Cousins of Clouds

Cousins of Clouds
Tracie's NEW BOOK!
Showing posts with label Vaughn Zimmer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vaughn Zimmer. Show all posts

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Sketches from a Spy Tree

Discussion Guide
   
Twins
Everyone thinks that Anne Marie and Mary Ann are identical but are they? How are they alike? How are they different?
Do you think twins like being treated as a matched set: "like a pair of shoes/or gloves,/worthless if one/ gets lost." What does Anne Marie mean by this? Did you learn anything from Anne Marie about twins? What?
Reread: "Not to Brag But" and then decide: do you wish you had a twin? What would be great about it? What would get old?
Parents:
Describe Ann Marie's mom, dad, and Mike. How does she get along with them?  What would you find most difficult in Anne Marie's story? Do you think it is fair how she feels about Mike? By the end of the book, what is Anne Marie trying to do?
Reread: "Dad's Roses"  What did Anne Marie do to her dad's rose bushes? Why? What does she mean when she says, "Only the roses came back?"
Neighbors:
Which of Anne Marie's neighbors did you find most interesting? Who would you like to live near? Is there anyone (or animal) that you're glad doesn't live by you? Why? In poems the author doesn't have much room for description, how can you still "see" the characters? What techniques can a writer use? Which poem is your favorite about the neighborhood? Why? How is Anne Marie's neighborhood like yours? How is it different?
Growing Up
Reread "The Book Lady"  What types of things does Anne Marie want to do when she is older? Why do you think she said "build my own fence/ change my own oil?" What on her list would you like to do too? What things would you include on your own list? Why do you think Ann Marie thinks it is important to "buy new books/ with all the rest/ for each kid who/never had one" ? Who would you like to help when you get older? What could you do? Is there anything you could do now?
Friendship
Discuss Anne Marie and Mary Anne's friendship with May Ching. How do things change with a new friend? What other friendships do they have in the neighborhood? How are the similar to the friendships you have outside of school? Are friendships different at home and at school? How?
Art:
Why is Anne Marie's sketchbook so important to her? What does she learn by creating pictures and poems about the people she knows? How does it make her like her dad? What, like Anne Marie's sketchbook, is important to you? What does Anne Marie mean when she says she's "hidden by these green and paper leaves?" Which illustration is your favorite? What technique did Andrew Glass use to create it? What colors did he use? Why do you think so?


The Spy Tree Scavenger Hunt
 Map | Help | Home   
 Teacher's Guide
   

Pre-Reading Activity:
Do you know any twins? Do you think it would be fun to be a twin? What would be great about it? What might be hard?
Check out the cover:
What do you think this story might be about? What do you think she might see from her spy tree?

Comprehension Check:
1. Who is the narrator of this story? Describe her.
2. Why does Ann Marie say that she's the "one with hate/painting my heart black"?
3. Explain what's going on between Mike and Anne Marie.
4. Retell the main events in the story.
5. Predict what happens after the close of the collection.

Poetry  Lessons:
Poetic element scavenger hunt.
After reviewing the poetic elements (Figurative Lesson Low Down: A brief introduction to the poetic elements), then search through SPY TREE to find examples of each.
Have students make a graph of their own, or use this one!  Poetic Element Scavenger Hunt
Imagery work:
Using highlighters (or post-it notes) let students tag the imagery in the book. Use a different color for each one of the senses.
Line break bonanza:
Use this copy of the words from "Across the Back Fence" which is missing all the line breaks. Have students work in pairs to decide where they would have ended each line. Compare it to the original.

Projects:
Spy Journal:  Keep a writer's notebook or sketchbook and go exploring in your own neighborhood for great characters, settings and scenes. Write at least five poems or descriptions about what you see, hear or smell! Choose one of these to revise and share.

Make a Venn diagram comparing Mary Anne and Anne Marie. What do they have in common? What are different? Think about not just what they look like, but what they do, think, say and how others view them.

Anne Marie explores a wide variety of art techniques throughout the collection. Create three different pictures inspired by your own neighborhood and use a variety of media as well. Be sure to try one as a collage because, well, it is so much fun!

Character chart: Make a chart (or print out this one) that explores the characters in Anne Marie's neighborhood. List the characters going down and the following categories across: what they look like, what they say, what they do, what others think of them. Then, fill in the boxes based on your reading of Spy Tree.

Anne Marie says in "The Book Lady" that shed like to buy new books for all the kids who never had one. So, have a book drive for a homeless shelter or other place for kids. Be sure the books are of high quality (like NO cartoon characters, for example) and in good shape. You might even want to purchase a new one (like your favorite of the year) to share with kids who may not ever get a brand new book.

Create a map of the neighborhood from Spy Tree. Make it out of 3D materials and use stuff from around the house- no buying! Try to add as many details as you can from the story.

Write a letter from Anne Marie to her real dad. What would she say to him? Write his response.

Reaching for Sun

Reaching for Sun

by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer
Reading Group Guide


  1. Reaching for Sun is a story about a girl who is like most girls—she fights with her mother, has a crush on a boy, and feels bullied by the popular girls.  In what ways do you personally relate to Josie, and in what ways is she different from you?  How do these differences make you feel?

  1. What did you know about cerebral palsy before reading this book?  After?  In what ways does Josie’s cerebral palsy challenge her, and in what ways does it make her stronger?

  1. Josie likes to eat breakfast for dinner.  What is your favorite meal?  What makes it so special?

  1. Josie, along with her mother and grandmother, has a special connection to her family’s land.  Does your family have a special place—a summer cottage, vacation spot, or even the house you live in year round—that has an important meaning to you?  Why do you feel so connected to this place?

  1. Reaching for Sun is divided into four sections based on the seasons of the year.  In what season is Josie happiest?  How do Josie’s relationships with her mother, her grandmother, and her friend Jordan change over the course of the year?

  1. Josie wants her summer “to be a wildflower-seed mix (pg. 81).”  What do you think Josie means by this?

  1. Josie and her grandmother dream of going to Paris.  If you could travel anywhere in the world, where would you go and why? 

  1. Josie likes to visit the Lazy Acres nursing home with her grandmother.  Why?  Where do you feel most accepted?

  1. Josie uses images from the natural world to describe her own emotional and physical growth, comparing herself to flowers and other plants.  For example, she doesn’t “want to be pruned or pinched back/like a wilting petunia” when her mother nags her about therapy (p. 80).  Which flower, plant, or tree best represents you and why?  How does your favorite flower or tree make you feel?

  1. Josie and Jordan are best friends who meet under a willow tree and discover their mutual interes






Voice:
Reaching for Sun is written completely in Josie’s voice. Experiment with voice by writing a few free verse poems through the eyes of Jordan. It can be any part of the novel or even set after it is over. Think about what types of words Jordan would use to describe an event and what types of things he might compare something to.

Comprehension:
Reread any poem in the story and answer the following questions about it: Who is it about? What happens in the poem? Where does it take place? What poetic language does the author use? Why did you choose this poem?

Fluency:
Free verse poetry is a great form to build student fluency- with it’s generous white space it doesn’t intimidate and it is written to flow off the tongue. Have students tape themselves reading a poem and then practice reading it silently (or under their breath) and then re-tape their reading. Students will be impressed by their marked improved performance.

Vocabulary:
As you read find ten words that you wouldn’t usually use in your everyday conversations. Then, try to use them as you go through your day. Write a brief journal about how this word experiment went.

Science:
Three Feet Square
Josie and Jordan tape off a small section of the garden and then study it over the course of the summer. You could do the same (and choose an even smaller border). Count insects, take pictures, study the plants and the soil conditions over time.

Health:
Learn more about cerebral palsy or another common disability. Research the causes, the impairments it can cause, the treatments, and how you can help. Create a pamphlet about what you learned.

Art:
Create a piece of collage or sculpture inspired by Josie’s story.  Use any media you like but explain it in a brief artist’s statement that you turn in with the piece (an index card works nicely).

Cooking:
Gran’s Divinity Recipe   (from the author’s grandmother’s kitchen)


Poetic Elements

Reaching for Sun
By Tracie Vaughn Zimmer
Poets use word tools to make their language stand out from regular prose. This poetic language is called figurative and it has many types. Read the definitions of these tools and then find an example of each in the novel. Then, try your own!
Types of poetic language:
An example from the novel:
An example of your own:
ALLITERATION:
 Repeated consonant sounds
 " lovely, leafy lettuce”




ASSONANCE:
 Repeated Vowel sounds
 "The June moon loomed over the horizon"



IMAGERY:
Creating pictures for the senses
“First day of school smells like new books”


METAPHORS:
Comparing two things by saying something IS something else:
“the ocean is a bowl of dreams”


SIMILE:
 A comparison using the words "like" or "as."
 "He smells like a gym shoe.”



PERSONIFICATION:
 Making an object act or look like a person or animal
 "The storm danced across the sky”



©2007 Tracie Vaughn Zimmer


 
 

 
Character Chart
Reaching for Sun
Tracie Vaughn Zimmer
     


Readers learn about characters in four ways: what they say, what they do, what they look like, and what others think and say about them. Find details about each character that helps you understand them from the book.

                                     Appearance             Actions                          Words                     Others
Josie








Gran








Jordan








Mom








Natalie











 


 
COMPREHENSION
Making Connections:


Good readers make connections as they try to understand a story. They think about how the story reminds them of other stories, how it relates to their own life and to the world around them. Tuck this chart in the book so you can make notes about what you’re thinking as you read the novel. Try to make at least one of each type of connection for each season in the book.



Chapter &
p. #
Text to text
Text to self
Text to world
Definitions:



Tell how this book reminds you of another in plot, content, style or structure
 
Relate what you just read to an experience or memory from your own life
Show how the book relates to events from the real world, or facts and info. that you know
Examples:



This book reminds me of LOVE THAT DOG by Sharon Creech because it is written in poem
 
Like Josie I’ve been teased at school though not as often.
 
I wonder if Josie can be cured of cerebral palsy or if she’ll always have it.


Winter







Spring







Summer







Fall







COMPREHENSION
Understanding Poems


Sometimes readers get confused when they read poems because of the fancy language or how few words are used to tell a story. Practice your understanding of poems by thinking about the five “W’s” as you read: who, what, when, where, and why.

Title of poem: _____________ page______

Who is this poem about?




Where does this poem take place?




What happens in the poem?




When is it happening?




Why is this poem important?





Title of poem: _____________ page______

Who is this poem about?




Where does this poem take place?




What happens in the poem?




When is it happening?




Why is this poem important?