I love January, but my sweet homeschool kiddos don’t seem to love it quite as much. Thus, a blues poem for my girls and all the students who wish they were still on Christmas vacation… School is in session Equations are flying Students are moaning Brain cells are frying Reading and painting Dividing and…
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Blog: WORDS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fun, poetry, school, students, poems, writing for children, fun poems, january, funny poetry, student poetry, Add a tag

Blog: Crazy For Kids Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fun poems, Poetry Friday, Ogden Nash, Add a tag
The GuppyIt's hard not to smile out loud with some of Ogden Nash's witty poems. Some could almost be considered "poem-lets" because of their brevity. But there are lots to choose from.
Here are a few samples:
Whales have calves,
Cats have kittens,
Bears have cubs,
Bats have bittens,
Swans have cygnets,
Seals have puppies,
But guppies just have little guppies.
The Firefly
The firefly's flame Is something for which science has no name
I can think of nothing eerier
Than flying around with an unidentified glow on a person's posteerier.
Further Reflections on Parsley
Parsley
Is gharsley.

Blog: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Little Bear-s Grandad, Nigel Gray, The Frog Ballet, The Puddleman, Vanessa Cabban, Children's Books, Ian Whybrow, Picture Books, grief, Jane Ray, Books at Bedtime, reading to children, Raymond Briggs, Katie Morag, Grandparent stories, A Balloon for Grandad, Adrian Reynolds, Amanda McCardie, Ana Baca, Anthony Accardo, Benito-s Sopaipillas-Las sopaipillas de Benito, Caroline Crossland, Harry and the Robots, Add a tag
Following on from Charlotte’s post the other day, I thought I would put together a list of a few of the books my family loves, which focus on that special bond between grandchildren and their grandparents.
I have already talked about the Katie Morag books, in which both her grandmothers are central. I wish we’d known about Nigel Gray’s A Balloon for Grandad when we lived abroad; as it is, we discovered it recently in our local library. Illustrated by one of my favorite illustrators, Jane Ray, it deals in such an uplifting way with the separation which is sometimes inevitable when generations live a long way from each other. Then there are Ana Baca and Anthony Accardo’s Benito books – look out for a review of their latest bilingual title Benito’s Sopaipillas/ Las Sopaipillas de Benito in next week’s update of PaperTigers (I’ll add the link to this post when it’s available).
We also love Raymond Briggs’ typically quirky story The Puddleman. You have to be an indulgent grandfather to allow your grandson to lead you around by a dog-lead attached to your wrist and call you “Collar” - but the hint at the end, where Briggs thanks “Miles” for “the naming of puddles, Collar” etc. would suggest that he had real-life, grandson inspiration for the story! It’s a loving, imaginative tale that also provides a particularly special read-aloud experience. Since it is a cartoon strip, you can’t just read it as a narrative; you have to share the interpretation of the pictures alongside the reading of the dialogue and build it up together.
Sometimes we need books to help us talk about the illness or death of a beloved grandparent. (more…)
Now who wouldn’t be cheered up by that promise!
Happy New Year, Donna!
After those treats, they’ll all be ready for naps which may help eliminate some griping too.
Cool – like, totally.