Growing Readers: The Power of Appeal Terms and book hooks
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Transcript of Growing Readers: The Power of Appeal Terms and book hooks
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GROWING READERS: THE POWER OF APPEAL TERMS AND BOOK HOOKS
O. NesiNYCSLA Workshop November 20, 2010
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TO START LETS READ But Excuse Me That is My Book by Lauren Child
Write a brief annotation for the book and share out
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Now Lets Go Back
Lets revisit the last activity using the language of appeal
Describe the story elements for the book we read using the appeal terms provided
Whats different? How? Why?
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THE STORY OF CAVALLAROS STUDENTSBUT REALLY THIS MIGHT BE THE STORY OF ALL OF OUR STUDENTS
Helping students find the books they like with their help vs. without their help (Nah)
Its about a boy
Its interesting. What does that mean, anyway?
Or we can teach them to use a common intelligent vocabulary to describe what they like (and dislike)
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MODIFICATIONS ANYONE?
Story Element: PACE
Story Element: TONE
Story Element: STORY LINE
Story Element: CHARACTERS / CHARACTERIZATION
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LETS READ
and assign appeal terms to more picture books
(then, lunch)
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SUMMARIES VS. BOOK HOOKSIf youre like me, you tend to regard plot summaries as a necessary boredom at best revealing almost nothing about the way a book actually works, almost nothing about why it succeeds or fails. If plot were the crucial measure, thered be no difference between a story about the fish that got away and Moby Dick. Will Blythe NY Times Book Review July 11, 2010
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WHAT IS A BOOK HOOK EXACTLY?
Neither a summary, nor a reviewA 2-3 paragraph distillation of the reading experience provided by a bookIt starts from the readers personal point of engagement Should capture the elements of a story in such a way as to entice someone to want to read itGives readers an in to the story by revealing its hookSame book different readers different hooks
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AND HOW DO I WRITE ONE?Begin by referring to the lists of appeal terms as you read
Jot down the adjectives you think best describe the feel of the book you are reading
Include as little as possible about the plot
Determine which of the story elements to feature in your Book Hook, then work them in
Practice, practice, practice (and it helps if you like the book)
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LETS READ & DISCUSS HOOKS
Winston the Book Wolf by Marni McGee and Ian Beck
The Winston Book HooksWhich ones work? Why?What doesnt work? Why?
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TIME TO WRITE SOME BOOK HOOKS
First: a story -
Visit by Walter Dean Myers
Then, Book Hooks and share out
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A BOOK HOOK POSSIBILITY FOR VISITIn this grim and impossibly hopeless story, a father visits his estranged son on death row. What minutes are left to them are spent in palpable discomfort, confession, regret and inescapable resignation.
Pace: measured*Tone: Heavy, quiet, sadStory line: thought provoking*Characters: introspective
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ONE MORE BOOK HOOK
Another story -
Snowbound by Lois Lowry
Now Book Hooks and share out
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A BOOK HOOK POSSIBILITY FOR SNOWBOUNDIn this light, humorous story, a young girl and her odd and obnoxious boyfriend visit with her family during a snow storm. Well drawn characters and a tightly focused story line draw readers fully into the episode.
Pace: relaxedTone: humorous and engaging*Story line: layered*Characters: well developed and vivid
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WHAT COMES FIRST?Set up a Book Hook binder in your library
Read as much as you humanly can out of your collection
Write Book Hooks for everything you read out of your collection
Teach your kids to refer to the binder any time they are looking for reading suggestions.
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THENAppeal terms and Book Hook writing PDs for ELA teachers
Book Hook binders in every ELA classroom
Generate lists of read alikes using your Book Hooks. Sort these by appeal
Get kids hooked on reading!