Monday, December 19, 2011

Fern Gully The Last Rainforest

  • Genre: Animation, Adventure, Family
  • Rated: G
  • Run time: 76 minutes


This is a magical movie about the Rain forest.  Students are able to have fun while also learning about everything that is harmed when the Rain forest is harmed.  A lumber jack is shrunk by a fairies magical powers and is not able to return to his magical size.  When he is the same size as the fairy and all of the other animals he is able to see all of the destruction that the lumber jacks are causing. 

Teachers can use this as an extension to a Rainforest lesson.

If I Ran the Rain Forest

  • Ages: 5-8
  • Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers
  • Author: Bonnie Worth 
  • Illustrator: Aristides Ruiz
Fiction:
This book is from the Cat in the Hat learning library.  Many kids enjoy Cat and the Hat books. The Cat in the Hat takes a journey through the rainforest.  There is a glossary in the back of the book that gives children clues about reading.  There is also a page that gives examples of further reading.  One book that I really liked was Amazon Fever which is recomended for grades 2 and up.  

In the classroom children are able to talk about rhyming.  They can find all of the rhyming words in the book and even make up their own rhyme about the rainforest.  Teachers can also connect other Cat in the Hat books to different subject they are learning in the classroom at the time. 

Who Grows Up in the Rain Forest?

  • Ages: 7-9
  • Publisher: Picture Window Books
  • Author: Theresa Longenecker 
  • Illustrator: Melisssa Carpenter

Illustrated:
This book talks about all of the baby animals that grow up in the Rain forest. The book describes animals that grow up with their parents and others that grow up on their own. All of the animals in the Rainforest have different types of families. Some of the baby animals talked about in the book are a chick, baby gibbon, and a cub. There are also did you know sections in the book that describe facts about the differnt animals.


Teachers can talk about how animlas grow up and the ways that they are born during a science lesson. Teachers can also incorperate their own students into the lesson. A teacher can talk about how everyones home life is different and how children have different types of families.
A lesson plan I found talks about different types of families.  A book that goes along with this lesson is All Kinds of Families.  A teacher can read these books simultaneously and talk about animal families and their students families. 

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Save My Rainforest

  • Ages 8-12
  • Publisher: Volcano Press, Incorporated
  • Author: Monica Zac
  • Illustrator: Bengt-Arne Runnerstrom
Fiction: 
This book is a story about a boy named Omar Castillo.  Omar is sad when he finds out that the rain forest in Mexico is being destroyed and people are selling animals from the rainforest as pets.  Children can take a journey with Omar and see how he tries to save the rain forest.  At the end of the story Omar gets to talk to the president about the deforestation of the rain forest.  The president romises Omar that in one year the rain forest cutting will stop and no one will be allowed to capture the rainforest birds and animals to sell them as pets.  Omar does not want to stop until the rain forest is saved. 

In the classroom you can talk about all of the animlas that are harmed when people cut down trees in the rain forest and get rid of the land.  As a class you can raise money and save an acre of land in the rain forest.   The Nature Conservancy allows anyone to do this. Another great site that allows children to adopt an animal or a rain forest tree is Kids Saving the Rainforest. Doing this would teach kids that they could make a difference and they could learn about how to earn and spend money. 

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Over in the Jungle A Rainforest Rhyme

  • Ages 3-7
  • Publisher: Dawn Publications
  • Author: Marianne Berkes 
  • Illustrator: Jeanette Canyon
Illustrated 
Over in the Jungle A Rainforest Rhyme is great for young kids! The book is based off of the 19th century song "Over in the Medow".  This childrens book starts off in the rainforest where the reader meets a marmoset.  On each page the reader will meet a new animal counting each time.  The last page ends in the den of ten monkeys.  The illistrations in this book are un like any other.  All of the animlas are made from polymer clay and then photographed.  In the back of the book the layout switches and the chilren can veiw the rainforest from top to bottom and find all of the animals they have met along the way.  The book also includes a Song Over in the Jungle.  There is also a spot in the book to learn more information about each animal.  

This is an example of the Polymer Clay animals

              






In the classroom teachers can have students make up their own rhyme or song about animals in the rainforest.  The children would have to do their research so that they know what each animal is what the animal looks like and where they life in the rainforest.  A teacher can also integrate music into this lesson by talking about rythem in music and how the book is based off of a song.  If a teacher also wants to integrate art into a lesson with this book, chilren could make their own animals out of clay. 

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

A Rainforest Food Chain


Ages: 10-12
Publisher: Creative Education (July 2008)
Author: A.D Tarbo

Non Fiction


This book includes many important vocabulary word that should be learned such as adaptation, producer, and consume.  In the back of the book there is an index and a glossary that can be used to find a word or explain a definition if a child needs one.  Many animals are described in this book, children learn what they eat and how the food chain works.  Each vocabulary word in the book is underlined in green so that it can be easily found in the back of the book.

This book can be used in the classroom during many science lessons.  It can help students apply vocabulary words such as producer and consumer to a real life situation. A teacher could also use this book during a spelling lesson by taking words from the book and integrating a science and english lesson together.

Monday, December 12, 2011

The Vanishing Rainforest

  • Ages: 7-10
  • Publisher: Frances Lincoln Children's Books
  • Author: Richard Platt
  • Illustrator: Rupert van Wyk's 


    Fiction
    In this children's book the Brazilian Rain forest is vanishing.  The books focus's on a girl names Ramaema.  On her walk home one day she hears the sound of the nabe.  The nabe were the white people who were taking away the forest she lived in.  The reader finds out if there is a soulution that can be made and if Ramaema's home will be saved.  Children will love the whimsical illistrartions that are done in acrylics.  
In the classroom a teacher can use this book during a history lesson.  The class can talk about other times in history in which others take over the land where people were already living. During the Indian Removal Act, in the 19th century, Andrew Jackson forced many Indians off of their land and out of their homes.  Children could learn how to use a Ven Diagram to compare the two times in history by finding a book about the trail of tears and reading both in class.