IN THE CLASSROOM -- Dr. Seuss says ...
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Danette Goulet
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
reporter Danette Goulet visits a school within the Newport-Mesa district
and writes about her experience.
Wearing tall, colorfully striped hats and clutching teddy bears, bunnies
and blankets, the fourth-graders listened attentively as their classmates
read aloud.
Abandoning their desks, the students in Laurie Schilling’s class pulled
their chairs toward the front of the room, huddling close to catch every
word.
The Davis Elementary School students in Costa Mesa are always concerned
with reading and writing. But last week, they were consumed with books as
they celebrated what would have been the late Dr. Seuss’ 96th birthday,
the theme for this year’s Read Across America Day -- a nationwide
literacy drive.
Each child made a hat, like one you might see a mischievouscat wear in
your favorite Dr. Seuss book. There were white hats with blue and red
stripes. There were blue hats with yellow and white stripes. There were
purple hats with yellow streamers and pink paper chains flowing off the
back.
There were even a few white pillbox-style hats, with grandiose flowers
flopping this way and that.
It was a day devoted to reading.
Students brought books from home to exchange with each other. They
brought pillows and blankets to snuggle up with in the reading corner.
And they toted their favorite books to read out loud.
As the end of the day approached, the students grew nervous and excited
-- it was finally time for the storytelling contest.
The blackboard was covered with words and phrases that the kids came up
with to describe a good storyteller. It read: “Knows the words, props,
proper pronunciation, clear voice.”
The excited chatter subsided as the first student boldly took the chair
facing the eager classmates and laid his large construction paper hat
aside.
As he read “Hop on Pop,” I realized you are never too old for books by
Dr. Seuss, also known as Theodore Geisel.
They are the first books many of us learn to read and the rhythmical,
often tongue-twisting, rhymes remain favorites, even if we don’t realize
it.
Other students tackled “Green Eggs and Ham” and “Oh, the Things You Can
Think” aloud.
Didn’t every child wonder why the eggs and ham were green? And then, did
they say to themselves, I wouldn’t eat them either?
As students voiced the words, they imitated the way adults had read to
them, turning the book toward the audience to let their classmates see
the pictures. One child even tried that patented librarian move --
holding the book facing the audience and read upside-down the entire
time.
Because participating in the storytelling contest was optional, Schilling
was proud and a bit stunned as 15 of her 30 students chose to read out
loud.
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FYI
* Who: Laurie Schilling’s fourth-grade students
* What: Storytelling contest marking Read Across America Day
* Where: Davis Elementary School in Costa Mesa
* Materials: All your favorite Dr. Seuss books
* Lesson: Inspiring children to read and work on oral presentation skills
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