With my new life of retirement, this blog is morphing into a CURRENT EVENTS BLOG... Including LINKS to CURRENT EVENT SITES (We're RETAINING RESEARCH LINKS in the far right column!) Please share your gems!
Sunday, November 30, 2014
MLA Format Handout
I created this to assist our students as they create Works Cited Pages in the MLA Format. I used Purdue's Owl Website to create it--thank you, Purdue!
If you find errors in this, PLEASE notify me so that I might fix it!
If it proves useful to you, it's up for the taking!
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Includes Video about Van Gogh. (Art is Fun!)
This article contains a video about Van Gogh--discusses what may have caused him to move from creating dark paintings to painting more vibrantly-colored works.
Linguistics Blogger, John Wells
Here's a great blog site for people who love linguistics: Sadly, he's not posting any longer, but his archives are great. (You really have to love linguistics to love this site!)
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Red Moon at Sharpsburg by Rosemary Wells
Red Moon at Sharpsburg
Author: Rosemary Wells (1943 - )
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 978-0-670-03638-7
Dewey Decimal Number: Fic WEL
Reading Range: ATOS Book Level = 4.7;
Interest Level = Middle Grades, Plus
AR Points = 8.0
Book Connection: Story of the Civil War with sympathy
for all parties
This well-researched
historical fiction tells of protagonist/narrator India Moody’s struggles
through the Civil War. When the war
begins, India is twelve years old living in the South’s rich Shenandoah Valley
and has been blessed with the comfort of a loving family, loving friends, and a
loving community. We share her loves,
fears, dangers, and pains as she grows from her naïve, protected world to carry
the burdens of friends and family in the horrors of this especially-bloody war. Uniquely, neither side of the horrific Civil
War is painted as villain or hero.
Mostly, we learn that war is monstrous.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Author: Alexi,
Sherman (1966 - )
Illustrator: Forney, Ellen (1968- )
Copyright: 2007
Illustrator: Forney, Ellen (1968- )
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 978-0-316-01368-0
Dewey
Decimal Number: Fic ELI
Reading Range: ATOS Book Level = 4.0;
Interest Level = Upper Grades;
AR Points = 6.0
Book Connection: Of high interest for readers who are of
“other” culture living in “white culture”
This is a
semi-autobiographical story about growing up on an American Indian Reservation
while trying to fit into the “white world.”
Told in first person, Junior shares interesting bits of his life as he
discovers that life on “the Rez” offers no future, and he works to become more than
an alcoholic. This story is told with
the humor of a teenager, and the many characters are shared in a playful manner. Overall, a very difficult situation is shared
in a palatable—in fact, delightful—way; and we come away full of admiration and
appreciation for those who have this unique cultural struggle.
Monday, September 29, 2014
Boosting SILAS MARNER
Silas Marner:
The Weaver of Raveloe –by
George Eliot
Author: Eliot, George [Evans, Mary Anne]
(1819-1880)
This is your Librarian, Mrs. Meier's, favorite book of all time; so it's especially exciting to have found this beautifully-illustrated copy on the Gutenberg Project (free downloadable eBooks!)! Everyone can enjoy this amazing copy at no cost!
This jewel of a book is an old classic, but--in spite of its perfectly-placed setting of Old England--it transcends time. It is a story of class-disparity, of loss, and of resurrection.
An young weaver, Silas Marner, is betrayed by his best friend and his tight, religious community. Having lost his betrothed and his high standing, Silas moves out of the city and into a quaint old country community in the England of the 17th Century.
Silas comes to love only gold and his solitude until a little girl brings him hope and love. Can he survive if he loses her, too?
This jewel of a book is an old classic, but--in spite of its perfectly-placed setting of Old England--it transcends time. It is a story of class-disparity, of loss, and of resurrection.
An young weaver, Silas Marner, is betrayed by his best friend and his tight, religious community. Having lost his betrothed and his high standing, Silas moves out of the city and into a quaint old country community in the England of the 17th Century.
Silas comes to love only gold and his solitude until a little girl brings him hope and love. Can he survive if he loses her, too?
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
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