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Twelve Days Giveaway: It’s Elementary!

The Twelve Days of Giveaway continues! You saw the wonderful snow-themed books we chose for primary readers—now get ready for another slew of picture books that welcome winter, this time for elementary-aged readers! Read on for a synopsis of each book and for ways to use them as springboards for learning.

HOW TO ENTER:

Enter once—or come back daily to boEdit (classic editor)ost your chances!

You can also earn bonus entries by:

  • Following us on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, or YouTube
  • Uploading your Blackbird & Company photos or videos (no faces required!)
  • Completing quick extra actions inside the contest portal

Read on for a synopsis of each book and for ways to use them as springboards for learning. 

The Mitten by Alvin Tresselt

The Mitten is a Ukrainian folktale that starts off with a little boy collecting firewood in the forest for his grandmother. It’s the coldest day of winter. The little boy drops one of his mittens in the snow and continues on collecting firewood. A tiny mouse finds shelter in the mitten. One by one, a frog, owl, rabbit, fox, wolf, boar, and bear crawl in too. The mitten is strained to its limits when a little old cricket tries to step inside—can the creatures make room for a tiny cricket? 

Folktales are stories that get passed down in a culture. As a folktale, The Mitten connects generations of Ukrainians to each other, creating common ground between old and young. Folktales usually deliver a lesson of some kind; after you read The Mitten with your student, ask: What lessons does it impart? What might be the purpose of telling this story in Ukrainian culture? In my reading, The Mitten illustrates the tragedy of the commons, or the idea that when people have unlimited access to a shared resource, they will ultimately over-use it at the expense of the collective. Each animal who hops in the mitten prioritizes their own comfort over the reality that the mitten can’t fit very many creatures, which eventually means that no one can enjoy the mitten. 

Brave Irene by William Steig

Mrs. Bobbin, a dressmaker, creates the most beautiful dress for the duchess, to be worn at her ball that night. However, Mrs. Bobbin feels too ill to deliver it so her daughter Irene volunteers despite the snow starting outside. After Irene tucks her mother into bed, she sets out with the big dress box to the palace. The wicked wind, however, has other plans—it rips the box from her hands and blows the dress off into the night. As if that’s not bad enough, Irene twists her ankle and realizes she’s lost! Brave Irene will have to live up to her name if she wants to make it out of this disaster. 

If we’re brainstorming character traits for Irene, the author makes our job a little bit easier with the title—Irene is definitely brave! In addition to the fun illustrations and beautiful word choice, we like Brave Irene because it depicts a brave, determined role model for young girls. As Irene faces the danger of freezing to death, she keeps her head and pushes through to complete her task. Heroes can come in all shapes and sizes! As you read this story with your student, discuss what makes a hero and if you would want to emulate any of Irene’s qualities.

The Big Snow by Berta and Elmer Hader

As winter looms, the woodland animals brace for the cold season. Some creatures migrate to warmer places, others hibernate in cozy burrows, and the rest prepare to find food in the snow. The first flakes of snow fall. Then, the night after Christmas, a rainbow shines around the moon—the owls know this means much more snow. Heavy snow falls for two days. After the snow stops and the animals grow hungry, a little old man and woman shovel a path and scatter food on the ground. Though the animals face a long and cold winter, the old couple might be the key to them making it to spring. 

One reason I think The Big Snow earned its place as a Caldecott winner is because of its realistic yet tender animal illustrations. The lines and colors possess a softness that capture the reader’s heart and foster connection with the animals on the page. The Big Snow answers the question, “Where do animals go when it snows?” After reading this book, ask your student, “What would you do if it snowed?” Encourage them to draw a picture or write a description of their favorite activity in the snow. It could be anything from staying inside to read a book to braving the cold to have a snowball fight!

The Mitten Tree by Candace Christiansen

Old Sarah watches the children wait for the bus every morning but they never notice her. One morning she notices a boy without mittens, so she knits him a pair and leaves them on the old blue spruce tree for him to find. From there, she knits new mittens for the children every day and leaves them on the tree. On the last day before winter break, Sarah hangs mittens on every branch so that all the children get new ones. Sarah’s heart feels full even though the children have never acknowledged her—when she gets home, however, she finds a basket filled with beautiful yarn. It seems Sarah’s hand in the children’s lives has not gone unnoticed! 

This sweet story highlights the contentment that generosity brings. Oftentimes, giving enriches the life of the giver just as much as or more than the recipient’s. Although Sarah never directly interacts with the children she knits mittens for, she feels like they have become her new family. Her soft smile speaks to the joy that generosity brings. After reading this story, challenge your student to give a gift (maybe a snack, a homemade craft, a pair of socks, etc.) without telling the recipient who it’s from. The reward of knowing you have given a gift is enough!

We’ll plan to draw 3 winners on December 30 and announce them on December 31—a fun way to close out the year and start the new one with great books in hand. So stay tuned!

And remember, more actions = more chances for you to win! Click through and enter to win today!

 

 

~Claire

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Twelve Days Giveaway: Let’s Get Reading!

As the days shrink to their shortest length and the winter chill seems here to stay, there’s nothing better than finding a cozy corner in which to read a book. That’s why we’re launching our Twelve Days Giveaway, with twelve delightful books, in three sets of four to enjoy. Their unifying theme? Snow!—and, of course, beautifully illustrated picture books!

The first bundle of four we’ve curated is perfect for primary and early elementary readers. Because the words in these stories are sparse (or for one story, nonexistent), reading the illustrations is key. As the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words—so take a close look along with your students at the wonderful sketches, collages, watercolors, paintings, and words that collaborate to tell the story, and get reading!

HOW TO ENTER:

Enter once—or come back daily to boost your chances!

You can also earn bonus entries by:

  • Following us on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, or YouTube
  • Uploading your Blackbird & Company photos or videos (no faces required!)
  • Completing quick extra actions inside the contest portal

Here’s the scoop about the books in the primary bundle:

Tracks in the Snow by Wong Herbert Yee

Tracks in the Snow tells the adorable story of a little girl who sees prints in the snow outside her window. She wonders what kind of creature could have made these tracks and follows them throughout the snowy woods.

We chose this tiny book not only because of the sweet and whimsical storyline, but because of the little girl’s tenacity and inquisitiveness. She poses a question about the world around her—who or what made these tracks?—and doesn’t stop until she solves the mystery.

Character is one of the first literary elements students are equipped to unpack at the Earlybird level. As you read this story with your student, ask: What are the little girl’s character traits? Is she brave or scared? Is she curious or disinterested? How do you know? You might be surprised at your student’s insights!

Wolf in the Snow by Matthew Cordell

Wolf in the Snow begins as a little girl walks home from school and loses her way in a snowstorm. In the same wintery landscape, a helpless wolf pup is separated from his pack. The little girl and the wolf pup stumble across one another and search for the way home together in the forest and snowy plains. Is the girl and pup’s friendship enough to save them both?

The illustrations in Wolf in the Snow are so masterful that they don’t require words to tell the story—no wonder this book won the 2018 Caldecott Award! Onomatopoeia (words that represent sounds) are the only scraps of writing in this piece, like when the wolves go “hooooooooowwlll” or the owl says, “screech!” As you read this book with your student, bring up a conversation about mood. Mood is how a story makes you feel, and Matthew Cordell creates  mood almost solely through pictures! How does each scene make you feel? How can you understand the little girl’s feelings from the illustrations?

After reading and discussing, consider challenging your student to draw a picture that conveys a certain mood, using no words except for onomatopoeias.

Snow by Uri Shulevitz

As one snowflake falls, then another, the boy with the dog knows what that means: it’s snowing! No matter how many times the people around him or the radio or the television say it isn’t snowing, the snow won’t listen to them.

We chose Uri Shulevitz’s Snow because of the boy’s faith that it would snow in the face of everyone else disagreeing with him. Despite grandfather with beard and man with hat and woman with umbrella explaining how the snowflakes are too few or how the snow will melt, the boy knows better and trusts himself. His optimism is rewarded when snow blankets the city and whimsical Mother Goose characters join him in celebrating the winter wonderland. As you read, ask: Has there ever been a time when you have known something to be true but other people disagreed with you? How did you handle it? Is it easy to trust yourself?

Snowballs by Lois Ehlert

The narrator knows a big snow is coming; it’s finally time to use the materials they’ve been collecting. They create a whole family of snowmen. When the sun comes out, the snowballs shrink and melt. Ehlert wraps up the book by including collage elements and an explanation of how snow is made.

One of the reasons we love this book is because of its interdisciplinary content. Ehlert combines the art of collage with the science of snow. After reading Snowballs with your student, cut out three circles of white paper and stack them to create a snowman. Looking to Ehlert’s examples for inspiration, collect a myriad of objects you can find around the house—like buttons, cashews, scraps of paper and fabric, string, plants, coins, socks—and arrange them on a piece of blank paper to decorate the snowman.

We’ll plan to draw 3 winners on December 30 and announce them on December 31—a fun way to close out the year and start the new one with great books in hand. So stay tuned!

And remember, more actions = more chances for you to win! Click through and enter to win today!

~Claire

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Big Reveal: Giving Thanks for Community

A crisp nip in the air, leaves dancing from green to yellow to orange, the scratch of claw on earth as squirrels dig hiding places for acorns—this can only mean one thing: Thanksgiving fast approaches!

If you ask me what I’m thankful for during this season, and if I had been reflecting on Reveal (Blackbird & Company’s annual student anthology), I would probably say, “amalgamation.”

What a pretentious answer, you think but are too polite to say aloud.

I would explain: an amalgamation is a combining of multiple elements to create a new, unique blend. When the elements come into contact with each other, they change to create something new, like iron and carbon superheating together to form steel. Or a slightly different but related concept—as Aristotle said, “The whole is greater than the sum of the parts,” which emphasizes the power of unity over individual strength.

How does all of this relate to Reveal? Reveal represents an amalgamation of Blackbird & Company writers, a combination of work that elevates each piece to form an inspiring whole. Reveal doesn’t represent one person’s foray into the literary world—rather, Reveal is a communal effort on the part of young writers and scholars who insist that their voices matter, that they have big ideas worth sharing. Encourage your students to submit their Blackbird & Company work here!

By combining our talents in ways that compliment and inspire each other, we can together create something greater than any of us could accomplish individually.

So what am I thankful for?

I’m thankful to be a part of a community that uses writing as a medium for connection, as a way to give voice to the whisperings of the soul. When we all bring our talents to the table, the amalgamation of our art is greater than what any of us could create alone.

 

~Claire S.

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Start the New Year with Pages

January 2026 is right around the corner!

Pages classes are designed to foster competence, creativity, and confidence in students as they press into the important work of becoming literate.  Being able to communicate an original, BIG idea is the ultimate goal of English Language Arts.

Get the most out of Blackbird & Company’s materials and methods! Classes run in 5-week sessions, and will kickstart your student’s work with skills, tips, and tricks to help them succeed. We offer a wide range of humanities classes, all designed to explore the art of idea making:

  1. CORE – Read and Write and Discuss! These classes are tied to individual Literature + Writing Discovery units (2nd grade through 12th grade). Students will receive weekly feedback on their writing via the one-on-one conference!
  2. The History Opt-in – These classes will provide extra historical background tied to specific CORE Level 3 (middle school), and Level 4 (high school) units. Students must be enrolled in CORE to participate.
  3. Research – Learn to explore the life of a famous person, extract facts, and write a unique biographical essay. Students are supported each step of the way.
  4. The Essay – Explore and construct topical essays and inspire your students to communicate big ideas.
  5. Poetry – Each session we are offering short thematic classes that will apply writing skills in beautifully creative ways.
  6. Visual Arts – Explore great works of art and their makers. Students will learn about and practice art making while gaining skills that will transfer to all areas of academic pursuit, especially the art of writing.
  7. Music – Explore the works of great composers and the language of music. Students will gain skills that will transfer to all areas of academic pursuit, especially the art of writing.

Enroll today!

What parents are saying about Pages:

“Thank you for making class so enjoyable and personal. My daughter’s writing has really expanded since being in classes with you.” ~Brit Riddle

“I really appreciate you going through the different areas of reading and writing in class as opposed to having him do it all on his own at home. It sets a good example of what to do (i.e. what to look for and pay close attention to as he reads) and how to do it (i.e. organize his thoughts and get ready to write into paragraphs).” ~Paulina Yeung

 

 

~Kimberly

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How to Find What you Need

Alphabetical Annotations are HERE!

A is for About Authors

All About Blog Categories – You are HERE!

Announcing – Click through to find out what’s new and happening at Blackbird & Company.

Arts Guild – All things visual and musical and pertinent to learning.

Campfire – Join us in January for inspiration and offerings to start the long leg of the school year off right.

CORE ELA – Tips and Tricks and Tools

Discovery – Key insights into the important work of building the fund of knowledge.

Hatching & Earlybird – Insights and inspiration for little ones in Kindergarten, 1st, and 2nd grade.

First Post

Habits of Being – Foster perseverance and you will weave a habit.

Operation Lexicon – Words, words and more words to grow a vibrant vocabulary.

Litropolis – Read Well = Well Read

Maker – Made by hand is an essential skill.

Momologue – Philosophical musings from the women of Blackbird & Company.

Observation – Da Vinci said it best: “All our knowledge has its origins in our perceptions.”

One True Sentence – Let’s follow Hemingway’s advice and write one true sentence.

Pages – Learn about our LIVE online classes.

Pencils – When it comes to technology, the pencil rules.

Print Shop – Downloadable mini-lessons to enrich ELA learning.

Remediation – Strategies for students who need to strengthen reading and writing skills.

Wax Poetic – All things poetic.

Write Ideas – Ideas are the foundation of all written work: Form Follows Function.

Writing Resources – Helps for the writing teacher or parent-teacher to mentor students in the art of writing well.

 

A) CORE Integrated Literature & Writing (Phonics, Reading, and Writing for K and 1st grade),

B) APPLICATION: Grammar, Mechanics & Style

C) APPLICATION: Research, Composition, Creative Writing.

 

CORE ELA

Pencils

APPLICATION

  Operation Lexicon

  One True Sentence

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Print Shop Coming Soon!

 

Come January, Blackbird & Company will be launching Print Shop!  Our awesome collection of downloadable Discovery activities are designed to engage students, Kindergarten through 8th Grade, in focused, independent work pinpointed on specific academic skills with opportunities to build upon the fund of knowledge.

This month we are releasing a sneak peak, three great Print Shop activities for primary students tied to the letter P for FREE! What is more quintessentially Fall than pumpkins? These multi-sensory activities are sure to engage and enrich learning.

Simply click through, print, and let the Discovery begin!

And, please stay tuned for  more details during our January Campfire 2026.

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Stitching Picasso

Stitchery builds cognitive plasticity.

Embroidery is a practice that will empower students to be aware of fine motor potential, overcome the short attention span, and to have a growth mindset. The nervous system controls all of the body functions. But it is a complicated system with diverse potential. by tapping into all potential and possibilities while learning, students will develop diverse thinking skills.

Enhanced performance of the brain ensures that all of the other body systems perform accordingly. Metabolism, for example, is a complex task that makes sure the body has minerals when needed and ensures that toxic waste is extracted from the body. Creative endeavors help the brain to engage in focused, relaxed work, improving nervous system performance. Embroidery is good for the brain. And this is good for learning.

For this project we began by observing Picasso’s Owl:

Next, students made original drawings inspired by Picasso’s drawing. After each child had a drawing they were settled with, the drawing was transferred to the burlap flap. We used the running stitch since these were made by 1st and 2nd graders. But running stitch is great place to start with all ages.

One hint: Have two needles threaded for each student, “unthreading” is common with new stitchers!

Embroidery is academic. So put down the pencil, pick up a needle and thread.

While stitching, think interdisciplinary: Read a book about owls! Write an owl poem.

 

~Kimberly

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Read a Book / Solve a Problem

“Mom, I sat by myself today at the park. Nobody was playing anything I was interested in. I tried to talk to Luis but he never listens; the game always has to go his way. Mom, Tommy says he has been playing football for 10 years, but he just had his 8th birthday. I don’t understand why he won’t just pass the ball. Gabby kept taking Carlos’s hat. She said it was a game but Carlos didn’t seem to like it.”

When Grady is driving in the car with me or sitting at the dinner table or when his head hits the pillow at night this is the usual conversation or maybe I should say download. I realized during this time how much I just needed to listen. Grady needed time to process these different situations and relationships that came across his path during his day.

How confusing, mystifying, uncomfortable human relationships can be—whether we are 8 or 80.

I was recently introduced to an author named Jon Klassen. The words and the pictures are very simple yet carry a lot of wisdom concerning human relationships.

Three books I read Grady over the course of nights were:

1 ) I want my Hat Back

 2) This is not my Hat

 3) We found my Hat

Grady would smile and laugh out loud. In I want my Hat Back, the main character, a bear, is running around asking other animals if they have seen his hat. He asks another character, a rabbit, (who, by the way, is wearing the bear’s hat) and the rabbit, in a suspicious way, says he hasn’t seen the hat. The bear continues his search until he realizes he has seen the hat… that rabbit was wearing it! He goes back to confront the rabbit, “You stole my hat!” There is a long look between the two. Then comes a picture of bear sitting down, saying he loves his hat, wearing it on his head. Then a squirrel comes passing by asking if he has seen rabbit. Bear answers in a suspicious way, “Who me?” “Why are you asking me? I wouldn’t eat a rabbit, don’t ask me anymore questions.” This story ends with no clear ending. Could the bear have sat on the rabbit? Ate the rabbit? Could the rabbit have run off? Really anything is possible.

I read an interview with Jon Klassen and he discussed these micro-dramas from childhood. He used the example of Frog and Toad books. How these two characters had unresolved, uneven relationships, where one of them needed one of them more than the other. The underlying thoughts, “I have friends who could leave me or I have friends I could leave. I don’t like them as much as they like me or vice versa.” I researched the author of Frog and Toad after reading Jon Klassen’s interview. Frog and Toad happened to be my childhood favorite as well. It was interesting to find that Arnold Lobel wrote Frog and Toad based on his experiences from second grade. Lobel was sick and out of school for most of that school year and kept himself busy by drawing. He used his animal drawings as a way of coping with the insecurity of his return and making friends. He used these experiences to write Frog and Toad.

Kids don’t want to analyze these relationships. In stories, like in life at this young age, they want to watch them play out—Jon Klassen reminds: validate that they exist.

Isn’t this part of human nature, to want to feel we are not alone in our experiences?

Jon Klassen goes on to explain that children don’t need to know the motivations of characters and can understand questionable behavior in an unexamined way. Kids don’t ask “why did he do that”, like us adults who like to analyze and pull out the meaning or morality.

How would an author answer the why?

Isn’t that for the reader to get too or not get too?

Is there really only one answer to what motivates human behavior?

Children don’t have to ask all of the whys to understand it can happen. Grady didn’t need to ask why the bunny took the bear’s hat or how the bear got the hat back. He related in the human experience, of having something taken and wanting it back, of finding it and getting it back. This is Not my Hat, shows a small fish taking a hat from a big fish and all his internal thinking about it why he does it. What a beautiful example of what we do as humans when we want something and dance into our internal justification. We laugh while reading because we all relate on some level. No story needs to be added to why stealing is wrong. We can all understand the higher moral value but also total relate with the very human behavior.

We Found a Hat, beautifully demonstrates the inner conflict when two friends find something they both want but there is only one. Our desire for something for ourselves mixed with our feelings of wanting to share and be honest is, again, common human nature. It is rarely just a clean action of what’s right.  It’s a pull and push to serve ourselves and someone we care about.

And then there is Jon Klassen’s book, The Rock from the Sky, that pushes us adults right off the ledge! The book is about what we cannot control.

Where a rock will land. What could happen in our day. What the future might bring. How things we can imagine will change and all the things we can’t imagine and all the questions that go with it, the what, why, how, when and where! There is SO much we can look up for children now, so much on-the-spot-access to information. We can know a lot of interesting facts. But in the case of our lives, the unknown is our future and the daily things that can happen that are out of our control. This book is addressing the fact we don’t know everything and we are not supposed to know. Part of life happenings are luck, timing, paying attention, listening, trusting, asking for help, admitting we don’t know!

So when I sit down to read Grady a book, especially a Jon Klassen book, I remember that Grady has had a full day with really big experiences. When Grady talks I listen. When we read I let the story be felt. I don’t have to pull the moral or give him instruction on who he should be. I watch him smile and laugh and I let the moment be. I give up my adult longing to know why and I sit on the ledge with the unknown. I become friends with the right now and that is enough.

-Clare Bonn

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The Art of Integrating Literacy

 

Blackbird & Company Discovery Literature & Writing Guides are designed to integrate the skills of reading and writing.
Over time, the curriculum will enable your children to develop the tools necessary to independently analyze and respond to great stories. Our goal is to help the child work independently freeing up your expertise.

Think in Threes:

ONE. Read the section to facilitate discussion, helping your readers tap into the heart of the story. Our guides have discussion questions built into every section, providing the framework for weekly interaction between you and your children. Questions are designed to spark student’s memories, trigger their interpretations, and get them thinking beyond the page about how a story can relate to their actual lives. In time, students who participate regularly in a discussion circle will become excited and amazed about what they glean from books.
TWO. Conference with the writer, lending expertise necessary for the emerging writer to gain the skills necessary to articulate an original idea on paper. Encourage young writers in Levels 1 through Level 3 to develop the skill of self-conferencing —having drafted, re-read, and made self-edit marks in red.
THREE. Establish a routine. The comfort of routine, once established, will set roots deep into soil, establishing a framework for the tree to grow strong. The following schedule—45 minutes to 1 hour per day—will allow your children to pace (not RACE) through the Discovery Guide.

Saturday & Sunday – Read the new section over the weekend… Create a tradition of cozy reading!
Monday– Complete the vocabulary Acquire and begin taking notes in the Journal (Characters, Setting, Plot)
Tuesday– Complete notes Journal (Characters, Setting, Plot) and begin comprehension Recollect
Wednesday– Complete the rough draft Explore, re-read and make edits with a red pen
Thursday– Conference with an adult mentor and complete comprehension Recollect
Friday– Complete the final draft, carefully re-reading and implementing all edit suggestions

We remember the things we discover for ourselves. As your children grow, the intensity of the important work that will enable them to discover, increases. Work is GOOD!

Remember, no child is able to do the work of bringing an original idea into the world without the tools. You can present a child with oil paint, for example, but without the skill to utilize the tool properly—color theory, practice mixing, good brushes and so on—the child will produce muddy colors.

Nothing fosters the higher-level thinking that allows students to form new ideas and opinions about real life more than hashing through a story in a discussion circle. What begins as an imagining in the mind of the writer is translated to story, and in turn, transferred to real life through group discussion. Integration is a powerful tool.

~Kimberly