Family Money

FamilyMoney

Family Money
By William Whitehead (Author) and Mark Beech (Illustrator)

Booktalk: How does a family get and spend its money? Just time for the back-to-school spending, this book looks at many of the expenses families have and how money is spent on utilities, services, health, food, transportation, and more. The concepts of budgeting, borrowing, spending, fiscal responsibility, and financial literacy are discussed in an easy to understand, accessible manner.

Snippet:

Money Talk
How many times have you heard your dad or mom say there’s just not enough money to do this or that? They just can’t afford it! The subject of money and how it’s spent is always around because it’s money that buys everything a family needs. And this matters to you in a lot of ways.

Why do families talk about money so much?
Very simply–it’s money that decides the comfort and the way in which you live. Money gets talked about a lot because whether there’s enough or not enough, everyone in the family seems to need some.

Six Traits Mini Lesson

Trait: Organization This short excerpt from the first page of the book has a chapter title and a subhead (both shown here in bold). These nonfiction text features help organize the ideas in a book.

The chapter title shows readers an overview of the topics that will be discussed.

Money Talk

Under the chapter title, the topic is introduced:

How many times have you heard your dad or mom say there’s just not enough money to do this or that? They just can’t afford it! The subject of money and how it’s spent is always around because it’s money that buys everything a family needs. And this matters to you in a lot of ways.

The rest of the chapter will add more details. These details are divided into smaller sections. Each small section of text will also have a title, called a subhead.

Why do families talk about money so much?

This subhead asks a question. The text below the subhead answers the question, giving the book a “question and answer” organizational pattern.

Very simply–it’s money that decides the comfort and the way in which you live. Money gets talked about a lot because whether there’s enough or not enough, everyone in the family seems to need some.

Nonfiction Monday

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The Flying Hand of Marco B.

FlyingHandMarcoB

The Flying Hand of Marco B.
by Richard Leiter (Author) and Shahar Kober (Illustrator)

Booktalk: A routine ride in the backseat of his parents’ car takes a fantastical turn when a young boy opens the car door window. With the click of the seat belt and door locks, Marco B. is securely tucked into the backseat of his parents’ car, heading out on a family errand. With the car window opened to the fresh air, this could be the start of any routine trip. But not if you’re Marco B. and most certainly not if you’re Marco B.’s hand! As the car travels along and the scenery rushes by, Marco B. puts his hand out the window and fantasizes about flying. And once his hand has felt the wind rushing around it, it has no intention of staying in the car. Marco B. soon finds himself on a wild ride up in the sky.

Snippet:
Why can’t grown-ups understand?
I can’t control this crazy hand.
Again it drifts outside the car . . .
Oh no! This time it’s gone too far!

The seat belt cannot keep me in.
I’m being SUCKED OUT by the wind!
And like a little shooting star
I’m FLYING right above our car.

Six Traits Mini Lesson

Trait: Organization Just like longer works of fiction, picture book stories are divided into three acts. In Act 1, the curtain opens and readers meet the main character, see the story setting, and find out what the story problem is. In this rhyming picture book story Marco B. is the main character. The story setting is the backseat of his parents’ car. These two items are established on the first page of the story.

After readers turn the page they see the story problem. Marco likes to put his hand out the window to see it fly but his mother wants Marco to keep his hand inside the car. The story problem is repeated after the next page turn. Now that the set up in Act 1 is firmly established, it’s time to move to Act 2.

After his mother repeats her warning, readers see Marco’s reaction on the next book page:

Why can’t grown-ups understand?
I can’t control this crazy hand.

For every action, there is a reaction. After Marco’s emotional reaction, readers see a physical reaction:

I can’t control this crazy hand.
Again it drifts outside the car . . .

And that physical reaction leads to a new emotional reaction:

Again it drifts outside the car . . .
Oh no! This time it’s gone too far!

Poetry Elements Notice the rhyme in these four lines? This poetry stanza (the fancy name for a poetry paragraph) is four lines long. These four lines have two pairs of couplets.

A couplet is two lines that rhyme. Here is the first couplet:

Why can’t grown-ups understand?
I can’t control this crazy hand.

And here is the second couplet:

Again it drifts outside the car . . .
Oh no! This time it’s gone too far!

These couplets both have end rhyme. The word at the end of the first line rhymes with the word at the end of the second line.

This end rhyme pattern is repeated in the next stanza on this book page.

It begins:

The seat belt cannot keep me in.
I’m being SUCKED OUT by the wind!

And ends:

And like a little shooting star
I’m FLYING right above our car.

The poetry pattern is consistent, which is what readers (and editors) expect. And the sound in the end rhyme is NOT the same. (Hearing the same sound at the end of each line over and over is too repetitive!)

Trait: Organization The first stanza on this book page begins Act 2 and by the end of the page, in just eight lines, the world of the story has changed. In his imagination (as shown in the art) Marco’s flying hand has just pulled him out of the car.

The seat belt cannot keep me in.
I’m being SUCKED OUT by the wind!

marco1_111813

The final couplet on this book page leads readers fully into Act 2:

And like a little shooting star
I’m FLYING right above our car.

marco5_111813

This rhyming picture book story meets the criteria for both genres. The rhyming works and the picture book story works. Both lead readers into the fantasy world of a boy named Marco B.

marco2_111813

poetry friday

This week’s Poetry Friday Round-up is hosted by Poetry For Children.

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