Katy Van Aken dreaming of her first year-end play |
Tell us about the final results of this project.
SRO for all 3 performances! Our audience was packed with family
members, students, and staff. On
the last day of school, kids from my class and others borrowed books by the
bagful for summer reading!
What do you think your students gained from this year-end activity?
‘Favorite Parts of Favorite Books’
empowered my students with confidence. They experienced a celebration of their
interests and talents - many newly discovered! - and a journey filled with
great reading, choices, higher level thinking, countless decisions, ah-ha!
moments, creativity, ideas on top of ideas, teamwork, compromise,
responsibility, and the joy of accomplishment. They invented, engineered, re-engineered, ad-libbed, cheered
for each other, and laughed too hard to stand! Without a doubt, it took ALL of us to do this. It was a
present to ourselves and our audience that took the entire school year to
unwrap.
Why would you recommend other teachers try this activity?
The plays captured students’ energy
and interests, keeping them fully engaged up to the last minute of the last
day, applying the skills we’d worked on all year. Best of all, the plays
generated a HUGE interest in reading!
What was the biggest surprise for you as this activity played out over
the years?
When we began to
work on the plays, students begged to come to school early, stay after, and
work through recess. WOW!
What else would you like to tell the readers of this blog about these
year-end plays?
Favorite Parts
of Favorite Books, including scripts, practice, costumes, and scenery, can be
adapted to any grade level or classroom. The plays can be presented one at a
time to celebrate a unit, theme, or grading period. Have a ball!
Katy, THANK YOU!! I'm sure there are hundreds of teachers out there who will now consider adapting this project for their students!
Thank you dearly for this opportunity
to share one of my classroom passions! Here are a few photos of my champions in action:
From Island, removing the bullet |
From Hattie Big Sky, Wolf Point train station scene |
Here are the books we’ve used. Several have been chosen more than
once.
The Sign of the Beaver, Maniac Magee, Holes, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Surviving
the Applewhites, The Cry of
the Icemark, The Game of
Sunken Places, East, The
Door to Time, Dragon Rider, The Elevator Family, The King’s Equal, Inkheart, The Palace of Mirrors, Crash, Just Ella,
Island Book 3: Escape, The Name of This Book is Secret, The 39 Clues Book 6: In Too Deep, Kanines (a student’s novel based
on the Warriors series), Wolf
Brother, 39 Clues Book 1:
The Maze of Bones, Percy
Jackson and the Lightning Thief,
Hattie Big Sky, Harry
Potter and the Order of the Phoenix,
43 Old Cemetery Road – Over My Dead Body, Magic, and all 5 books in the
The Underland Chronicles: Gregor the Overlander, The Prophecy of Bane,
Curse of the Warmbloods, Marks of Secret, Code of Claw
Thank you, Katy, for sharing in such an in-depth way. Your passion and enthusiasm illustrate what's GREAT about our nation's teachers.
What a great idea. One of my critique mates writes short musicals that are used in school settings much like this one.
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