New
book clubs pair kids and parents
Fourth graders
Megan Schroeder and Andrea Malcolm liked the chance this summer
to team with their moms in a book club experiment.
Judy Gray is the
girls' teacher at Oak Brook Elementary. She signed up 15 kid-adult
pairs to take part in a new book club sponsored by Cooperating
School District (CSD). The summer club featured the famous
St. Louis kids' authors Pat and Fred McKissacks.
The kid and parent
read the same book and then discussed it. Later, they got
a chance to ask the McKissacks questions about how they write
their children's books. The McKissacks talked to club members
by way of two-way video conferencing.
The 85 kid-adult
pairs from eight different schools in the St. Louis metro
area took part in the summer experiment.
(Young Saint
Louis.com last month had a complete story about the CSD
book club experiment and a new writing program. To read that
complete story, just click
here.)
Gray liked the
idea of kids and adults reading the same book so much she's
offering two different clubs to her class this school year.
The first will
be in the CSD program which will feature other famous kids'
authors. The big book publisher, Scholastic, is providing
other authors to replace the McKissacks this school year.
The McKissacks
are going to conduct special writing classes for St. Louis
kids this year.
Gray's other book
club will feature just kids and parents reading the same book.
"A lot of parents wanted to read with their kids but
not do all the other stuff," Gray said.
They've already
got the first book selected. It's titled "The Dark-Thirty,
Southern Tales of Supernatural." That's another book
by Pat McKissack.
Teacher Judy Gray
also plans to feature books by the McKissacks in regular parts
of their reading classes.
Her fourth grade
literature segment involves reading books in a variety of
genre. The categories include folklore, realistic fiction,
fantasy, poetry, science fiction, informational non-fiction,
geography and historical fiction.
"We're going
to research to see how many different categories the McKissacks'
books fit into," Gray said. The McKissacks have written
over 100 kids books.
This emphasis
by Gray on the McKissack books fits well with another program
at the Parkway School District. Oak Brook is in that district.
Pat McKissack
will be the featured speaker at next spring's Parkway Young
Author Conference. Andrea will be an Oak Brook Elementary
delegate next March, Gray said.
The summer book
club selection was Pat McKissack's book, "Nzingha, Warrior
Queen of Matamba, Angola, Africa, 1595." In addition
to reading the book, the kids and parents were asked to do
research on present-day Angola. One of the research questions
was: Do present day Africans eat termites like they did in
olden days?
Each kid was to
have a question to ask the McKissacks in the last video-conference.
Megan's question
was: Did Nzingha stop writing her journal after she got married?
Pat McKissack wrote the book as a series of entries in a daily
journal by the warrior queen.
Megan said she
read the book faster than her mother, Barb Schroeder.
But, Andrea said
she and her mother kept pace with each other in reading the
book. That way they got a chance to discuss different parts
of the book as they went along.
Andrea said she
likes adventures and mysteries. She's especially interested
in the American Girl History Mysteries. One of those she liked
was "The Smuggler's Treasure."
Megan said she's
read all of the Harry Potter books. Her mother said, "She's
more likely to discuss the Harry Potter books with her older
sisters."
Both girls also
participated this summer in the St. Louis County Library's
Summer Reading Program.
Megan and Andrea
have another interest in common. Both said they'd like to
be fashion designers when they get older.
Andrea recently
got new Dream Doll Designers computer software. That allows
her to mix and match clothing styles. She also can change
size, shape and features of the model.
Both Megan's and
Andrea's moms said the best thing about the kid-adult book
club was the sharing they got to do with their kids.