Thursday, January 30, 2014

The Watsons Go to Birmingham
by Paul Curtis
The book is based in Flint, Michigan, with the narrator, Kenny, introducing his family in a cold house on the couch huddled up together, the "Weird Watsons'". His family includes his dad, his mom, older brother Byron, nicknamed By, and their younger sister Joetta, nicknamed Joey. This section is largely a description of the Watsons' family life: Byron kissing his reflection in a car mirror in January and freezing his lips to the chilled glass, Kenny's friend LJ stealing many of Kenny's toy dinosaurs, the countrified new kids at school, and Byron's sliding into friendship with the bad element in town. It is this last episode that prompts the main conflict in the story, as Byron's behavior worsens. Ultimately he is caught again playing with matches despite having been warned repeatedly against doing just this.
At this point, the family decides Byron should live with his Grandma Sands in Alabama for the Summer and if things don't work out he'll stay there for the next school year. It is, however, when the grandmother's church is bombed that the family decides to return home, with Byron, in an attempt to avoid explaining the full implications of what has happened to the children.
Kenny, having never encountered racism of this magnitude before, is unable to process what has happened—he ran to the church moments after the bombing took place as he believed his sister to be in the building, and saw the aftermath. As a result of the bomb, four little girls had died, one was blinded, and one had to have one of her eyes removed. Byron does his best to help Kenny understand what has happened, as the parents are reluctant to explain. Kenny sees that though the world is not perfect, he has to keep pushing on. 





Thursday, January 23, 2014

The Watsons Go to Birmingham, Women's Basketball, and Letter Projects (due Januaury 31st)


The Watsons Go to Birmingham
by Paul Curtis
The book is based in Flint, Michigan, with the narrator, Kenny, introducing his family in a cold house on the couch huddled up together, the "Weird Watsons'". His family includes his dad, his mom, older brother Byron, nicknamed By, and their younger sister Joetta, nicknamed Joey. This section is largely a description of the Watsons' family life: Byron kissing his reflection in a car mirror in January and freezing his lips to the chilled glass, Kenny's friend LJ stealing many of Kenny's toy dinosaurs, the countrified new kids at school, and Byron's sliding into friendship with the bad element in town. It is this last episode that prompts the main conflict in the story, as Byron's behavior worsens. Ultimately he is caught again playing with matches despite having been warned repeatedly against doing just this.
At this point, the family decides Byron should live with his Grandma Sands in Alabama for the Summer and if things don't work out he'll stay there for the next school year. It is, however, when the grandmother's church is bombed that the family decides to return home, with Byron, in an attempt to avoid explaining the full implications of what has happened to the children.
Kenny, having never encountered racism of this magnitude before, is unable to process what has happened—he ran to the church moments after the bombing took place as he believed his sister to be in the building, and saw the aftermath. As a result of the bomb, four little girls had died, one was blinded, and one had to have one of her eyes removed. Byron does his best to help Kenny understand what has happened, as the parents are reluctant to explain. Kenny sees that though the world is not perfect, he has to keep pushing on. 





Campus School has been invited to attend Wednesday's basketball game at the Elma Roane Fieldhouse. We will eat lunch and view the game from wonderful seats that have been sectioned off for our students. Please send a sack lunch with your child Wednesday, January 29th.


vs.

UCF
Day:Wednesday
Date:Jan. 29, 2014
Location:Elma Roane Fieldhouse
Time:12:00 p.m. CT



Thursday, January 16, 2014

Remembering Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., The Watsons Go to Birmingham-1963, and Typing Club




Martin Luther King was just a man
for justice and peace he would stand

All he wished
Is for whites and blacks
to be equal when we finished

He had a non-violent protest
To put the people to a special test

So, to racial injustice, to inequality,
He raised a fist of peace
and with equal rights,
America would find release.

He knew his people were very bright,
he just had to lead them to the light.

Because Martin Luther King had a Dream
so no one would have to scream
for there wouldn't be a dilemma
like Birmingham or Selma.

He once said that he had a dream
and that one day it will come true.
But it will only be a dream
until there is change in me and you.




Below is a book review of our next class novel by By

Curtis has the ability to make you laugh and cry and think deeply about something, all within a few pages. – Heather Christensen

The character voices are so charming and right on. It sweeps you up in this funny tale of a loving and slightly wacky family – until a tragedy pulls everything out from underneath you. As it should. – Emily Myhr

       It was the book that took Christopher Paul Curtis off the assembly line and into libraries.  I once read or saw an interview with him where he discussed this title.  Essentially he said that while authors aren’t supposed to say which of their books is their “favorite” his will always be The Watsons since it changed his life in one fell swoop.  It may surprise some people to see The Watsons coming in well above Bud Not Buddy on this list, but for most people this is the Curtis book that will always be first in their hearts.
      The plot description from the publisher reads, “Enter the hilarious world of 10-year-old Kenny and his family, the Weird Watsons of Flint, Michigan. There’s Momma, Dad, little sister Joetta, and brother Byron, who’s 13 and an ‘official juvenile delinquent.’ When Momma and Dad decide it’s time for a visit to Grandma, Dad comes home with the amazing Ultra-Glide, and the Watsons set out on a trip like no other. They’re heading South. They’re going to Birmingham, Alabama, toward one of the darkest moments in America’s history.”
      In Funny Business: Conversations With Writers of Comedy by Leonard Marcus we get the true scoop behind this book’s creation.  “After reading several of his letters, Kay Sookram, his Canadian girlfriend and future wife, told Curtis firmly that he should be a writer.  He had begun to think so too.”  Fast forward ten years into the future and, “Curtis’s career took off when an unpublished version of The Watsons took first place in a writing contest and he was offered a contract to publish his novel.”  Nicely done!  Wonder what that writing contest was. In 1996 it won a Newbery Honor, beaten only by The Midwife’s Apprentice by Karen Cushman.  It also won a Coretta Scott King Award that year.
       By the way, Mr. Curtis has just the loveliest things to say about teachers as part of the publisher’s Teachers Guide online:
“What a thrill the publication of The Watsons Go to Birmingham–1963 has been for me! I’ve been asked many times what the highlight of this experience has been and I don’t have to think at all before answering. It occurred on February 15, 1996 at a reception given by the Flint Public Library when, to my complete surprise and delight, I was introduced by my third-grade teacher, Ms. Suzanne Henry. It wasn’t the fact that in her introduction she gave me a gold star and told everyone that I was Room C’s “Good Citizen of the Day” that affected me so–it was the surprise I felt on realizing that she had always been such an important and powerful part of my life. I hadn’t seen Ms. Henry for more than 35 years, and I had spent only nine months of my life with her when I was 7 or 8–yet as she told everyone gathered in the library how proud of me she was, I found myself near tears.

http://campus-school3.typingclub.com

    Typing Club is an online program that will assist your child with learning and improving their typing speed!

By clicking the above link and logging in with their epgy username and password they may begin.

How does it work?

     Practice each lesson over and over to at least get all three stars. It really doesn't take much to learn, a few minutes a day for one to two weeks and you will be a pro! Using this program, your typing speed will reach 10 to 12 words per minute rather quickly. From there practice on your normal typing activities to increase your speed to 40 - 90 words per minute.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Typing Club

http://campus-school3.typingclub.com

 Dear Parents,

Typing Club is an online program that will assist your child with learning and improving their typing speed!
By clicking the above link and logging in with their epgy username and password they may begin.

How does it work?

Practice each lesson over and over to at least get all three stars. It really doesn't take much to learn, a few minutes a day for one to two weeks and you will be a pro!
Using this program, your typing speed will reach 10 to 12 words per minute rather quickly. From there practice on your normal typing activities to increase your speed to 40 - 90 words per minute.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Discovery & Reading Plus Homefun


Dear Parent(s),
 
I am sending home your child's Discovery Assessment, their Discovery booklet, and the answer key. This is a predictor of this year's TCAP, however please know that it is not the only predictor. Just like last year, the students will take 1-2 more of these assessments. It is common to have some fluctuation of scores throughout the year. There are several items on the assessment that have not yet been discussed in class.
 
I am sending this home for you to review, correct, discuss and return with your child. I do not need them back until January 17th.





All students will begin to complete 30 minutes of Reading Plus for homefun every week. The new Reading Plus is the only Common Core aligned reading intervention that prepares students to engage with complex text by developing all three dimensions of successful readers: capacity, efficiency, and motivation. Developed in partnership with leading reading researchers, the personalized and dynamically adjusting program is proven to increase reading achievement for students in grades 3 and beyond. Our site code is campusschool
https://login.readingplus.com/