Monthly Archives: July 2012

Writing Wednesday: Family Photos

The combination of digital cameras and airplanes means many parents have photos of people whom their kids have never met and places they’ve never been.  These photos can be used in myriad ways to encourage language skills.

Source: Wikimedia Commons

One way to start is to simply tell kids the stories behind the photos.  Choose just a couple and judge your child’s interest level.  This is not supposed to be torture!  Your words will expose your child to important communication skills like narrative structure, audience awareness, and the importance of description.  You begin with a concrete item (the photo) but move into abstract discussion (the story surrounding the photo).  Most importantly, you demonstrate to your child that you value using language to communicate.

Source: Wikimedia Commons

ELL Families: We work with many parents who don’t feel fluent in English themselves but want to support their children’s studies.  This sort of story-telling, in any language, will help your child’s English language skills.  “Fluency” is not only knowing the vocabulary and grammar of the language, but also being able to put that knowledge together to create an entirely new sentence.  Doing that in your first language will help your child do it in many languages.

So turn on your computer, open up a photo album, and tell your child a story!

Book Review: The Paper Crane

In this retelling of a Japanese folktale by artist Molly Bang, an old man brings magic and joy to a quiet restaurant when he pays for his meal with an origami crane.  (Grade level 2+.)

The Paper Crane

The Paper Crane by Molly Bang

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Bang’s version of this Japanese folktale captures multiculturalism in the best way. The three main characters are clearly Japanese, as is the origami crane at the center of the story. The other characters are a diverse bunch and – my favorite detail of all – the restaurant owned by the main character serves Western food like garden salad and layer cake, with nary a chopstick in sight. It’s a subtle lesson, reminding us that minorities can simultaneously embrace some aspects of their heritage without being ghettoized into a needless representation of *all* mainstream expectations.

Bang’s artistic choices also stand out here, as she uses dimensional paper collage to illustrate a story about the power of a piece of paper art. The crane itself begins as the well-known origami figure, before becoming something more within the story … but remaining a paper crane from the perspective of the reader, a nice visual example of what the word “irony” technically means.

View all my reviews

E-Resource: Zimmer Twins

Young movie makers will enjoy the Zimmer Twins website which provides animated clips and dialogue screens which kids can then assemble into their very own stories.  It is an entertaining way to practice writing and story-telling skills.

The basic site is free, although a paid membership is available (a nice touch: they do not automatically charge your credit card when your membership period ends).  Unfortunately, Zimmer Twins requires Flash, so it cannot be used on any iOS devices.  When signing up, children are required to provide a parent or guardian’s email address, and they cannot use their own names for their accounts – the site takes kids’ safety seriously and begins teaching them the basics of Internet safety and courtesy.

With paid membership, you get more clips to choose from, but I actually like the existing limitations.  There is still a huge selection with the free account, and the teacher in me appreciates the ways students have creatively used what’s available to tell an infinite variety of stories.

Try using Zimmer Twins to make any of these movies:

  • Write a story set in the future … or the past.
  • Write a sequel to someone else’s movie.
  • Tell the true story of something that really happened to you.
  • Tell a story backwards.
  • Recreate your favorite book.

Have fun!

Friday the 13th

Today is Friday the 13th. In American culture, 13 is an unlucky number (7 is lucky), and Friday the 13th is especially bad. cloud hosting info In fact, there is a series of horror films named after this unlucky day. Friday used to be considered an unlucky day in general, but that has mostly been forgotten, perhaps because the invention of the weekend has made people much happier about Friday!

Triskaidekaphobia is the fear of the number 13. The word comes from Greek: tris = three; kai = and; deka = ten; phobia = fear. It has inspired some strange efforts by hotels, airlines and others to avoid that number. Next time you are on an elevator in a tall building, look to see if the numbers jump from 12 to 14.

Friggatriskaidekaphobia and paraskevidekatriaphobia are less-well known words that both mean the fear of Friday the 13th.

What is your lucky – or unlucky – number?

Weekend Fun: WGBH FunFest

PBS is a TV network respected for its advertisement-free shows like children’s favorites Curious George, Arthur, and Clifford the Big Red Dog.  This Sunday from noon-6pm, your family can enjoy ice cream and live music while meeting these characters at the WGBH FunFest.

Tickets are $5 for children and $10 for adults at the door.  Boston Central’s website has the address and hours.  (While you’re there, sign up for Boston Central’s weekly email which will keep you informed about all the best family events around the city.) server headers

Book Review: One Cool Friend

With a story as whimsical as Imogene’s Antlers (also by  illustrator David Small), readers will discover exactly how to get a distracted parent’s permission to bring home a pet penguin.  Sorry, mom and dad.  (Grade level 1+.)

One Cool FriendOne Cool Friend by Toni Buzzeo

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Good story, excellent illustrations – One Cool Friend is an off-kilter book that lets you get used to its absurdity in time to *still* be surprised by the ending. After the first reading, I found that Small’s art was doing more of the heavy lifting, as previously-unnoticed clues and jokes made themselves seen. As a teacher, I often prefer this balance, as students seem more apt to put their own spin on retellings.

View all my reviews

Book Review: Everlost

In the first of the Skinjacker trilogy, Nick and Allie must learn to survive as Everlosts – we’d call them ghosts but that’s a rude term according to the Everlosts themselves.  Schusterman’s novel is a well-realized alternative universe layered right on top of the universe we living people are so accustomed to.  The trilogy is completed with Everwild and Everfound.  (Grade level 5+.)

Everlost (Skinjacker, #1)Everlost by Neal Shusterman

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Two things I particularly enjoy about Schusterman’s writing:

First, he has a way of turning a clever phrase. Sometimes insightful, sometimes funny – every ten or twenty pages I find myself reaching for a post-it to flag some sentence. He doesn’t get these phrases by overwriting, either. Not every sentence is some … ahem … gem dripping like honey from the author’s rapier wit. Yeah, nothing like that tripe.

Secondly, his characters are not Boys and Girls. Sure, the characters are male and female, but some books seem to be always thinking of the characters as gendered beings first and foremost, as if they are in urgent need of a public bathroom. Not this book, where the characters are, first and foremost, characters. They are individuals who act according to -all- aspects of their personality and circumstance. It is hard to explain, and I assume it is harder to write (consciously, at least), but at least I can say I like what I read when I open the pages of Everlost.

View all my reviews

Hello friends!

Welcome to We Two Tutoring’s new website. Allison and Jennifer are so excited to have you here!

In upcoming weeks, you will see book reviews, educational resources, and family activities posted here.

We will also use this website to post any announcements and let you know what special topics we are covering in class or on the Yellow Bookcase.

Say hi in the comments below! If you want, you can let us know if there is anything you especially hope we will discuss here.