Grand View Elementary School Library
manhattan beach unified school district
Heidi snively - library RESOURCE specialist
310/546-8022 x5404
  • Home
    • Class Visit Schedule
    • Library Policies
    • Library Map
    • Our School
    • Our School District
    • Our Education Foundation
    • GV Library on Facebook
    • About Mrs. Snively
  • News & Events
    • New Books in the Library
    • Readathon Fundraiser
    • Super Literacy Quiz Bowl
    • CA Young Reader Medal
    • Monthly Highlights
  • Read-alouds
    • Read-Alouds 2024-25
    • Read-Alouds 2023-24
    • Read Alouds 2022-23
    • Read-Alouds 2021-22
    • Read-alouds 2020-21
    • Mrs. Snively Reads to You
    • Read-alouds 2019-20
    • Read-alouds 2018-19 Mar-Jun
    • Read-alouds 2018-19 Aug-Feb
    • Read-alouds 2017-18
    • Read-alouds 2016-17
    • Read-alouds 2015-16
    • Read-Alouds 2014-15
    • Read-Alouds 2013-14
    • Read-Alouds Archive
  • Resources
    • Discovery Education Video (password protected)
    • World Book Encyclopedia (password protected)
    • Encyclopedia Britannica (no password needed)
    • TeachingBooks.net (use with or without password)
    • California K-12 Online Content Project
    • Reading Lists
    • Student Resources
    • Parent/Teacher Resources
    • Resources for Library Colleagues
    • MBUSD Library Catalogs
    • CA Dept. of Ed. School Libraries Curriculum & Instruction
    • Articles about Reading Trends and More
  • Volunteers
  • CATALOG

Read-Alouds and Presentations Week to Week by Grade Level

3/24/2025

 
Looking for content from previous weeks? Scroll further down.

Week of March 24, 2025 | TK & Kindergarten | Let's Roll

Picture
Picture
Picture
Roly-Poly Egg, by Kali Stileman
Splotch is a small bird who lives high up in a tree. One day, she lays an egg. It is small and very spotty, but Splotch thinks it is perfect in every way! This is the story of Splotch and the adventure of her roly-poly egg. Follow the dotted line and see where it goes. Along the way, find lots of animals and a butterfly on every page.
​
Science Connection Video When I was a little girl, I adored roly polies! Somehow, they were not creepy like other insects, and guess what? They are not true insects! Learn all about the wonderful roly poly from PBS Digital Studios. 

Pill Bug Does Not Need Anybody, by Jonathan Fenske

Pill Bug rolls alone. Pill Bug does not need anybody. And Pill Bug likes it that way, until he finds himself in a tight spot! Can he get out of this on his own, or does Pill Bug need a helping hand? Video

Crafty Connection There is no right or wrong way to make your own Splotch and egg. Get some paint and blend two colors in a riotous scribble-circle for Splotch's body. Use paper cut outs to add eyes, legs, and the egg. Here is a how-to. In the library we'll create with crayons.
​
Let's Roll While you're waiting for paint to dry, roll around in the backyard like a roly poly!

Week of March 24, 2025 | First Grade | Spring Seeds

Picture
Picture
The Reason for a Flower, by Ruth Heller
Explains plant reproduction and the purpose of a flower and presents some plants which don't seem to be in flower but are.

We Are Growing! by Laurie Keller

Walt is not the tallest or the curliest or the pointiest or even the crunchiest. A confounded blade of grass searches for his 'est' in this story about growing up.

Crafty Connection Spring flower pot color by number with monetary denominations


At-Home Connection Make spring flowers with chenille stems

Week of March 24, 2025 | Second Grade | Women's History Month
Curriculum Connection: Field Trip to See Dinosaur Bones

Picture
Picture
Lyme Regis, Dorset, England
Picture
Mary Anning (1799-1847)
Picture
Video A brief tour of Lyme Regis

Video Background information provided by the Lyme Regis Museum

Dinosaur Lady: the Daring Discoveries by Mary Anning, the first paleontologist, by Linda Skeers
This introduction to the life and achievements of Mary Anning (1799-1847) describes how her work reshaped scientific understanding of the natural world and helped launch the field of paleontology.

Video Dinosaur Hall Los Angeles Natural History Museum

Crafty Connection Step-by-step video show how to draw a baby dinosaur in an egg

Week of March 24, 2025 | Third Grade | Women in Science

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Video Ada Lovelace

Ada Byron Lovelace and the Thinking Machine, by Laurie Wallmark
​
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 The Babbage Difference Engine 

Crafty Connection Spring flower pot color by number with monetary denominations

Week of March 24, 2025 | Fourth Grade | Women in Science

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Video Construction of the Brooklyn Bridge on HistoryPod 

Secret Engineer: How Emily Roebling Built the Brooklyn Bridge, by Rachel Dougherty
Emily Warren Roebling (1843-1903) was way ahead of her time. As a young girl she studied math and science. Her husband was the chief engineer of the suspension bridge spanning the East River but when he became incapacitated after contracting "the bends" Emily became his go-between for the remaining years that it took to complete the project, teaching herself to interpret plan equations and drawings.

Crafty Connection Brooklyn Bridge coloring sheet

Week of March 24, 2025 | Fifth Grade | Women in Science

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Counting on Katherine: How Katherine Johnson Saved Apollo 13, by Helaine Becker
From an early age Katherine (1918-2020) loved numbers. She was ready for high school at age 10, but her West Virginia hometown was segregated and there was no high school for Black children. Her family moved to another town and Katherine graduated from a Black high school there by age 14. She began a career as a human computer in the early 1950s for the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (which later became NASA) earning the trust of the astronauts with her competency and creativity.

The Boy Who Loved Math by Deborah Heiligman. At the age of four Paul Erdos (1913-1996) could ask you when you were born and then calculate the number of seconds you had been alive in his head. But he didn't learn to butter his own bread until he turned twenty! 

Video N Is a Number: a Portrait of Paul Erdos (trailer)

Having an Erdos Number Paul Erdos published papers with 507 coauthors. In the mathematics community those 507 people have the coveted distinction of having an Erdos number of 1, meaning that they wrote a paper with Erdos himself. Someone who published a paper with one of his coauthors is said to have an Erdos number of 2, and an Erdos number of 3 means that someone wrote a paper with someone who wrote a paper with someone who worked with Erdos. Albert Einstein’s Erdos number was 2. The highest known Erdos number is 15; this excludes non mathematicians, who all have an Erdos number of infinity.

Website Magical Answer to an 80-Year-Old Puzzle. Terence Tao, now a math professor at UCLA, was a youngster when he met Erdos, earning his Erdos number of 1.

Crafty Connection Cat tessellation coloring sheet


Crafty Extensions Create an easy cat tessellation or go all the way and create your own pattern using this worksheet and video demonstration.
    Picture
    Picture

    Library Program

    Our students enjoy weekly visits for presentations crafted to instill a love of reading, to enhance classroom lessons, and to inspire life-long learning. Visits include checking out materials, practicing information literacy, and exercising digital citizenship.
    Colleagues are welcome to borrow program ideas.

    California Model School Library Standards 

    Read Aloud 15 Minutes 
    Every Child
    Every Parent
    Every Day
    Why It Matters 
    Picture

    Archives

    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024

    Categories

    All
    100th Day Of School
    AAPI
    Apples
    Banned Books Week
    Baseball
    Beloved Older Books
    Beverly Cleary
    Black History Month
    Books And Reading
    Caldecott Medal
    Cats
    CA Young Reader Medal
    Children's Book Week
    Christmas
    COVID-19 Five-Year Mark
    D.E.A.R. Time
    Dinosaurs
    Dot Day
    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
    Dr. Seuss
    Earth Day
    Elements Of Mystery
    Endangered Animals
    Fantasy
    First Day Of School
    Frogs
    Groundhog Day
    Halloween
    Hanukkah
    Hispanic/Latinx Month
    Information Literacy
    Insects
    Kindness
    Library Skills
    Lunar New Year
    Manners
    Memorial Day
    Mindfulness
    Monsters
    National Library Week
    Peace Week
    Picture Book Month
    Poetry Month
    Pumpkins
    Recipes
    Rocks
    Rotary Readers
    Screen Time Awareness
    Social Emotional Learning
    Social Issues
    Social Justice
    Spiders
    Summer
    Super Literacy Quiz Bowl
    Thanksgiving
    Valentine's Day
    Wetlands
    Who's On First
    Winter
    Witches
    Women's History Month
    Worms

    RSS Feed