Category: Alphabet

  • Today I Feel…

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    We have come a long way since my childhood in the 70s, in terms of books and curriculum about social-emotional ideas and learning. However, few picture books exist to offer language and images for young ones. Today I would like to recommend the 2017 English translation of the book Today I Feel: An Alphabet of Feelings by Madalena Moniz.

    Use this book with a variety of age groups – from preschool through 3rd grade. The book can inspire an improvisational activity, mirroring activity, or group dance. 

    The words include:

    adored

    brilliant

    curious

    daring

    excited 

    free

    There's lots of potential with facial expressions, body parts/whole body movement, dynamic changes, and axial/traveling movement. Seasoned dance teachers could make a playlist and change the music with each new word to further explore the varying qualities and speeds for each idea.

    Some of my favorite words in the book are free, grumpy, light, patient, and strong.

    I am adding this to my ongoing alphabet book list as well as book list for emotions/feelings.

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter Y

    Y is for Yellow

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    To begin to explore the color yellow, you can pull out all of your books about colors. Four examples include: My Many Colored DaysColourLiving Color, and The Rainbow Book. What are our associations with yellow? How can we translate these ideas into movement? Ideally, see if you can pull out 3-5 books on color. Look at the yellow pages, and then explore movement ideas related to these pages. You can even string the 3-5 ideas together.

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    Lauren Stringer's book Yellow Time is also the perfect story to explore for the letter Y. 

    The story of Yellow Time inspires me to give each student some yellow fabric (or scarves) to create some dancing leaves. Students LOVE props and the simple joy of something in their hand to toss, sway, circle, and zigzag. Head to your local fabric store to purchase a few yards of fabric. You can purchase tulle for everyone, or select a variety of fabrics in varying shades of yellow.

    Stringer's story easily leads to a full dance with a clear beginning, middle, and end. The students can be the crows in the trees. They can fly in and then be still (as dance students practice shapes and stillness). The crows can "hide" yellow pieces of fabric behind their backs, and then the leaves begin to dance. Use a music selection from Vivaldi's Four Seasons……

    Crows love yellow time.

    They fill still-leafy trees with their voices announcing it's coming to everyone. 

    Just before yellow time, the air smells different. Like wet mud and dry grass with a sprinkle of sugar.

    Yellow time comes before white time. Every time.

    Everyone is ready. The trees can't hold on forever.

    The sky billows gray with clouds, and then it begins…..Whoosh! Whoosh! WHOOSH!

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    Y is for Yoga

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    If you teach preschoolers, the Kid Moves yoga books are fun inspiration for young ones to try out various yoga poses. The board books include illustrations and joyful photos of young children in motion.

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    Baron Baptiste's My Daddy is a Pretzel is great to use with preschoolers, kindergarteners, and first graders alike. It has a cute, simple storyline to help inspire the poses. "Niki says her mommy's a gardener. Sometimes, my daddy's a tree (leading into the tree pose)."

    In My Daddy is a Pretzel, there are playful illustrations and clear instructions for parents and teachers new to teaching yoga poses. 

    Newer children's books on yoga also include the titles Good Morning Yoga: A Pose-by-Pose Wake Up Story (Mariam Gates and illustrator and Sarah Jane Hinder) and also ABC Yoga (Christiane Engel).

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  • Book to Boogie Blog Today: Alphabet Movers

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    I recently wrote about the book Alphabet Movers for the Book to Boogie Blog project, a component of the Library as Incubator website. 

    This is a great book to explore during storytime or within a dance class (parent/child or creative movement). 

    Read more here.

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  • Exploring the Alphabet Through Dance and Reading (All 26 Letters)

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    Over the past year, I have highlighted books to accompany each letter you are exploring with students. Here are links to all of the posts. As we teach one of the most important concepts to young children – the alphabet – let's explore it in a multimodal way that involves seeing, hearing, feeling, and moving so that all children can learn in their own way. Moving through the alphabet is playful and memorable. Click on any letter below to find books for your classes with preschoolers, kindergarteners, and first graders.

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    A

    B

    C

    D

    E

    F

    G

    H

    I

    J

    K

    L

    M

    N

    O

    P

    Q

    R

    S

    T

    U

    V

    W 

    X

    Y

    Z 

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter Z

    We have reached the letter Z! Yay! Let's zip and zigzag around. The letter Z will inspire us to explore pathways.

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    Here are four books to inspire moving in zigzags, straight lines, curving pathways, and much more. Explore zigzagging with your feet, hands, and arms.

    1. Little Green by Keith Baker 

    A hummingbird – making various pathways in space (zig zag, curlycue, etc)

    2. Jonathan and His Mommy by Irene Smalls and Michael Hays

    A son and mother taking a walk and exploring all different ways to walk – big steps, small steps, zigzag pathways

    3. Lines that Wiggle by Candace Whitman and Steve Wilson

    An artistic exploration of lines that wiggle, bend, spiral, curve, etc.

    4. Harold and the Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson

    An imaginative tale of a little boy drawing his world around him – the path he takes, the moon in the air, and much more to create an adventure

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter X

    No surprise – there aren't picture books to support studying the letter X! Wish there was one though. There are lots of great action words that include the letter X: extend, expand, explode….

    Also, having students make Xs with their whole body is a simple and wonderful thing – whether on the floor or standing.

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    As I have suggested in several prior posts, creating a book bin of alphabet books is a great idea. For example with the letter X, look at all of the "X pages" in your bin. Have students pair up, and give each pair one alphabet book. Ask them to find the X page. What movement or shape can they create related to that page? Give each pair a chance to share in front of the class. Again, you can string all of the ideas together to create a "X Dance."

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter W

    Many wonderful, movement inspiring words begin with W: water, waves, winter, and wind.

    W IS FOR WATER

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    I love the theme of water and have explored it in many ways over the past 18 years in dance classes varying from preschool through 7th grade. Students explore the actions of water, the water cycle, forms of water, and more.

    This summer at the library, I found the book This is the Rain by Lola M. Schaefer and illustrator Jane Wattenberg. This is the Rain is a cumulative story, like The House That Jack Built, where the story gets built upon. 

    As for movement inspiration, the book talks about the water cycle and the many forms/states of water. The use of repetition in the text is a great way to explore repetition in your dance class.

    I encourage dance teaching artists, classroom teachers, and science teachers working with students in grades K-3 to check out this book. You can purchase used copies on amazon.com

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    I have eagerly awaited a copy of this book in our local library system, and I finally checked it out recently. To my delight, Water Sings Blue: Ocean Poems, might be one of my new favorite children's poetry books to use in dance classes. The poetry is by Kate Coombs, with illustrations by Meilo So. Both text and paintings are full of magic, whimsy, and imagery to inspire movement with students ages 5-10. 

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    From start to finish, the poems take you on a journey along the shore and in the water. Topics include: sand, tide pools, waves, jellyfish, squid, and coral. The poems lend themselves to a variety of projects for both small groups (solos and duets) and whole group vignettes. You could easily use all or most poems in the book to create a beautiful performance with your class. 

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    Thomas Locker's three picture books - Water Dance, Cloud Dance, and Mountain Dance - are great springboards for group dances. The use of the word "dance" refers to the changing of states, forms, and rises and falls within the natural world.

    Water Dance is a book with poetic language. Each page describes a different form of water:

    I wind through broad, golden valley

    joined by streams,

    joined by creeks.

    I grow ever wider,

    broader and deeper.

    I am the river.

    W IS FOR WAVES

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    This week I referenced the wordless book Wave by Suzy Lee. It inspired me to think more about ocean waves and how you can develop several dance lessons on this topic as well. Ocean waves are a creative way to explore up/down, calm/chaotic, forward/back, wavy pathways, and more.

    I would recommend buying or borrowing photography books of ocean waves to explore with your students, such as:

    Swell: A Year of Waves

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    W IS FOR WINTER

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    I am always searching for books about the seasons. Winter Bees and Other Poems of the Cold is a great new addition with poems by Joyce Sidman and gorgeous illustrations by Rick Allen.

    Sidman writes about the animals of winter, with unique poems about moose, tundra swans, and bees that can inspire dances in your classes. And, the poem "Snowflake Wakes" is a new favorite of mine – filled with moving words such as drifting down, settling, whirling, and "a pinwheel gathering glitter."

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    Yesterday I got to stop into one of my favorite independent bookstores in the US, The King's English Bookstore in Salt Lake City. The new poetry compilation, Firefly July: A Year of Very Short Poems, was on display. 

    The book jumped out at me for various reasons:

    • Melissa Sweet's artwork is colorful and whimsical. 
    • I am always looking for new poems to use within dance classes.
    • I love poetry books that are categorized by seasons.
    • Upon a quick browse, I knew the content evoked a sense of "magic and whimsy."

    Paul B. Janeczko has compiled a strong collection of very short poems. Poets include: Eve Merriam, Robert Frost, Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser, and Joyce Sidman. The brevity of the poems will lead to movement studies as well as a series of vignettes within a larger class, that could be strung together for a performance. Melissa Sweet's  illustrations and color scheme can also easily inspire costume selections.

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    Bay Area educator Michael DeWall has created a beautiful book and CD to explore with children in preschool, kindergarten, first, and second grades. Illustrator Sara Kahn has created color-rich watercolors to accompany the lyrics of the songs. In the back of the book you will find the sheet music for these nine original songs as well as a CD.

    The music is definitely "children's music," but I like it a lot. My own children are enjoying listening to it, and I can easily see PreK-2 dance teachers and classroom teachers using it in classes. The music is joyful and a great addition to your music collection about the seasons. The songs explore a variety of themes including: changes, rain, picking berries, and the four seasons.

    Check out Seasons: Rhymes in Time here.

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    Stella Blackstone and Maria Carluccio created a fun, colorful, movement-filled book called Skip through the Seasons. "Jump into January….Fly into February….Race into June…." You can use the text to inspire a dance with students in K-2 classrooms. 

    W IS FOR WIND

    There are numerous books to explore the concept, to inspire students to move "like the wind" – exploring the qualities of lightness and strong force, fast and slow,and over/under/towards/away. In your classes your students can explore being the wind or being moved by the wind.

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    While You Were Chasing a Hat by Lilian Moore can be an easy introduction to the concept of wind and all that it moves in our world. Students in preschool and kindergarten will identify with the text, and the text can inspire a simple improvisation of being moved "by the wind."

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    When the Wind Bears Go Dancing by Phoebe Stone is a playful book about the "wind bears in the sky." Again, children ages 4-7 will delight in hearing this story and creating a dance with you in class as you become the magical bears in the sky that make things move.

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    For students in K-2, there are two books with poetic text that could lead to beautiful group dances with a windy theme. I recommend both Where Does the Wind Blow? (Cindy Rink) and Like a Windy Day (Frank Asch and Devin Asch).

    Wind can be a beautiful theme to explore along side, or instead of, your usual theme of the season of fall and leaves. 

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter V

    V is for Volcano

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    Volcanoes move and dance. We too can take inspiration from their movement – brewing, exploding, pouring, oozing, and spreading. 

    I love the book Volcano Wakes Up! by Lisa Westberg Peters and illustrator Steve Jenkins. Through a series of poems, a story of a brewing volcano is shared. Through five different perspectives – such as a cricket nearby and the sun and  moon – you learn about a Hawaiian volcano. 

    I suggest reading the whole book to your group. This can become your research and brainstorming. Write down words and images that come to mind. In small groups, can your students list 6-8 ideas from the book and make a vignette based on it? How can the students explore dynamic qualities, pathway, direction, and tempo? Or, take some of the short poems from the book, divide into groups, and create vignettes based on the poems. 

    You could also select several of the illustrations, in the same manner (about 6-8), to create a movement phrase. There is lots of potential within this single book.

    Alphabet Books Too

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    As I suggested in the first post of this alphabet series, creating a book bin of alphabet books is a great idea. For example with the letter V, look at all of the "V pages" in your bin. Have students pair up, and give each pair one alphabet book. Ask them to find the V page. What movement or shape can they create related to that page? Give each pair a chance to share in front of the class. Again, you can string all of the ideas together to create a "V Dance."

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter U

    When you and your students explore the letter U, these books can be springboards and inspiration for improvisation and dance projects.

    Up and Under

    I am always on the lookout for picture books with prepositions. Prepositions are so fun to explore in movement with students in preschool, kindergarten, and 1st grades. You can explore relationships – over, under, around, and through – whether it is students dancing with a prop (hula hoop), students dancing together, or using imagery to inspire movement (ex. crawling through a tunnel). 

    Tana Hoban's classic picture book Over, Under, and Through is a great starting off point. Up, Down, and Around (Katherine Ayres and illustrator Nadine Bernard Westcott) is also a great exploration of prepositions as well as plants. 

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    You might play with different parts, dividing the class into two to explore the "above ground" and "under the ground" ideas (such as in Over and Under the Snow by Kate Messner). 

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    Underground

     

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    Many of Denise Fleming's picture books are fun to use in dance classes – full of action words and animal inspiration. Her latest book, Underground, is a wonderful new addition. 

    I have a small collection of books about plants and animals underground. This theme is fun to explore in preschool and kindergarten dance classes. 

    Use Fleming's new book to inspire improvisation activities or a group dance. This picture includes numerous animals and creatures that go underground – digging, tunneling, and burrowing.

    Upside Down

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    "Silly Sally went to town, walking backwards, upside down." So begins this playful picture book by well-known children's author Audrey Wood. The main character encounters different animals, and does a certain action with each one (a jig with a pig and leapfrog with a dog).

    Use the book as a starting to point to explore many ways of moving backwards and upside down (or the concept of "direction" in general).

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  • Alphabet Series: The Letter T

    When you and your students explore the letter T, these books can be springboards and inspiration for improvisation and dance projects.

    T is for Toe

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    Eric Carle’s book From Head to Toe is a simple story that easily translates into a warm up exercise in a preschool or kindergarten class. As you read along, you and your students can wiggle, stretch, and bend different body parts, taking inspiration from animals.

    T is for Tall

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    Like From Head to Toe, Denise Fleming’s In the Tall, Tall Grass is full of actions. You can read aloud as you ask your students to improvise around your classroom – darting, dipping, crunching, and munching. The words offer great variety and a sense of playfulness. 

    T is for Trucks

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    Tip Tip Dig Dig - by Emma Garcia – also is filled with verbs to inspire an improv activity or group dance, this time taking inspiration from a variety of trucks. Students will love to lift, dig, and roll. 

    T is for Tuesday

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    The Caldecott Medal book Tuesday by David Wiesner is a book with flying, sneaking frogs. Read the book to your class and then encourage them to "show you" the story through an improvised frog dance. Take notes on a white erase board or chart paper – noting how the students move. Select 6-8 movements to create a "sneaky frog dance" as a group. 

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    Alphabet Books Too

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    As I suggested in the first post of this alphabet series, creating a book bin of alphabet books is a great idea. For example with the letter T, look at all of the "T pages" in your bin. Have students pair up, and give each pair one alphabet book. Ask them to find the T page. What movement or shape can they create related to that page? Give each pair a chance to share in front of the class. Again, you can string all of the ideas together to create a "T Dance."

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