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| Overview |
Bill Martin, Jr’s picture books are known for their
creative use of language. In this lesson, the repetition, rhythm, and rhyme of
Martin’s
works
provide
opportunities for students to hear fluent reading modeled then to join in the
readings through literary performance. By
inviting
students
to participate in
the shared
and choral
reading, the lesson provides students the chance to focus
their
fluency and comprehension. The readers theater section of the lesson allows
students
to
demonstrate
for an
audience,
while improving
their literacy skills further.
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| From Theory to Practice |
As teachers, we know how important language is to young children. This knowledge
shapes our teaching. But, how do authors use this knowledge? In his Sounds
of Language teacher’s
editions, Bill Martin writes, “It should not surprise you to know that
even at
the first grade level, a child is already something of an expert in analyzing
language, a fact overlooked in most reading programs. . . . The aim is to help
him become aware of what he intuitively knows about language, and to help him
explore and verbalize old and new learnings” (Martin & Brogan
2–3).
This insight into young children literacy knowledge and acquisition is apparent
in
Martin’s books.
This lesson focuses on tapping and building on
the language skills that students have by participating in collaborative activities. As
supported by Vygotsky’s language and learning theories, this lesson’s focus
on social interaction nudges students toward the “zone of proximal development.” By
group literary performance, students move toward
learning and development that the student “can accomplish—with
adult guidance or help of a more capable peer—what the child could not
accomplish alone” (Dale 2).
Further Reading
Dale, Helen. Co-authoring in the Classroom: Creating an Environment for Effective
Collaboration. Urbana, IL: NCTE, 1997.
Martin, Bill, Jr., and Peggy Brogan. Sounds in the
Wind.
Teacher’s ed. New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston,
1974.
Patterson, Elizabeth Underwood. “Profile: The Professional
Legacy of Bill Martin Jr.” Language
Arts 79.6 (July 2002): 515-520.
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| Student Objectives |
Students will
- identify characteristics of books written by Bill Martin, Jr., including
repetition, rhyme, and rhythm.
- participate in shared reading, choral reading, and readers theater.
- participate in opportunities to improve reading fluency through repeated
readings and performances of the texts.
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| Instructional Plan |
Resources
Preparation
Instruction and Activities
Session One: Introducing Bill Martin, Jr.
- Introduce Bill Martin, Jr. to the students, using the books you’ve
collected and the Web sites you’ve chosen.
- Invite students to browse through your collection of Martin’s books.
Students may already be familiar with some of his books—Encourage them
to
tell about their favorites and share why they like the books.
- Begin a chart to record the characteristics of Martin’s work, which
will include student observations about the repetition, rhythm, and rhyme of
the texts.
Some student responses might be:
- “You can clap his words. His words sing. His books make you dance.”
- “He uses lots of rhyming words. B, C, and tree rhyme! So do D, E, G! And P, T, V, Z! What about F and out of breath?”
- “His sentences sound the same. It’s easy to learn because it’s kind of the same. I can read it after I heard it only twice. I hear a pattern.”
- After the students have shared their observations, as a group, label and categorize the responses:
- “You can clap his words. His words sing. His books make you dance.” (rhythm)
- “He uses lots of rhyming words. B, C, and tree rhyme! So do D, E, G! And P, T, V, Z! What about F and out of breath?” (rhyme)
- “His sentences sound the same. It’s easy to learn because it’s kind of the same. I can read it after I heard it only twice. I hear a pattern.” (repetition in Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?, Panda Bear, Panda Bear, What Do You See?, Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear?)
- Alternately, if students’ skills allow, head a paper with
three columns labeled with the words Rhythm,
Rhyme, and Repetition and have the students fill in the information
on their own.
- Ask students to explore the books for details on other people who have worked
with Martin. Depending upon the books that you have available for students
to investigate, they will find that Martin wrote books with John Archambault
and Michael Sampson. Illustrators of his books include
Lois Ehlert and Eric Carle.
- Visit the Favorite Things list on the Bill
Martin Jr/Michael Sampson Homepage.
- As a class, brainstorm a list of favorite things, or invite students to create
their own personal lists of favorite things.
- Compare students’ favorite things with those listed on the Web site.
- In pairs, groups, or as a whole class activity, visually represent the
comparison using
the Venn
Diagram tool.
Session Two:
Shared Reading with Bill Martin, Jr.
- Choose one of Bill Martin, Jr.’s books to read aloud to the students.
While you can use any of Martin’s books, these books work especially
well:
- Chicka Chicka 1·2·3 is a great book to share as you get closer
to your 100th
Day of School.
- Chicka Chicka Boom Boom can be paired with related CD, audiotape,
or video to help students practice their shared reading. The CD includes
additional alphabet games that students can play.
- Here Are My Hands makes a nice shared reading focus for an “All
About Me” unit or a kindergarten lesson on parts of the body. As
students share in the reading of the book, they point to the parts of
their own bodies.
- Read the book aloud to the class, modeling fluent and expressive reading.
- Reread the book several times, inviting students to join you as you read.
- Focus on the characteristics of the text:
- Help students identify the pattern of the book.
- Identify rhyming words.
- Clap along with the rhythm of the book or march to the rhythm.
- Identify repeating phrases.
- While reading, point to the words, helping students focus on the print
as well as using the clues from the pictures to decode words.
- Practice the book for several days, reading at the same rate of speed and
using the same phrasing so that words can be easily heard and understood
by an audience.
- Invite an audience to the classroom to listen to your students read/perform
the story. This audience might include parents or grandparents, another class,
the principal, nurse, secretary, librarian, and other school staff.
- Update your class chart by recording student observations about the repetition,
rhythm, and rhyme of the books.
Session Three: Writing Model Books with Bill Martin, Jr.
- Choose one of Martin’s books as a model for your own, original class
book. While you can use any of Martin’s books, these books work
especially well:
- Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? can be used as a follow-up
to a class unit on animals, plants, or insects. Students can choose specific
items from their unit (e.g., ants, bees, hornets) as the focus for the pages
of their book.
- Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear? is an excellent model
for a focus on sounds. If you've recently completed a unit on animals, for
instance,
your model books might focus on animal sounds. Your book might focus on animals
from your local area and the special sounds that they make. If possible,
make a tape recording of the real animals that can be used in your listening
center to inspire the book.
- Panda Bear, Panda Bear, What Do You See? focuses on powerful word
choice (participles) to describe how animals move. The book would make a
great model for books focusing on how animals, humans, or machines move.
Your book might focus on endangered animals that live in your area or ones that
your class has explored recently.
- Chicka Chicka Boom Boom provides several options:
- Focus your book on the students in the class—Chicka Chicka Boom
Boom! Look Who’s in Our Classroom! Ask students to paint
a coconut tree on a 9 by 12" sheet of paper. If desired,
use body/finger painting.
Paint the arm brown and stamp it on the paper for the trunk then paint
the hand green and point the fingers downward to stamp the leaves of the
coconut tree. Allow the pages to dry overnight. On the following day, have
students cut out the letters in their names from magazines. Students glue
the letters going up the coconut tree on their pages. A picture of each
student can be cut into the shape of a coconut and glued on the tree.
- Create number books based on Chicka Chicka Boom Boom, with various
numbers of coconuts in each tree. The class book can comprise a counting
book, with pages counting from one to twenty (one page for each student
in your class). Alternately, you might focus on counting by twos.
- After learning
the letters from the book, students can also create their own alphabet
books,
using
the Alphabet
Organizer.
- Read the book aloud to the class, modeling fluent and expressive reading.
- Use the book for shared reading until students are very familiar with
the text.
- Choose a focus for your book (e.g., insects).
- Ask students to brainstorm a list to use as they write. For a book about
insects, for example, the list might include ants, bees, and butterflies.
- Using chart paper, create the first page of the book—choose one of
the items from the brainstormed list, and draw its picture on the page.
- Underneath the picture, write the first question for your book. For instance,
your first question might be “Butterfly, Butterfly, what do you see?”
- Post another sheet of chart paper, for the second page of the book.
- On this new sheet, write the response to the question at the top of the
page, the related picture in the center, and the next question at the bottom.
For instance, if the butterfly saw a honey bee, the second page would be
composed of these parts:
- Top: The sentence “I see a honey bee looking at me.”
- Middle: Draw a picture of a honey bee.
- Bottom: The question “Honey Bee, Honey Bee, what do you see?”
- Continue working through the brainstormed list, creating pages for each
item.
- Once you've created a page for each animal, end the last page with the
sentence “That’s who I see” or the appropriate alternative. For
instance, if your book focuses on animal sounds, the last line of the book
would be “That’s what I hear.”
- Assemble the entire book, and read through it as a group.
- Allow opportunities for students to share their book with an
audience.
- Update your class chart by recording student observations about the repetition,
rhythm, and rhyme in the model books.
Session Four: Choral Reading with Bill Martin, Jr.
- Choose another one of Bill Martin, Jr.’s books for choral reading.
While you can use any of Martin’s books, these books work especially
well:
- Chicka Chicka 1·2·3 works best with three groups
of students, as shown on the Chicka
Chicka 1·2·3 Choral
Reading Chart.
- Chicka Chicka Boom Boom can be read by two groups, which take
turns reading the text then jointly read the chorus. For instance, the
first group would read the first page of the text. The second group would
read the second page. Both groups read the chorus together (“Chicka chicka
boom boom! Will there be enough room?”)
- Read the book aloud to the class, modeling fluent and expressive reading.
- Use the book for shared reading until students are very familiar with
the text.
- Divide the students into groups to read assigned parts, with whole group
reading of the chorus or repeated phrases.
- Allow ample practice time.
- Remind the students how important it is to read with the same phrasing
and at the same rate of speed, so the words can be understood by the audience.
It is helpful to video or audiotape the practice sessions, so students can
hear themselves and identify places where they need to work on phrasing or
speed or enunciation to improve clarity.
- Allow opportunities for students to share their choral readings with an
audience.
- Update your class chart by recording student observations about the repetition,
rhythm, and rhyme of the books.
Session Five: Readers Theater with Bill Martin, Jr.
- Choose one of Bill Martin Jr.’s books for stronger readers. While you
can use any of Martin’s books, these books work especially
well:
- Barn Dance! makes a great focus for performance because of the
focus on dancing in the book. Invite students to perform their own square
dance as part of the performance.
- The Ghost-Eye Tree is a wonderfully spooky story about a dark,
fall night. The main characters include a boy and his sister, with a
supporting role for Mr. Cowlander, the milkman. The remaining text can
be divided among several students. Be sure to choose a good, spooky screamer
for the part of the ghost-eye tree (an owl).
- Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear? uses strong words
to describe the sounds that the animals make. In your performance, ask
students to act out the animals and their unique sounds.
- Panda Bear, Panda Bear, What Do You See? uses participles to
describe how animals move. In your performance, ask
students to act out the animals and the way they move.
- Read the book aloud to the class, modeling fluent and expressive reading.
- Divide the class into groups of 4–6 students for Readers Theater groups.
- Assign parts of the texts to each group.
- Highlight the part of each student in their copy of the text.
- Provide lots of practice time for groups to practice their scripts.
- Invite them to practice at home using their parents as their audience.
- Encourage students to read fluently and expressively with good phrasing so that the rhythm and rhyme of the text is maintained by each of the readers.
- Help students define and pronounce any difficult words found in the text.
- Encourage students to understand the characters’ feelings and emotions—and
help them portray those feelings in their oral reading of the text.
- Arrange for the performance of the book:
Readers Theater may be performed
by students sitting on stools or standing. During the performance, students
read
their
scripts,
but
are not
required to
act out the story or wear costumes. Instead, the story comes alive through
their expressive reading of the words. Students may want to tape their practice
sessions to self-assess their progress and identify areas to work on. They
may also choose to video tape themselves.
- Invite parents to come to your performance. You may also do repeat performances for other classes.
- Update your class chart by recording student observations about the repetition,
rhythm, and rhyme of the books.
Extensions
- Learn more about Michael Sampson and John Archambault and their relationship
with Bill Martin Jr. Research other author-illustrator pair who work together
for long amounts of time.
- Since Martin’s books fit well in an early literacy program,
continue the work of letter sounds using some of the ReadWriteThink student
interactives: Picture
Match, Alphabet
Organizer,
and Construct-a-Word.
- Obtain the square dance music and learn the steps to a dance well enough
to teach the students while reading Barn Dance! You may want to invite
a square dance caller to visit your class and teach the dance to the students.
You can also visit the Swing
Your Partner! lesson plan to learn more about the ties between Barn
Dance! and square dancing.
- Create
a model book based on your class using the Teacher, Teacher handout. Take
digital pictures of each student or use their school pictures. Begin the
book with a picture of your school. On the first page, use your name for
the question. For instance, “Mrs. Hamner, Mrs. Hamner, who do you
see?” Follow on the next pages with each of your students’ names
and pictures. At the top of each page, write, “I see _____________
looking at me.” Then glue in each child’s picture in the center
of the page with the following pattern sentence below the picture: “_____________,
_____________, who do you see?” On the last page, have a class picture
in front of your school with the concluding sentence “I see the great
kids at _____________ School! That’s who I see!”
Web Resources
- Bill Martin Jr/Michael Sampson Official Homepage
http://www.billmartinjr.com/bill.htm
- Visit Bill Martin Jr.’s Web site
to see his picture and learn more about his life, how he got his pen name, his
favorite things, and more.
- Reading Rockets Interview with Bill Martin Jr.
http://www.readingrockets.org/transcript.php?ID=66
- In this interview, Martin talks about his love of language, his education, and his writing.
- Books by Bill Martin Jr
http://www.michaelsampson.com/billmartinjr-books.htm
- This site provides a comprehensive list of books by the author, Bill Martin Jr.
Readers Theater Collection
http://www.readerstheatre.ecsd.net/collection.htm
- Among many scripts, this site includes Readers Theater scripts for Fire! Fire! and Here Are My Hands.
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| Student Assessment/Reflections |
As the students are reading and participating in reading activities, look for
the following indications of fluency:
- Reading accurately
- Reading at an appropriate pace
- Reading expressively
- Reading with good phrasing
- Reading with good comprehension
Since the students will also be performing, provide them with Questions
for Reflection and Self-evaluation so they are able to assess their own
performance and participation. Questions are included for shared
reading, choral reading, and readers theater.
After the activities are complete, conduct a class discussion:
- Encourage students to share what they learned from their performances.
- Ask students to discuss how the performance affected their reading—Did
it make them better readers? How?
- Ask students if they think their practicing and performing the story helped
them understand the story better—Could they tell someone the story in their
own words? Did they learn any new vocabulary words?
- Encourage students to share what they learned about Bill Martin Jr. and his books.
- Review, discuss, and complete the chart of the characteristics of his books
and post in the room.
- Ask students whether they would recommend his books to a friend and to
explain their responses.
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1 - Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
3 - Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
4 - Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
5 - Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of purposes.
6 - Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique, and discuss print and nonprint texts.
11 - Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy communities.
12 - Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).
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