Based upon the picture book, Giraffes Can’t Dance, this sturdy and colorful board book is a fun way for little ones to learn how to count to ten.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Giraffe Books, Ages 0-3, Animals, Counting, Dancing, Board Books, Numbers, Animal Books, Giles Andreae, Boards Books, Jungle Animals, Poetry & Rhyme, Guy Parker-Rees, Add a tag
Blog: Margo Dill's Read These Books and Use Them! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Picture Book, individuality, Elementary Educators, Personal Connections, Preschool to 1st grade teachers, Shared Writing, Art activities, Sequencing, Sequence Practice, silly picture books, jungle animals, Brown Peter, Add a tag
*Picture book for preschoolers through 2nd graders
*Mr. Tiger as the main character
*Rating: Mr. Tiger Goes Wild is a super, cute picture book that sends the message to children that they need to listen to their heart and become individuals. It’s also okay to miss your friends and love them for whom they are! I was lucky enough to see Peter Brown in person in St. Peters, MO, at a library presentation. He is a very funny speaker and a talented artist. It was a great night. Although my husband said to him at the book signing: “Now my daughter is going to want to take her clothes off and run wild in the jungle.” Oh, so not true–but Peter did apologize. My daughter is now in love with this very cute book.
Short, short summary: Mr. Tiger is bored and grumpy in his regular outfit and acting prim and proper in his village all the time. He decides to go WILD one day and walk on all four legs instead of on two legs. Then he decides to go swimming and shed the clothes–now he’s like a real tiger! So Mrs. Elephant tells him to go be wild in the wilderness, and off to the jungle he goes. At first, he is having a marvelous time, but he misses his friends-even the prim and proper ones. So, he goes back to his village, and he realizes that he can be an individual there, too, and his friends will still love him. And his uniqueness might just have worn off on an elephant or two.
So, what do I do with this book?
1. What do children think about what Mr. Tiger did? Do they think he acted in the right way? How do they feel about Mr. Tiger’s friends? Why do they think he got lonely? These are the types of discussion questions you can have with young children when you are reading this book with them.
2. You can do an easy sequencing activity with this book. You or even children can draw Mr. Tiger at different stages of the book–each on a separate sheet of 8 1/2 “ x 11 ” paper. So, you would have a drawing of him at the beginning grumpy and bored, then on all fours with his clothes on, then swimming, then no clothes, then in the jungle, etc. As a whole group activity, mix up the order and have children come up and put the drawings in the right order to retell the story.
3. Ask children to draw an illustration of themselves “going wild” and write a sentence about it. You should probably discuss this first–so you don’t get too many naked pictures. HA! But you can make a list like: they could dress up in funny costumes, do a silly dance, wear clown makeup, etc.
Add a CommentBlog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: cute, illustration friday, children's art, turtle, monkeys, whimsical, duck, bananas, bedding, nursery art, the enchanted easel, nicole's nursery art, jungle animals, Add a tag
Blog: the enchanted easel (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: monkey, whimsical, lion, colorful, safari, bright, bedding, nursery art, the enchanted easel, jungle animals, cute, Add a tag