86747-6
|
Brief
Summary
|
At
the age of six, Sienna was told that she had flat feet. When Sienna’s mother suggested dance
classes to help improve her daughter's feet, the doctor replied that it was no use. However, Sienna’s mother decided to sign
her up for the classes anyway. Sienna
loved attending dance class. After
viewing a performance from famed dancer Maya Plisetskaya, Sienna was
convinced that she wanted to become a ballerina herself. When she was eleven, Sienna auditioned at
the School of American Ballet (SAB) and was accepted. While at SAB, Sienna’s true talent began to
emerge as dancing became a permanent fixture in her life.
|
Picture
of book cover
|
|
Description of how you would use book with
students
|
I
would use this book as a mentor text to encourage students to write their own
memoirs in a graphic novel format.
|
Chapter Book 8
Author
|
Mildred
D. Taylor
|
Title
|
The Gold Cadillac
|
Illustrator
|
NA
|
Readability
Score
|
Grade
level equivalent: 4.2
Lexile
Measure: 650 L
DRA:
40
Guided
Reading: S
|
Genre
|
Fiction
|
Subgenre
|
Historical
Fiction
|
Theme
|
This
book spotlights the importance of familial bonds.
|
Primary
and Secondary Characters
|
Lois,
Wilma, Daddy, Mother-Dear
|
Award(s)
date of publication
|
1987
|
Publishing
Company
|
Puffin
Books
|
ISBN
Number
|
0-14-038963-6
|
Brief
Summary
|
Lois
and her sister Wilma are ecstatic when Daddy pulls up to their house in a
brand new gold Cadillac. The neighbors
share the girls’ feelings of excitement and awe. However, Mother-Dear becomes furious when
she learns of Daddy’s new impractical and expensive purchase. Mother-Dear refuses to ride in the new car
and forbids the girls to do so as well.
Yet, when Daddy announces his plans to take the new car down South to
Mississippi to visit relatives, Mother-Dear decides that the entire family will accompany
him on the journey due to fear for his safety. Just as Mother-Dear feared, Daddy is pulled
over and arrested by a police officer simply for being of color and driving
an expensive car in the rural South.
|
Picture
of book cover
|
|
Description of how you would use book with
students
|
I
would use this book in literature circles during a unit on the Civil Rights
Movement.
|
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Chapter Book 7
Author
|
Sharon
Creech
|
Title
|
Love That Dog
|
Illustrator
|
NA
|
Readability
Score
|
Grade
level equivalent: 4.9
Lexile
Measure: 1010L
DRA:
50
Guided
Reading: T
|
Genre
|
Poetry
|
Subgenre
|
Narrative
|
Theme
|
This
book emphasizes the power of poetry.
|
Primary
and Secondary Characters
|
Jack,
Miss Stretchberry, Mr. Walter Dean Myers, Sky
|
Award(s)
date of publication
|
2001
|
Publishing
Company
|
Harper
Trophy
|
ISBN
Number
|
978-0-06-440959-9
|
Brief
Summary
|
Jack
doesn’t believe that he has the ability to write poetry. He doesn’t even want to write poetry
because it is something that “girls do.”
However, with constant motivation from his teacher, Miss Stretchberry,
Jack slowly begins to realize that he can in fact write poetry. Through his poems, Jack comes to terms with
the loss of his dog Sky.
|
Picture
of book cover
|
|
Description of how you would use book with
students
|
I
would use this book at the beginning of a poetry unit to motivate and
encourage all students of their ability to write poetry.
|
Chapter Book 6
Author
|
Eleanor
Estes
|
Title
|
The Hundred Dresses
|
Illustrator
|
Louis
Slobodkin
|
Readability
Score
|
Grade
level equivalent: 5.0
Lexile
Measure: 890L
DRA:
34
Guided
Reading: O
|
Genre
|
Fiction
|
Subgenre
|
Realistic
Fiction
|
Theme
|
This
book emphasizes the importance of being respectful toward others.
|
Primary
and Secondary Characters
|
Wanda
Petronski, Peggy, Maddie, Miss Mason, old man Svenson, Jake Petronksi, Cecile
|
Award(s)
date of publication
|
1944
Newbery Honor
|
Publishing
Company
|
Harcourt
Brace & Company
|
ISBN
Number
|
0-15-237374-8
|
Brief
Summary
|
Where
was Wanda Petronski? Everyday Maddie
and Peggy wait for Wanda before school to “have fun with her.” It is soon revealed that the girls’ version
of “having fun” with Wanda is teasing her daily about the hundred dresses she
claims to have lined up in her closet.
The girls find this proclamation shocking due to the fact that Wanda
wears the same blue dress to school each day.
Maddie feels slightly uncomfortable with the teasing, but reassures
herself of the game’s innocence since Wanda never cried. After a drawing contest, Maddie and Peggy
find out that Wanda in fact does have 100 drawings of dresses. Wanda is unable to claim her prize since
she is again absent. While the girls
are still fawning over Wanda’s beautiful drawings, their teacher Miss Mason
receives a letter from Wanda’s father explaining her absence. Wanda’s family has moved to escape
teasing. This bothers both Maddie and
Peggy, so the girls attempt to find a way to make things up to Wanda.
|
Picture
of book cover
|
|
Description of how you would use book with
students
|
I
would use this book as part of a character education unit to focus on the
importance of showing respect toward others and to caution students against
bullying and being “innocent” bystanders.
|
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