Classroom Guide for COOL MELONS-TURN TO FROGS The Life and Poems of Issa by Matthew Gollub illustrated by Kazuko G. Stone

Similar documents
Grade K Book Reviews Mini-Lessons at a Glance

1. Which word had the most rhyming words? 4. Why is it important to read poems out loud?

Theme 9. THEME 9: Special Friends

Traditional Haiku. Mrs. Paula McMullen Library Teacher Norwood Public Schools

Independent Reading Management Kit. Grades 4 6

This Native American folk

What Am I? Answers: egg, rain, letter, nest, hand. Perfect Poems for Teaching Sight Words Ellermeyer & Rowell, Scholastic Teaching Resources

The Year of Billy Miller

English 7 Gold Mini-Index of Literary Elements

TEACHER S GUIDE. About Habitats series Written by Cathryn Sill Illustrated by John Sill

Analyzing a Five-Sense Descriptive Paragraph

!! The!Wave! by#morton#rhue# # # # # # # Students #handout# # # #

JAPAN SOCIETY Haiku Workshop Paul Conneally. Beyond 5/7/5. Masoaka Shiki ( )

WORKSTATION FLIP CHART. Reading

The Search for Delicious

Teaching Haiku Poetry

ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ACADEMIC STANDARDS

WORKSTATION FLIP CHART. Reading

Pembroke Friday Freebie

Educator's Guide. Ava and Pip and. Ava and Taco Cat. A Common Core State Standards-Aligned Educator s Guide for Grades 4-6.

ESMS 6th Grade Summer Reading Choices

Name. gracious fl attened muttered brainstorm stale frantically official original. Finish each sentence using the vocabulary word provided.

A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA

Latino Impressions: Portraits of a Culture Poetas y Pintores: Artists Conversing with Verse

Lesson 15 - My Five Senses

The Underneath. Kathi Appelt. A Novel Study by Joel Michel Reed

Visual Art Department Indian Hill Exempted Village School District

POETRY. GRADE 7 Term 4 SURNAME, NAME: CLASS: eng-wb-t4-(Poetry)

GLOSSARY OF TERMS. It may be mostly objective or show some bias. Key details help the reader decide an author s point of view.

Poetry Unit Outline. 4 th Grade. 4. RL.2- Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poem from details in the text; summarize the text.

OVERVIEW. Book Summary. Teaching the Book ABOUT THE ILLUSTRATOR ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Book Bingo Task Explanations

Line 1: Title (2 syllables) (1 word)

Access 4 First Read: Paul Revere's Ride

Reading Strategies Level D

Jake and Lily. Jerry Spinelli. A Novel Study by Nat Reed

6 th Grade ELA Post-Test Study Guide Semester One

Elements Of Language First Course Page122

Owls In The Family. Farley Mowat. A Novel Study by Nat Reed

Unit 7.3: Poetry: My Identity English as a Second Language 8 weeks of instruction

The Writer s Eye (I): Lists of Things I Can Write About

Prentice Hall. Literature, The Penguin Edition, Grade 6 The Oklahoma Edition Grade 6

This week we re. Reading Anansi Goes Fishing. contrast characters and settings in a story. Discuss. Your child has been learning to compare and

Sample Pages from. Strategies to Integrate the Arts in Language Arts

NAME DATE USE THE INFORMATION ABOVE TO CHOOSE WHICH RESOURCE WOULD BEST HELP YOU FIND THE INFORMATION:

Poems and Thoughts. Full Name 4 th Grade Written By: Full Name Illustrator: Full Name

The First Hundred Instant Sight Words. Words 1-25 Words Words Words

Answer Key Grade 5. Practice Test. The Road Not Taken Birches

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Poems and Thoughts. Full Name 4 th Grade Written By: Full Name Illustrator: Full Name

COLLEGE GUILD POETRY CLUB-2, UNIT 4 SPANISH SPEAKING POETS

The Sacred Salmon UNIT 2 WEEK 4. Read the passage The Sacred Salmon before answering Numbers 1 through 5. Weekly Assessment Unit 2, Week 4 Grade 6 97

Reading Horizons. Using Poetry in the Intermediate Grades. Luethel M. Kormanski JANUARY/FEBRUARY Volume 32, Issue Article 2

Vocabulary Workstation

The Door In The Wall. Marguerite de Angeli. A Novel Study by Nat Reed

Another Attempt To Define Haiku

Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening

hhhhhhhh by Maria Fleming NEW YORK TORONTO LONDON AUCKLAND SYDNEY MEXICO CITY NEW DELHI HONG KONG BUENOS AIRES

Pairing Picture Books and Research with PebbleGo

Read aloud this poem by Kate Greenaway ( ):

The Art of Bonsai Display (and How to Look at Bonsai on Display) by Ian Barnes Part 5

Putting It All Together Using Pocket Charts & Big Books. Sandra Ball & Lillah Martin Nov. 27/13

310th death day was held. How important is Bashô for the modern Japanese Haiku?

Beginning Discuss Photograph Point to the frog and say, It s a. Intermediate Develop Concept Write the words pets and wildlife

Hunter Moran Saves the Universe Hunter Moran Hangs Out Hunter Moran Digs Deep Patricia Reilly Giff Two-time Newbery Honor Medalist

Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening

The Mouse and The Motorcycle

What can you learn from the character? How do you know this? Use a part of the story in your answer. RL 1.2

The Taxi by Amy Lowell

The Boundless. Kenneth Oppel. A Novel Study by Joel Michel Reed

LYST 220/A: Literature in the Lives of Young Children

something that costs a lot of money but serves no useful purpose

ENGLISH LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT 3-5 READING: Literary Response and Analysis

Mark Teague. Teague s pictures are brilliant, cinematic fullbleed oil-paint dramas. School Library Journal

Poetic Devices Task Cards

Curriculum Document. Subject: Language Arts : Writing Grade: 2 August, 2012

Focus: Culturally-Responsive Author Study Booklist Pat Mora Developed by: Amanda Bento Fall, 2011

A guide to. brown girl dreaming

CHILDREN S ESL CURRICULUM: LEARNING ENGLISH WITH LAUGHTER

San Francisco Opera s Verdi s AIDA

Sestina by Elizabeth Bishop

Lesson 5: Figurative Language and Voice

In order to complete this task effectively, make sure you

Lyddie. Katherine Paterson. A Novel Study by Nat Reed

LITERAL UNDERSTANDING Skill 1 Recalling Information

attracted fabric honest soared dazzling greed requested trudged

Petra, Calder, and Tommy

Turtle In Paradise. Jennifer L. Holm. A Novel Study by Nat Reed

Personal Narrative STUDENT SELF-ASSESSMENT

Bunnicula. Deborah & James Howe. A Novel Study by Joel Michel Reed

Wherever You Go: A Graduation Event Kit

Filigree RPO Flute and Harp Duo

Personification For Kids Poetry

Second Grade ELA Third Nine-Week Study Guide

Handouts to Teach Theme & Imagery Included! Comprehension Questions & Open-Ended Response Questions Included!

Readability Assessment and Reflection. Exemplar. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth by Jeff Kinney. Kim Breon. University of New England

Take It From Me I Know, Part 1

MCPS Enhanced Scope and Sequence Reading Definitions

Autumn 1 Autumn 2 Spring 1 Spring 2 Summer 1 Summer 2

When I ve earned this badge, I ll know how to write different kinds of stories both true tales and ideas from my imagination.

Transcription:

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.1 Classroom Guide for COOL MELONS-TURN TO FROGS The Life and Poems of Issa by Matthew Gollub illustrated by Kazuko G. Stone Reading Level Interest Level: Grades 1-6 Reading Level: Grade 3 (Reading level based on the Spache Readability Formula) Accelerated Reader Level/Points: 4.7/.5 Lexile Measure : 800 AD Scholastic Reading Counts : 4.6 Themes Haiku Poetry, Nature, Biography, Japan Synopsis The title of the book, Cool Melons - Turn to Frogs!, comes from a haiku by the Japanese poet, Issa. Told in prose interspersed with 33 of Issa s most delightful poems, the book is both a biography of the famed poet and an introduction to haiku. The poems also appear in Japanese along the outside edges of the pages. Kobayashi Yataro, who became known as Issa, was born in 1763 on a farm in the village of Kashiwabara in central Japan. Even as a very young boy, Issa was attracted to the birds, insects, and other small creatures that shared his world. Issa s mother died when he was three, and he was raised by his grandmother until his father remarried, when Issa was about seven. Issa and his stepmother didn t get along. Noticing the boy s unhappiness, Issa s schoolmaster encouraged him to write haiku. "With haiku," the schoolmaster said, "you can show what you are feeling inside." Issa and his stepmother quarreled so much that his father reluctantly sent his son away when he was 14. Issa traveled first to Tokyo, and even in this big city, he noticed little things that others were too busy to see. Eventually he asked a master poet for training, and soon Issa was teaching others. But what Issa really wanted to do was continue writing poetry and see more of the world. So he set out to travel around the country in the tradition of haiku poets. During his lifetime Issa composed more than 20,000 haiku. He died in 1827 at the age of 64. He is still considered to be Japan s premier haiku poet.

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.2 Background Japanese poets have written haiku for centuries. Traditional haiku describe a single moment in nature that the poet observes or discovers. They consist of sensory details things the poet can see, hear, taste, smell, or touch. Traditional haiku also usually convey a sense of season in a subtle way, not by naming the season, but by using a word or phrase that suggests the season indirectly. Additional background information about the history and poetic structure of haiku can be found on the last page of the book. The author and artist selected the specific poems in this book because they shed light on significant events in Issa s life. Interspersing these poems with the prose sections describing those events enables readers to experience the subtle meaning and power of these seemingly simple poems. The artist visited Issa s village and read more than 2500 of his haiku as part of her research for the book. The author, who is fluent in Japanese, translated the poems in the book by adhering closely to the charm and simplicity of Issa s words. An Author s Note at the back of the book provides additional information about Issa and the significance of some of the poems. BEFORE READING Prereading Focus Questions Before reading the book, you may wish to read a few poems aloud and have students discuss one or more of the following questions as a motivation for reading. 1. How did the poems I just read make you feel? What parts of the poem made you feel that way? 2. How do you show what you are feeling or thinking about? 3. How are poems different from stories? 4. Do you think poems are easier or harder to understand than stories? Why? Setting a Purpose for Reading Introduce the book and read the title aloud. Ask students what they think the title means. Have students write their ideas in their journals and then check their notes after they have read the book. Then invite students to study and discuss the cover illustration. What is in the tub? What is jumping out? Why would a melon turn to a frog? Ask students if they know what haiku is. You may wish to share this definition of a haiku from the book s last page: "Traditional haiku describe a single moment in nature, something that the poet observes or discovers." You might also point out that a traditional haiku contains 17 syllables in three lines (5, 7, and 5 syllables), but some of the haiku they will read in this book have different numbers of syllables because the poems were translated from Japanese into English, and Japanese words often have more syllables than English words. Encourage students to flip through the book and note the Japanese writing down the sides of the pages. Why is it there? What might it say?

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.3 Vocabulary Reinforce the use of context as a way to understand vocabulary by having students refer to the illustrations for help in determining the meaning of these words from Issa s poems: silhouette intent plucking locusts bamboo shoot peony soothing Based on the illustrations and haiku, have students write a sentence defining each word. READING & RESPONDING Discussion Questions After reading the book, you may wish to use some of these questions to generate discussion and expand students understanding of the text and poems. 1. This book is different from most books you have read because it contains both a story and poems. What did you learn about Issa from the story? What did you learn from the haiku? How do the story and haiku work together? 2. The book begins by describing Issa s life as it relates to the seasons. How do the first four poems illustrate the different seasons? What words in each haiku suggest the season it represents? 3. Why do you think Issa came to think of birds and insects as his friends? 4. Why did Issa s schoolmaster encourage him to write haiku? What do you learn about how Issa was feeling from the haiku he wrote at this time? 5. What does Issa s father mean when he tells his son that his gift "cannot grow in this soil"? 6. A haiku often describes two events side by side. What are the two events in the poem "Lilies blooming"? How might these two events be related? 7. Issa was a country boy, so when he moved to Toyko, the bustling city seemed overwhelming. How might the poems "Sparrow chicks " and "A newborn butterfly" relate to Issa s life in Tokyo? 8. Read the haiku "Climb Mount Fuji" again. What might this poem be saying about Issa s journey to become a master poet? 9. How might the poems "Needlework " and "Asleep on the ocean " relate to Issa s years of traveling around Japan? 10. In "Spring rain," who is the owl? Who is the dove? What do you think this haiku means? 11. What feelings does Issa express in "A dewdrop world "?

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.4 Literature Circles* If you use literature circles during reading time, students might find the following suggestions helpful in focusing the roles of group members. The Questioner might use questions similar to items 6 through 10 in the Discussion Questions section above to help students think about the relationship of the haiku to events in Issa s life. The Passage Locator might look for passages in the book that reveal information about Japan in the 1700s. The Illustrator might draw a picture to go with part of the text for others in the group to interpret. The Connector might report on the status of poetry in contemporary Japan. The Summarizer should provide a brief summary of the group s reading for each meeting. The Investigator might research additional information about haiku and/or Issa. *There are many resource books available with more information about organizing and implementing literature circles. One such book you may wish to refer to is LITERATURE CIRCLES: VOICE AND CHOICE IN THE STUDENT-CENTERED CLASSROOM by Harvey Daniels (Stenhouse, 1994). Reader s Response Help students personalize what they have read by encouraging them to respond to one or more of the following. Students might respond in sketchbooks, journals, or oral discussion. 1. Which haiku in the book is your favorite? Why? 2. How do Issa s haiku help you "see" things in new or different ways? 3. Reread the poems and try to figure out which ones suggest sounds, tastes, odors, and things you can touch? Which ones are funny, sad, and show joy? 4. Try writing and illustrating your own haiku based on your own experiences. (If necessary, review the definition of a haiku and the rules for syllables, as noted on the last page of the book. Compose a few practice haiku as a group to get students started.) 5. Write a letter to Issa telling how his haiku affected you. 6. Which illustrations do you like best? Why? How did they help you understand the poems? Other Writing Activities Ask students to respond to one or more of the following writing activities. 1. Have students create similes by writing what things are like. Brainstorm with students a list of familiar items, such as the sample list shown here. Ask students to compare the items in unusual ways to other things. For example: My shoes are like a soft pillow.

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.5 Familiar Items Shoe Fingernail Chalkboard Pencil Scarf Calendar 2. Challenge students to write haiku based on the comparisons expressed in their similes. For example: My old yellow shoes cushions for my tired feet, soft like a pillow. 3. Have students choose one of the haiku in the book and write a descriptive paragraph about the same topic. ESL Teaching Strategies The following activities may be used with students who speak English as a second language. 1. Have strong English speakers make tape recordings of the haiku in the book. ESL students can follow along in the book as they listen to the tapes to become familiar with the spoken and written words. 2. Use photographs, real objects, and the book s illustrations to help students identify concrete nouns such as cat, child, dew, kitten, leaves. 3. If you have students who speak and read Japanese in your class, invite them to read aloud the Japanese versions of some of the haiku in the book. Have students make a chart showing the Japanese and English words for nouns and verbs used in the haiku. INTERDISCIPLINARY ACTIVITIES To integrate students reading experiences with other subject areas, you may wish to have students complete some of the following activities. Social Studies 1. Poetry plays a role in several Japanese holidays. For example, on the second day of the new year, Japanese families often engage in the activity called Kakizome. They write poems or favorite proverbs on long strips of paper and hang them in a place of honor. Poems also feature in another holiday, called Tanabata, which falls on the seventh day of the seventh moon (around July 7). Students might do research to learn more about these holidays, exploring questions such as: What kind of poems do people write for these occasions? What is the legend associated with Tanabata?

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.6 What role do poems play in this holiday? 2. Challenge students to use the book s text and poetry to find clues about Japan s geography, climate, architecture, religion, and traditional clothing. For example, students should be able to determine that Buddhism is practiced in Japan. Have students follow up each clue with research to verify and expand what they have learned. 3. Students might want to learn more about Issa and then make a timeline covering his life span (1763-1827). Have students include six to eight important events in Issa s life on one side of the timeline. On the other side, have students show a similar number of important events in U.S. history. Students who have access to their own family histories during this time period, might want to try plotting important events in their families opposite the events in Issa s life. Literature Expand students experience with haiku by having them read and discuss works by other seventeenth century and eighteenth century poets such as Basho, Jöso, Ryota, Buson, or Sanpu. Students may also enjoy reading more contemporary haiku and comparing the contemporary poetry with the more traditional. Science Remind students that observation is an important skill for a scientist, but it is also important for a poet. Challenge students to find as many plants and animals as they can in the book s text and poems. Then have students make an illustrated chart showing these plants and animals along with basic information about each. ABOUT THE AUTHOR AND ILLUSTRATOR Matthew Gollub is the author of several award-winning books for children including The Twenty Five Mixtec Cats and Uncle Snake. Since its publication in 1998, Cool Melons - Turn to Frogs! has won critical acclaim and numerous awards, including selection as an ALA Notable Book and CBC/NCSS Notable Children s Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies, and starred reviews in The Horn Book and Publishers Weekly. Says Gollub, "Haiku is a wonderful introduction to poetry for children, consisting of sensory details -- things that students can see, hear, taste, smell, and touch -- these short poems serve as an excellent stepping stones to writing longer verse or prose." Gollub was born in Los Angeles, California, and presently lives in Santa Rosa. He is fluent in Spanish and holds degrees in international studies and the Japanese language from the University of the Pacific. He has traveled extensively and lived in other countries including Japan, Mexico, and India. In Japan, he worked as an advertising copywriter and also toured with a Japanese taiko drum troupe. Kazuko G. Stone has illustrated many books for children in the United States and her native Japan. Some of her American titles include Dorobo The Dangerous, Good Night, Twinklegator, and Aligay Saves The Day. Stone was born in Tokyo and now lives in New York City with her two daughters. In addition to illustrating, she teaches design at the Fashion Institute of Technology and Parson s School of Design.

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.7 Awards & Reviews ALA Notable Children's Book CBC/NCSS Notable Childen's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies Children's Books Mean Business, Children's Book Council Children's Book of Distinction, Poetry Finalist, RIVERBANK REVIEW "Choices," Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC) Children's Book of the Year, Bank Street College Children's Book Committee Editor's Choice, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE Children's and Young Adult honorable mention for illustration, Asian Pacific American Award for Litearture (APAAL) Fanfare, The Horn Book Finalist, Bay Area Book Reviewers Association Award Notable Books for a Global Society, International Reading Association (IRA) Not Just for Children Anymore Selection, Children's Book Council NCTE Notable Children's Books in the Language Arts for 1999 1999-2000 Read-Alouds Too Good to Miss, Indiana Dept. of Education "Starred Review," THE HORN BOOK "Starred Review," PUBLISHERS WEEKLY Resources on the Web Learn more about Cool Melons Turn to Frogs http://www.leeandlow.com/books/37/hc/cool_melons_turn_to_frogs_the_life_and_poems_of _issa BookTalk interview with Matthew Gollub http://www.leeandlow.com/p/gollub.mhtml BookTalk interview with Kazuko G. Stone http://www.leeandlow.com/p/kazuko.mhtml Also by Matthew Gollub and Kazuko G. Stone, Ten Oni Drummers http://www.leeandlow.com/books/118/hc/ten_oni_drummers Book Information $17.95, HARDCOVER ISBN 9781880000717 32 pages, 10 x 8 Interest Level: Grades 1-6 Reading Level: Grade 3 (Reading level based on the Spache Readability Formula) Accelerated Reader Level/Points: 4.7/.5 Lexile Measure : 800 AD Scholastic Reading Counts : 4.6 Themes: Haiku Poetry, Nature, Biography, Japan

Lee & Low Books Cool Melons Turn to Frogs! Teacher s Guide p.8 Order Information On the Web: http://www.leeandlow.com/books/37/hc/cool_melons_turn_to_frogs_the_life_and_poems_of _issa (secure on-line ordering) http://www.leeandlow.com/p/ordering.mhtml (general order information) By Phone: 212-779-4400 ext. 25 212-683-3591 fax By Mail: Lee & Low Books, 95 Madison Avenue, NY NY 10016 Copyright 1997-2008 The Active Learner Lee & Low Books, all rights reserved. For questions, comments and/or more information please contact us at general@leeandlow.com