The Poetry Friday Anthology is a great book to infuse poetry into your elementary classroom or library. The book offers one poem each week for each grade level K-5, or 216 poems in all. Each poem is accompanied by a short, lively Take 5! activity designed to engage students. For Texas teachers and librarians, TEKS correlations have been helpfully provided. Short on time? The book is well organized, easy to use, and the compilers suggest that a five-minute poetry break is an effective way to use transition time on Fridays or any other day. An excellent volume for elementary teachers and librarians by well-known compilers Dr. Sylvia Vardell and poet Janet Wong.
Friday, September 14, 2012
The Poetry Friday Anthology: Poems for the School Year with Connections to the TEKS
The Poetry Friday Anthology is a great book to infuse poetry into your elementary classroom or library. The book offers one poem each week for each grade level K-5, or 216 poems in all. Each poem is accompanied by a short, lively Take 5! activity designed to engage students. For Texas teachers and librarians, TEKS correlations have been helpfully provided. Short on time? The book is well organized, easy to use, and the compilers suggest that a five-minute poetry break is an effective way to use transition time on Fridays or any other day. An excellent volume for elementary teachers and librarians by well-known compilers Dr. Sylvia Vardell and poet Janet Wong.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking by Susan Cain
ShelfConsumed has been on a bit of a hiatus as none of you has probably noticed! May was a blur with all those things we do in the library at the end of school. The summer was a wondrous time of grandsons, books, and doing just what we wanted when we wanted. Bliss!
But today was the first day back at school, so I think it's time to get back to thinking about libraries.
One of the best books I read this summer is Susan Cain's Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking. Whether you consider yourself an introvert or an extrovert, I think you'll enjoy what Cain has to say and that you'll find yourself applying her words to situations with friends and family.
I didn't expect was to find implications for education and for the library. Cain's book made me realize that not all students want to "share good books" with friends. It may be hard for some students to go around the table and talk about an author they enjoy. Many students may prefer to work alone rather than in a group. In our rush to collaborate and share, we may be isolating many students who prefer quiet.
I hope you'll find time to read this powerful book and also to find a bit of quiet in your hectic schedule this new school year.
But today was the first day back at school, so I think it's time to get back to thinking about libraries.
One of the best books I read this summer is Susan Cain's Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking. Whether you consider yourself an introvert or an extrovert, I think you'll enjoy what Cain has to say and that you'll find yourself applying her words to situations with friends and family.
I didn't expect was to find implications for education and for the library. Cain's book made me realize that not all students want to "share good books" with friends. It may be hard for some students to go around the table and talk about an author they enjoy. Many students may prefer to work alone rather than in a group. In our rush to collaborate and share, we may be isolating many students who prefer quiet.
I hope you'll find time to read this powerful book and also to find a bit of quiet in your hectic schedule this new school year.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Confessions of a shusher
![]() |
| Marc Levin Creative Commons License 2.0 |
My desk is behind the circulation area, so I can’t see the main library when I’m at my computer, but I can usually hear what’s happening. At the moment there are 26 students in the library, and it’s not silent, but it’s pretty quiet.
It took me the better half of the year to realize that a quiet library is the preference for most of the students who come here. They have lots of work to do, and the library is quieter and more structured than the cafeteria or the commons area.
How did I come to this realization? I started asking kids why they come to the library, which yes, I know I should have done at the beginning of the year. But when I finally got around to asking, just as many said they were seeking quiet as those who needed to use a computer or other resources.
This preference for quiet was surprising to me. Quiet is not what I'd expect kids to want. Quiet school libraries appear unpopular in professional literature, and it seems that school librarians who help maintain this quiet are deemed out of step.
But it’s our job to provide what our patrons need. And I’ve realized that a quiet library and a welcoming library are not mutually exclusive.
So, yes, I occasionally shush kids in the library. I know. I know. But I also smile at kids, try to call them by name, and ask about their activities, their tests, and their weekends. And when they come back to the library by choice, it’s a pretty good feeling.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
ShelfConsumed has moved to shelfconsumed.org
Apparently my domain name has been swiped, and I am not able to find a way to redirect traffic from the old address to the new one. Ack. Aargh.
ShelfConsumed may now be found at http://www.shelfconsumed.org
I would appreciate it if you'd help spread the word! Many thanks.
Saturday, April 21, 2012
TASL thanks
Many thanks to Texas Association of School Librarians (TASL) for naming ShelfConsumed as the best professional blog during the Texas Library Association (TLA) conference last week! TASL is awesome!
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
The Wise Man Said it Best...
| Fotalia |
"50 million Americans haven't read a book in the past 12 months. As a business, THAT'S our #1 problem--not format or distribution models."
Of course we have to think about format and distribution models. It's our job to provide for our patrons in the most friendly, useable, cost-efficient, and sustainable ways possible. It's our job to meet their information and reading needs.
But if our patrons don't have reading needs, John Green is right. Helping to create readers should be our priority.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Author, author!
I'm feeling a little behind the curve in lining up authors for next year, so the last couple of days I've started making some initial inquiries. We're planning on hosting an author for our first through fourth graders and another author for our middle schoolers.
After hosting many authors over the years (see tags for previous post) I've decided that a successful visit is due to lots of advance planning and a little bit of good luck. Selecting the right author is half the battle, so I'll offer a few tips that seem to work for me. I'd love to hear your tips as well. Please comment!
Choosing the right author for your school:
1. Browse your shelves for ideas. Look at which books circulate frequently.
2. Talk to kids (Granted they will probably say Rick Riordan or Suzanne Collins, but it's great to get their ideas).
3. Ask teachers for input. This builds collaboration and buy-in for the visit.
4. Browse author websites to get a feel for their body of work.
5. Try to choose an author that may appeal to a range of readers.
6. Watch author interviews on YouTube to see the author in action. Is he/she engaging?
7. Listen to authors at conferences.
8. Ask other librarians for recommendations.
9. When in doubt, just go for it. Trust your instinct and book that author!
10. Low on funding? Avoid the authors who will come to your school for free unless you've heard them and know they're really good. A bad author visit is counterproductive to your cause. Better to Skype with an interesting author for free or at a reduced cost.
What's worked well for you?
Monday, March 19, 2012
What would Seth (Godin) say?
Conventional wisdom says the rich get richer while the poor continue to struggle. Physics says a body in motion tends to stay in motion, and a body at rest tends to stay at rest.
So does it follow that people who are motivated tend to get more motivated while the unmotivated generally stay that way?
So does it follow that people who are motivated tend to get more motivated while the unmotivated generally stay that way?
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Parish Literary Festival
Our libraries hosted Dr. J. Patrick Lewis, the U.S. Poet Laureate for Children this week for our first-annual Parish Literary Festival.
Pat, as he insists everyone call him, is engaging and informative. If you are looking for someone who can hold the attention of kids of all ages while teaching them about the writing process and poetry, Pat is your author.
For proof positive, see this darling response from a Parish primary student:
Pat, as he insists everyone call him, is engaging and informative. If you are looking for someone who can hold the attention of kids of all ages while teaching them about the writing process and poetry, Pat is your author.
For proof positive, see this darling response from a Parish primary student:
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Ashley Hope Pérez on Writing YA Novels & 5 Keys to Snagging Reluctant Readers
First off, thanks to Leigh Ann for having me here at Shelf Consumed! It’s an honor because I’m a dedicated librarian groupie; if I didn’t have such a loud talking voice, maybe I’d be one of you. Instead, I’m a teacher who became a YA writer.
I owe that journey almost entirely to my (formerly) reluctant readers. In our work to find the key that would unlock the joy of reading for them, they told me about a book they wanted to read but couldn’t find. That book became What Can’t Wait, and students also helped me find the story for my new novel, The Knife and the Butterfly.
I’ll tell you a bit about both novels, but my main purpose here today is to dish out my top 5 tips for snagging reluctant readers and bringing out the bookworm within them.
Here’s the scoop on What Can’t Wait: Seventeen-year-old Marisa Moreno has smarts and plenty of promise, but she’s marooned in a broken-down Houston neighborhood—and in a Mexican immigrant family where making ends meet matters more than making it to college. At school, it's another story. Marisa's calc teacher expects her to ace the AP test and to get into an engineering program in Austin—a city that seems unimaginably far away. When her home life becomes unbearable, Marisa seeks comfort elsewhere—and suddenly neither her best friend nor boyfriend can get through to her. Caught between the expectations of two different worlds and carrying a dark secret, Marisa will finally have to decide what can't wait.
Kirkus Reviews called What Can’t Wait “un magnĂfico debut,” and it recently made YALSA’s 2012 Best Fiction for YA list. (Full reviews of What Can’t Wait from loads of publications all in one place here.) I’m even more excited to report that I’ve heard from librarians from Boston to Austin that this is a title they can’t keep on the shelf!
The Knife and the Butterfly, my latest novel, was just released on February 1. The grittiness goes up a couple of notches in this novel, not because I celebrate violence but because that’s the reality of the world my characters live in. Here’s the low-down:
Azael Arevalo wishes he could remember how the fight ended. He knows his MS13 boys faced off with some punks from Crazy Crew. He can picture the bats, the bricks, the chains. A knife. But he can’t remember anything between that moment and when he woke behind bars. Azael knows jails, and something isn’t right about this lockup. No phone call. No lawyer. No news about his brother or his homies. The only thing they make him do is watch some white girl in some cell. Watch her and try to remember.
Lexi Allen would love to forget the fight, would love for it to disappear back into the Xanax fog it came from. And her mother and her lawyer hope she chooses not to remember too much about the brawl—at least when it’s time to testify. Lexi knows that there’s more at stake in her trial than her life alone, though. Azael needs the truth. The knife cut, but somehow it also connected.
Kirkus Reviews called The Knife and the Butterfly “An unflinching portrait with an ending that begs for another reading,” and the fabulous Jordan Sonnenblick of Drums, Girls, and Dangerous Pie praised it as “harrowing, heart-rending, and ultimately hopeful.” Reviews are still rolling in, but they are continually updated here.
Put The Knife and the Butterfly in the hands of any reader—even the most reluctant—and see what happens. I think you’ll like the results. I wrote with the question, “what would keep my non-readers reading?” always in mind. Which brings me to…
Ashley Hope PĂ©rez’s 5 Keys to Snagging Reluctant Readers
(1) Meet readers where they are. This goes for reading level, length of books, topic, and genre. Of course, I’m preaching to the choir, but many people recommend books to teens based on what they (the recommender) likes. Instead, I leave my preferences aside and try to steer students toward books based on what THEY say about their interests and past reading (or movie watching, for those who insist they’ve never liked a book). Here’s a simple questionnaire that I had students fill out and bring with them on our first trip to the library to give me a starting place for our conversations about books.
(2) Make it easy to find appealing choices. I used to plant books in prominent places in my room so students could stumble upon them. They seemed to like this better than a hard sell, and that also made it okay for them to lay the book aside if it didn’t appeal after all. My reluctant readers seemed to really respond to “If you like X, then try Y…” displays in our library. Also, our librarian renamed one shelving cart “Hot Titles” and filled it with books that were recently returned or frequently checked out, a de facto recommendation from kids’ peers.
(3) Build buzz by giving students time, tools, and space to talk about books they love. When students finish a book and rave about it, have them make a two-sentence pitch for the book saying who would like it and why. These can be displayed or kept in a notebook. These became dog-eared reference in my classroom and soon, students were recommending books to each other. 1-minute book pitches to students as a group work well even coming from a librarian; have another student give the pitch, and good luck keeping that book inside your library!
(4) Encourage readers to make the text their own. I’ve found that, for reluctant readers, making a personal connection to books is the difference between caring (and reading) and letting it fall by the wayside. When using library books or class sets, I provide students with ample tools to annotate their texts as they read (the POUNDS of sticky notes we went through…), and every day after choice reading students wrote briefly in their multi-genre reading log. I also kept poster boards up in the classroom where students could put a sticky note about what they, personally, were getting out of their reading. They loved the idea that our reading time—even though it came in the middle of class—was actually all about pursuing a direction that they chose on their own.
(5) BELIEVE that there is a gateway book for the reluctant reader in front of you. I saw a lot of non-readers become readers over the course of their time with me, but many (many!) of the cases looked pretty hopeless at the beginning. There were sullen glares, rolled eyes, shrugged shoulders… just about every gesture of indifference and disdain that you can fathom. I never responded to this negativity; my optimism—and my belief that there was a book that would change their minds—was iron-clad. All the tips and tricks in the world are empty unless we believe there is something in books, not just for the vague, faceless everyone, but for the specific and difficult teen someone presently refusing eye contact.
Thanks for letting me share some of what I’ve learned about unlocking the reader within reluctant teens. Please don’t hesitate to get in touch with me if you have questions or if there’s any way I can repay the good work of many librarians in my life. Also, I do free skype sessions with teen groups, reading clubs, and classrooms (and live author stuff when we’re not living in Paris).
Bon courage!
—
Ask for The Knife and the Butterfly from your favorite local bookseller or order it from my publisher with a school and library discount.
More interviews, excerpts, guest posts, and secrets (including two truths and a lie) coming throughout Ashley’s The Knife and the Butterfly blog tour. See the full tour schedule here.
Can’t get enough? Check out Ashley’s blog, follow her on twitter @ashleyhopeperez, or find her on facebook.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)









