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The reunion was a joyful one, relief on all sides spilling over into elation.
Click on a title below for book recommendations; reading, writing, and art information and activities; and discussion questions. • An Annotated List of Suggested Read Alouds and Independent Reads Magical Food! An Annotated List of Suggested Read Alouds and Independent Reads by Geri Zabela Eddins, NCBLA
Read Alouds: Speed, Toby. Illustrated by Barry Root. Brave Potatoes. 32p. Gr. K-3. Muth, Jon J. Stone Soup. 32p. Gr. K-4.
Independent Reads: Cook, Deanna. Kids' Multicultural Cookbook: Food and Fun Around the World. 157p. Gr. 1-4. Dahl, Roald. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. 160p. Gr. 4-7. Kingfisher, Rupert. Illustrated by Sue Hellard. Madame Pamplemousse and Her Incredible Edibles. © 2011 Geri Zabela Eddins by Marilyn Ludolph, Ed.D, Dominican University School of Education
Response Journal A Response Journal is a written response to various genres: literature, poetry, mathematics, history, or geography. It has been described as a vehicle to provide a personal and meaningful connection to text in order to support retention. (Brozo, 1989) (Richek et al., 2002) The purpose of student writing in this format is to engage in free writing and free expression as a response to text. Comprehension increases as a result of personalization of thoughts and ideas. A graphic organizer that includes the text on the left side of the page and a space for writing a response on the right side of the page can be very helpful. Before Reading: Introduce the material to be read, such as one particular episode of The Exquisite Corpse Adventure. Good readers reflect on what they know and how information can personally affect them. During Reading: Students read the selection and record their thoughts, feelings, opinions, questions, likes, or dislikes connected to the reading. After Reading: Notes taken during reading can support students as they engage in class discussion and in their interpretation of facts, events, or ideas that were presented in the reading. © 2011 Marilyn Ludolph Discussion Questions and Activities by Geri Zabela Eddins, NCBLA When protagonists Nancy and Joe first embarked on this adventure in Episode 1, they left with not much more than the clothes on their backs. Finding food and drink has been exceedingly difficult as the twins travel through space and time. In Episode 21 Nancy and Joe are once again famished. Angel offers them “whatever” they want using the food replicator onboard the Cradle of Time. Not only can the twins choose anything, but Joe can hardly believe that no one is imposing any kind of limitations---they can eat whatever and as much as they both want. Nancy chooses oatmeal, and Joe chooses pizza. Are you surprised by their choices? Do Nancy and Joe overindulge? What do their choices and actions say about them? If you could have access to a food replicator when you get home after school each day, would you choose something healthy? What would you ask for? If you had not eaten anything for days, do you think your choices would be different? Why? The food replicator provides an easy solution for ensuring the characters get fed. A type of food replicator provides easy access to food for a laboring family in the Brother Grimm’s fairy tale “The Magic Table, the Golden Donkey, and the Club in the Sack.” Visit your local library, and check out a collection of Grimm’s fairy tales. Read “The Magic Table, the Golden Donkey, and the Club in the Sack,” and discover how the “food replicator” in this folk tale works! Do you think The Exquisite Corpse Adventure authors Steven Kellogg and Linda Sue Park were inspired by the Grimm’s food replicator? Can you think of a more modern version of a food replicator in other stories or TV shows? Can you think of other stories in which hungry children are offered extreme amounts of food? Consider the Grimm’s fairy tale “Hansel and Gretel” and Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. What happens when these children indulge? Are they able to fill their bellies and continue their adventures, or do they suffer some type of consequence? As the episode nears its end, Nancy experiences a moment of sadness as she misses her parents. She wonders how she can miss something she’s “never really had.” Is it possible to miss someone or something you have not had? Can you think of a time when you have experienced something similar? ©2011 Geri Zabela Eddins
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