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	<title>Seventh Grade English.com &#187; Reading</title>
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	<description>Stuff for Middle School Language Arts Teachers</description>
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		<title>75 Ways to Share a Book</title>
		<link>http://seventhgradeenglish.com/75-ways-to-share-a-book/</link>
		<comments>http://seventhgradeenglish.com/75-ways-to-share-a-book/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2009 06:42:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mrC</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Book Sharing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reading]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://seventhgradeenglish.com/?p=41</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I first discovered this all-time fave during my first real year of teaching. I was one of those who had to move from room to room, period by period. This handout was left behind by a student. I have used it many times ever since. I have also mutated it down to 55 ways suitable [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I first discovered this all-time fave during my first real year of teaching. I was one of those who had to move from room to room, period by period. This handout was left behind by a student. I have used it many times ever since. I have also mutated it down to <a href="http://mrcoward.com/slcusd/75a.html">55 ways suitable for my KBAR</a> reading program.</p>
<p><span style="font-size: x-small;">75 WAYS TO SHARE A BOOK </span>by Suzanne Barchers</p>
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<td><strong>Using the story:</strong><br />
 1.  Organize a panel to debate it.<br />
 2.  Dramatize an incident from it.<br />
 3.  Tell about it over the school PA system.<br />
 4.  Condense it to 15, 50, or 100 words.<br />
 5.  Write about it to a friend.<br />
 6.  Make a map of where it takes place.<br />
 7.  Make a story map of its main events.<br />
 8.  Create a crossword puzzle, using its setting and plot.<br />
 9.  Create a scroll or hand-rolled movie to illustrateit.<br />
 10.  Tell Why it would (or wouldn’t) make a great movie.<br />
 11.  Tell its funniest (or most exciting) incident.<br />
 12.  Make a poster about it.<br />
 13.  Pick five to 10 adjectives that describe it.  Tell whyyou<br />
 chose them.<br />
 14.  Describe an incident from it as though you were an on-the-sceneTV reporter.<br />
 15.  Make a model of something in it.<br />
 16.  Draw objects from it and make them into a mobile.<br />
 17.  Draw a significant scene on construction paper cut to thesize of a coat hanger; attach it to the hanger; then suspend from the hangera report about the scene.<br />
 18.  Choose an idea or scene from it as the subject of a collage.Use old magazine pictures.<br />
 19.  Make up a limerick or haiku about it.<br />
 20.  Put an important item from it into a shoebox.  Giveclues<br />
 so your class can guess what theitem is.<br />
 21.  Illustrate it with objects found at home or handmade, orwith photographs you’ve take of people, places and events.<br />
 22.  Create a mural about it, using charcoal, crayons, cut paper,water colors, or another art form.<br />
 23.  Compare it to the movie or TV version.<br />
 24.  Make a time-line of its events.<br />
 25.  Create a new ending for it.<br />
 26. Make a mosaic to illustrate one of its settings or events.<br />
 27.  Make up a lost or found ad for something in it.<br />
 28.  Make a peep-box of an important scene or event.<br />
 29.  Rewrite one of its incidents for a younger reader.<br />
 30.  Use sketches or photographs to recreate one of its actionsequences.<br />
 <strong>Using the characters:</strong><br />
 31.  The U.S. President has learned that you’ve read this bookand wants to know one thing a main character discovered about life thatyou think all Americans should know.  What would you tell him? Why?<br />
 32.  Describe the main character in 64 words.<br />
 33.  Choose a character you’d like (or not like) to have as a<br />
 friend.  Tell why.<br />
 34.  Make believe you were one of the minor characters.How wouldyou describe a main character?<br />
 35.  Role play one of the characters.<br />
 36.  Plan an appropriate meal for a main character.<br />
 37.  Do a cartoon strip based on a character.<br />
 38.  Write a few pages in a diary as if you were a character.<br />
 39.  Write a poem about a character.</td>
<td>40.  Design costumes for some of the characters.<br />
 41.  Dress as one of the characters.<br />
 42.  For stories that took place in another time, tell how oneof the characters would act today, or would respond to a present day situation.<br />
 43. Tell why one of the characters should have a different role.<br />
 44.  Tell what your home would be like if it belonged to one ofthe main characters.<br />
 45.  Write a biography of one of the characters.<br />
 46.  Write an interview between a character and the author, orbetween two characters.<br />
 47.  Create paper dolls of the main characters.<br />
 48.  Pick a book you think each of the main characters would enjoyreading.  Tell why.<br />
 49.  Prepare flannel board characters.<br />
 50.  Develop a game of charades based on the characters.<br />
 51.  Make puppets of the characters.  Set up dialogue.<br />
 52.  Pantomime a character and ask the class to guess the<br />
 book.<br />
 53.  Guess what would have happened if a character had made an important decision differently.<br />
 <strong>Using the book itself:</strong><br />
 54.  Make a list of facts you learned from it.<br />
 55.  Persuade an audience to read (or not read) it.<br />
 56.  Tell why you would (or wouldn’t) recommend it to your<br />
 principal, a parent, or anotherstudent.<br />
 57.  Tell what the book would say about itself if it could talk.<br />
 58.  List its five most interesting or critical sentences.<br />
 59.  Use its theme or setting to create a postcard or greetingcard.<br />
 60.  Compare it to another book the author has written.<br />
 Describe common elements, style,theme, and so forth.<br />
 61.  Write a song about it.<br />
 62.  Demonstrate something you learned from it.<br />
 63.  Prepare a list of its most unusual, difficult, or excitingwords.<br />
 64.  Use its title and theme to write your own story.<br />
 65.  Do a scientific experiment associated with it.<br />
 66.  Present a review of it to a younger class.<br />
 67.  Pretend to be the book and tell what you hold within your pages.<br />
 68.  Make a bulletin board about it, showing the main<br />
 characters, the setting, and soforth.<br />
 69.  Compare it with a book of similar theme.<br />
 70.  Prepare a book jacket for it.<br />
 71.  Have someone who has read it try to stump you with<br />
 questions.<br />
 <strong>Using the author:</strong><br />
 72.  Become the author and tell why you wrote this book.<br />
 73.  Plan the questions you’d use in a conference call interviewwith the author.<br />
 74.  The author has written to you and wants to know how thisbook would have been improved.  How would you answer?<br />
 75.  Write a letter of appreciation to the author, asking questionsand sharing thoughts.</td>
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