Are
you the next Magic Tree House Educator of the Year?
Check back again or sign-up for the Magic
Tree House Classroom Club Email Newsletter to be the
first
to learn how to enter the 2008 contest!
Here is Ms. Henson's winning entry:
Click here for PDF with class photos!
I
have depended on Magic Tree House books to inspire a love
for reading, ignite the imagination, and enrich the learning
environment in my first grade classroom at the Christian
Academy of Knoxville for the past six years. Boys and
girls identify with the characters, and are intrigued
by the elements of magic and adventure.
I
quickly realized the value of Magic Tree House books as
teaching tools after my son received Dinosaurs
Before Dark as a gift. Never before had
he listened with such enthusiasm to a chapter book! I
knew I possessed the same ability to “turn my students
on” to reading with Magic Tree House books. The results
exceeded my expectations! As soon as I began reading the
adventures of Jack and Annie, I noticed the change. My
first graders began to carry the books everywhere they
went, even on the playground! Delighted parents began
to see Magic Tree House books at the top of birthday and
Christmas lists!
Magic
Tree House books provide numerous opportunities to meet
objectives across the curriculum. Map skills are sharpened
as we track Jack and Annie’s travels across the globe
using a world map found in the front of their Magic Tree
House Journals. There are activities related to each adventure
in their journals, allowing for cross-curriculum instruction
in science, social studies, and math.
The
Research Guides assist me in creating mini-units on Magic
Tree House destinations that allow children to make connections
between literature and their world, an important objective
in our language arts curriculum. Our Patriotic Day and
Plymouth Rock activities grew out of an interest in events
we read about in Thanksgiving on Thursday
and Revolutionary War on Wednesday.
Factual information obtained from reading the accompanying
research guides was instrumental in planning these events.
At
the end of each year, we celebrate and reflect with a
Magic Tree House Grande Finale! Children come in costume
depicting their favorite adventure. A contest is held
to determine who can correctly identify the books their
classmates are representing with the most accuracy. They
rotate through “stations” representing Australia , Hawaii
, Rattlesnake Flats, and the North Atlantic aboard the
Titanic playing games, tasting foods, and learning facts
related to the various locations. The Research Guides
help provide ideas for activities. For example, I made
posters by enlarging pictures from the Titanic Research
Guide showing where the ship went down, and how the Titanic
radioed for help using Morse Code. I bring a short wave
receiver and a Morse Code practice oscillator so that
students can send and receive messages from ships at sea.
We also have our own version of the Magic Tree House,
complete with a rope ladder, The Pennsylvania Book,
and a Magic Tree House “Mystery Box” containing the “M”
things, the answers to Morgan’s riddles, and many special
items for several books. It is always an exciting end
to a “magical” year! Mrs. Osborne’s love for writing has
created a genuine love for reading in my classroom!
-----------------------------------------------------------------
These
are a few other great ideas we read about in the 2007
contest entries
Shari
Valencic-Ursel of Venice
Elementary School in Venice , Florida introduces students
to Jack and Annie through Midnight on the
Moon. This book helps her meet curriculum
objectives relating to astronomy and gravity, and is a
perfect lead-up to their annual class star-gaze! Later
in the year, students work together to create a digital
slideshow of Jack and Annie’s fictional adventures through
the US . They employ Magic Tree House books for models
of writing and spelling, and they use online resources
for images. At the end of the unit, other classes, friends,
and families are invited to view the new adventures.
“Forget
Drake and Josh and Johnny Depp. Jack and Annie are the
two biggest celebrities in my first grade class!” –Shari
Valencic-Ursel, Venice , FL
Bramlett
Micklow from Ford Elementary in Acworth, Georgia
creates a cycle of literacy centers surrounding different
Magic Tree House titles. In the map skills center students
plot a route from their town in Georgia to the story’s
location. In the writing center, students keep a journal
about their reaction to Jack and Annie’s adventures. In
the art center, students paint pictures depicting events
from the stories. As a class they construct a large tree,
adorning it with construction paper leaves with a title
each time a student completes a Magic Tree House book.
“The
kids are still talking about it and the class this year
wants to know, ‘Are we going to get to do a Magic Tree
House?’” –Bramlett Micklow, Acworth , GA
Susan
Ward from Tigerville Elementary in Taylors ,
South Carolina uses various Magic Tree House books to
meet South Carolina state curriculum standards. She uses
Twisters on Tuesday to enrich
their district-wide weather unit and Thanksgiving
on Thursday to meet their social studies
goals. During each book study, students help to create
a version of Jack’s Journal. In the journal, they record
facts, vocabulary words, learn to summarize chapters,
and draw educated conclusions.
“This
series has become an ‘Adventure’ for me to teach!” –Susan
Ward, Taylors , SC
Valerie
Milnes from Devon Aire K-8 Center in Miami ,
Florida created an entire grade-wide unit based around
Tonight on the Titanic. Each
classroom took charge in developing an activity that related
to one element of the book. Her class created a science
experiment that measured the percentage of an iceberg
that remains under water. There was also a quiz game to
test participant’s Titanic knowledge, and an event in
which students dressed in period clothing, strolled the
decks, and interviewed each other (in character) about
the historical event.
“The
interaction with Magic Tree House has sparked an intrinsic
interest within my students.” –Valerie Milnes, Miami ,
FL
Rita
Dean from East Elementary School in Cullman
, Alabama employs Magic Tree House books to make an integrated
curriculum for her classroom. In math, students create
word problems to determine how many years Jack and Annie
have traveled, as well as the weight of objects on the
moon. In a science unit, she uses Midnight
on the Moon to explore various topics relating
to the solar system. And in reading, students keep a reader’s
response journal as well as graphic organizers to help
them compare and contrast new Magic Tree House books with
those they have already read.
“Incorporating
Magic Tree House books into the classroom creates an integrated
curriculum that is incredibly fun to learn.” –Rita Dean,
Cullman , AL
-------------------------------------------------------------
To
read the winning entry from the Magic Tree House
Educator
of the Year 2006, Beth Fawley, click
here.
back
to top
|