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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: preschool storytime, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Storytime Suggestions: Me Hungry! by Jeremy Tankard

Do I pander?  All right then, I pander.  When you find yourself doing a storytime for the kidlets, you may start to become desperate to hold their attention in some way.  With toddlers I always have the option of singing my head off.  Only a few tots have ever resisted the lure of “The Wheels on the Bus” (the “up and down” part is gold, baby, GOLD!).  Preschoolers don’t mind the occasional song but I’ve often found that sometimes they moan when you fail to read them yet another book.  That is a good sign.  It means (A) that they like books and (B) that they don’t mind hearing YOU read said book.  Today’s particular title came out in board book form not that long ago, but I tend to stick with the old reliable hardcover version.  Sometimes I wonder if the future will consist of a children’s librarian, like myself, holding a big iPad up to a group of kids and reading a book that way.  Then my brain starts spluttering like an overheated engine and I have to place some cooling pads beneath my ears until I regain some level of coherence.

Jeremy Tankard, I have found, is a storytime librarian’s best friend.  There’s not a book he’s produced that doesn’t zap inattentive kids to attention.  This one’s the simplest, but as you can see it reads just fine without needing too much in the way of wordplay.

Name: Me Hungry!
Author/Illustrator: Jeremy Tankard
In Print?: Yep. And available in both hardcover and board book formats.  Paperback is out of stock at the moment.
ISBN: 978-0763633608
Best For: Preschool Storytime

Storytime Suggestions:

Warning: You do run the risk of ending up with a roomful of children who upon returning home will turn to their parental units and demand in tones of indisputable authority, “Me hungry!”  On the other hand, it beats whining.

The book allows you to do a variety of different voices, from the gruff dad to the beleaguered mom to the terrified bunny (who I just noticed, for the first time, appears on the cover as well).

The downside?  Well, as you can see it’s an incredibly fast read.  That means you will retain the audience’s attention, sure, but on the downside it’ll be two minutes long (and only if you really stretch it out).

Storytime Suggestions by Readers Have Included:

  • After mentioning Hennepin County Library system’s filmed fingerplays for kids birth to six, Jess at Garish & Tweed pointed out that King County’s wiki includes Fingerplays, Rhymes and Songs that you can watch.  I was delighted to find a version of A Ram Sam Sam that doesn’t go as high, vocally, as the versions I’ve heard before.  Finally I can incorporate it into my storytimes!  Fantastic!
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    6 Comments on Storytime Suggestions: Me Hungry! by Jeremy Tankard, last added: 10/8/2010
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2. Storytime Suggestions: Rhyming Dust Bunnies

That went well!  A week or two ago I announced that I would begin a new series on this blog.  My idea was that children’s librarians always want to see how other children’s librarians tell different stories.  It gives us ideas.  We can steal ways of telling books and incorporate them into our own storytimes.  So I did a post called Storytime Suggestions that consisted of a video of me reading The Noisy Counting Book by Susan Schade along with suggestions on how to present it.

Well I had so much fun that I’m doing it again!  And since we already did a Toddler Storytime book last time, let’s go for a Preschool Storytime book this time!

We begin.

Name: Rhyming Dust Bunnies
Author: Jan Thomas
In Print?: You bet.
ISBN: 978-1-4169-7976-0
Best For: Preschool Storytime

Storytime Suggestions: While there’s nothing saying you couldn’t present this book to a group of toddlers or even second graders, I personally feel that the ideal audience for this book is preschoolers (which is to say, 3-5 year olds).  First off, when each Dust Bunny asks for words that rhyme with “car” or “cat”, sometimes an enterprising preschooler will interject with suggestions of their own.  You can totally use that.  And that makes Bob’s ill-rhymed words all the better.

Some librarians I know have performed a kind of Readers’ Theater with this book.  They’ve taken colored fluff, be it faux fur or colored cotton balls, and stuck ‘em on the ends of pencils or popsicle sticks.  Or, if your office looks anything like my own, you can grab actual dust bunnies and give ‘em a dye job.  And googly eyes.  Be sure you are well stocked in googly eyes.

The advantage of any Jan Thomas book is that it reads well from a distance.  Now in this video I cut off the side of the book once in a while, but it’s rarely a problem because the images are so doggone big.  Thomas participates in what I like to call The Todd Parr/Lucy Cousins Effect.  Which is to say, if you combine thick black lines and bold colors, kids go gaga.  Add in some humor and you’ve come up with the world’s greatest readalouds.

When doing a Jan Thomas books in a preschool storytime you can always begin with this one after the preliminaries.  It doesn’t get the children so riled up they won’t sit for more books (unlike, say, Can You Make a Scary Face?), though they may be baffled by the ending.  I love Ms. Thomas but while her books read aloud beautifully, her en

10 Comments on Storytime Suggestions: Rhyming Dust Bunnies, last added: 7/8/2010
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