As of March 16, 2020, MBUSD schools are dismissed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Distance learning is in place until further notice.
To my library colleagues around the country: you are welcome to borrow any ideas that may work for your own students.
Week of March 23, 2020 - TK and Kindergarten - The Alphabet
A raucous creature eats everything in sight from A to Z.
Video See and hear this book read aloud by Mike Golczynski on Mr. Mike's Storytime Bonanza from the Ionia Community Library. The reader is off camera, and provides a nice close up of the book's pages for students to pause the video and read along.
Activity Download and print pages to make your own ABC book from easypeasyandfun.com.
More Mo Did you know Mo Willems will doodle with you? Click here for doodle fun with Mo.
Week of March 23, 2020 - First Grade
Bedtime, or Anytime, Reading Together Makes Us Feel Better
A Good Knight helps three little dragons who are having trouble getting to sleep.
Video See and hear this book read by Grandma at MaynStreetLife.
Get Well, Good Knight, by Shelley Moore Thomas
A good knight does his best to help his three ill dragon friends with a wizard's soups, but when these fail miserably, the knight realizes he needs a more dependable source of aid.
Video See and hear this book read by Shauna Patek.
Week of March 23, 2020 - Second Grade
A Playful Connection to Dinosaur Research Project
Pre-read discussion Front load some of the vocabulary with this guide found at teachingbooks.net provided by Macmillan.
Video See and hear this story read by Dustin Steichmann for AHEV Library. The reader is off camera and provides a nice close up of the book's pages for students to pause the video and read along.
Activity Extend the reading experience with this guide found at teachingbooks.net provided by Macmillan.
Week of March 23, 2020 - Third Grade - Women's History Month
Ada Lovelace (1815-1852) was fascinated by numbers as a child and is considered by many to be the mother of computer programming. In 1953, more than a century after her death, her notes on Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine were republished. The engine has now been recognized as an early model for a computer and her notes as a description of a computer and software.
Video See the story presented by author Laurie Wallmark at Talks by Google. The author reads the story and asks thought-provoking questions.
Video See and hear this story read by Rebecca Knowles at Rebecca Reads. The reader is off camera and provides a nice close up of the book's pages for students to pause the video and read along.
Week of March 23, 2020 - Fourth Grade - Women's History Month
Describes the opposition Elizabeth Blackwell (1821-1910) faced while pursuing a medical education, and her pioneering medical career that opened doors for future generations of women. Blackwell was rejected by 28 medical schools before being accepted to Geneva College (now Hobart College) in New York. She was the first woman in the United States (1849) to earn a medical degree.
Pre-read discussion Parent and child can each tell about something they wanted to do, but were told that they could not. Why did you want to do it? How did it feel to be denied the opportunity?
Video See and hear this story read by NC Bookgirl Colleen Yarnell. The reader is off camera and provides a nice close up of the book's pages for students to pause the video and read along.
Activity To enrich and deepen the understanding of the material, try these discussion questions found at teachingbooks.net.
Week of March 23, 2020 - Fifth Grade - Women's History Month
A picture book portrait of the celebrated Supreme Court justice traces her achievements through the lens of her many famous acts of civil disagreement against inequality, unfair treatment and human rights injustice. In celebration of her 86th birthday on March 15, 2019, fans "planked like Ruth."
Video See and hear this story read by the Children's Librarian at the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library.
Activity Extend the reading experience with this curriculum guide provided by Simon & Schuster.