Week 1: Miss Rumphius, Barbara Cooney
Vocabulary
- beautiful: pleasing to look at
- faraway: a long distance
- porridge: hot cereal like oatmeal
- tropical: a hot and humid place
- wharf: a place for ships to load and unload
- Grandma lived so faraway we had to travel there by train.
- It took all day to unload the ship’s cargo onto the wharf.
- The summer was so hot it felt like being on a tropical island.
- The family sat down to eat their delicious breakfast of porridge just like the three bears.
- She received a vase full of beautiful flowers for Mother’s Day.
Vocabulary Usage in the Book
- “You must do something to make the world more beautiful,” said her grandfather.
- Some of the books told her about faraway places.
- In the meantime Alice got up and washed her face and ate porridge for breakfast.
- “This is almost like a tropical isle,”said Miss Rumphius.
- From the front stoop she could see the wharves and the bristling masts of tall ships.
Comprehension
- Alice could see the wharves and masts of tall ships from her front stoop.
- Her grandfather came to America on a sailing ship.
- Alice’s grandfather was an artist.
- Alice told her grandfather that she wanted to go to faraway places and live by the sea.
- Her grandfather told her that she must also do something to make the world a more beautiful place.
- Miss Rumphius worked in a library.
- Miss Rumphius thought the conservatory in the park was almost like a tropical isle/.
- Before Miss Rumphius left the tropical islands, Baba Raja gave her a beautiful mother-of-pearl shell.
- Miss Rumphius climbed tall mountains where the snow never melted.
- Feeling much better, Miss Rumphius discovered on her walk a large patch of blue and purple and rose-colored lupines.
- The flowers gave Miss Rumphius the idea to hurry home and send off for five bushels of lupine seed.
- Miss Rumphius, the Lupine Lady, had done the third most difficult thing of all.
Week 2: Abuela, Arthur Dorros
Vocabulary
- beautiful: something that is very pretty
- dock: to park a boat
- soar: fly or rise in the air
- surround: to be all around
- swoop: go down very far
- The bouquet of flowers was very beautiful.
- The birds swoop down from the tree.
- The children run to surround the candy from the pinata.
- The boat was tied securely to the dock.
- The gentle breeze made my kite soar/ above the waves.
Vocabulary Usage in the Book
- I think the park is beautiful too.
- We’d fly to where the ships are docked and watch people unload fruits from the land where Abuela grew up.
- And I’d look as we soared over parks and streets, dogs and people.
- “Tantos pajaros,” Abuela says as a flock of birds surrounds us.
- “Swooping like a bird”, I’d call to her.
Comprehension
- People mostly speak Spanish where she is from.
- Abuela means grandmother in Spanish.
- A bus will take you all around the city.
- I wish I could fly like a bird.
- The birds eat the bread crumbs we bring.
- The first thing we did at the park was play on the swings.
- When we flew, we would see parks, streets, dogs, and people.
- Abuela’s skirt would be like a sail.
- Pablo is my uncle and Elisa is my aunt.
- The clouds look like a cat, a bear, and a chair.
- We would fly by the buildings where my father works.
- Abuela wants to go on a boat ride.
Week 3: The Wonderful Towers of Watts, Patricia Zelver
Vocabulary
- bungalow: a small, one-story house
- creation: something that is made
- gramophone: an old-fashioned music player
- marvel: to be amazed
- tile: a small square of glass or clay
- My family moved into the bungalow.
- The counter is made out of beautiful tile.
- He was proud of his creation made out of clay.
- My grandfather listened to music on a gramophone.
- They marvel at the amazing animals.
Vocabulary Usage in the Book
- He bought a little bungalow in Watts, a poor neighborhood that was half town, half country, outside the city limits of Los Angeles.
- Everyone stared in wonder at old Sam’s creation.
- While he worked he listened to opera music on an old gramophone.
- Every year people come from all over the world to marvel at Old Sam’s crazy dream.
- Every evening he got off the streetcar carrying a large burlap of broken colored tiles.
Comprehension
- Many people though that Old Sam was crazy.
- Old Sam came from Italy.
- Old Sam rode the street car to work and home.
- Many people thought that Old Sam was collecting junk.
- People wondered what Old Sam was up to.
- One day a sparkling tower of cement and tiles rose over the fence.
- Old Sam climbed his towers with only a window washer’s belt to keep him from falling.
- Even though Old Sam was getting older, he kept on working just as before.
- Children found a magical city with little streets, squares, and fountains in Old Sam’s backyard.
- Many newspaper reporters came to see the towers and talk to Old Sam
- When Old Sam turned eighty, he moved away and went to live near his relatives in another city.
- City officials wanted to knock the towers down, but the people volunteered to make a wind load test to prove the towers were safe, they were!
Week 4: Fly High, Fly Low, Don Freeman
Vocabulary
- bewildered: to be confused
- glide: to move smoothly
- peeped: looked quickly
- persnickety: very fussy and picky
- tuckered-out: to be very tired
- The child was a persnickety eater.
- The baby was tuckered-out after a long day.
- The puppy looked bewildered at his new home.
- The baby chick peeped over the edge of the nest.
- The pelican’s parents taught him to glide over the ocean.
Vocabulary Usage in the Book
- He stood there dazed and bewildered, wondering where his sign had gone. (Pg. 29)
- Side by side they glided over the bay, until they could look down and see The Golden Gate Bridge. (Pgs. 15-16)
- When he peeped out he saw that the rain had stopped and warm rays from the sun were beginning to shine down. (Pg. 47)
- The pigeons who roosted along the ledges of the building across the street thought he was a pretty persnickety pigeon to live where he did. (Pg. 10)
- Then, as the setting sun began painting the sky with a rosy glow, two tuckered-out birds would be slowly winging their way back to the park just in time for supper. (Pg. 18)
Comprehension
- San Francisco is famous for it s fog and flowers. (Pg. 6)
- The other pigeons thought that he was too choosy and persnickety. (Pg. 10)
- Sometimes Mr. Hi Lee brought the pigeons day-old cake crumbs from the bakery. (Pg. 13)
- Sid and Midge could look down at the Golden Gate Bridge because they flew so high. (Pg. 16)
- Sid and Midge built a nest using straw, string and old cloth. (Pg. 21)
- Midge was afraid because her home was being taken down. (Pg. 24)
- When Sid came home, he was dazed and bewildered. (Pg. 29)
- When the storm hit, Sid tried to hide in the traffic light and then the cable carbell. (Pg. 37)
- Sid was rescued from the gutter by Mr. Hi Lee. (Pg. 46)
- When Sid was in Mr. Hi Lee’s pocket he found several sunflower seeds. (Pg. 46)
- Mr. Hi Lee took Sid to a bakery. (Pg. 47)
- After the baby birds were born, all of the other birds were very appreciative of the birds choice of home. (Pg. 56)
Week 5: Letting Swift River Go, Jane Yolen
Vocabulary
- harvested : to have gathered things together
- mumblety-peg: an old game played with sticks or pocket knives
- rippled: a water surface with very small waves
- sacred: religiously important
- whispered: spoken very quietly
- The mother whispered goodnight to her baby.
- The children were playing mumblety-peg in the yard.
- When the crops were ripe, the farmers harvested them.
- The Bible is considered sacred to Christians.
- The afternoon wind rippled the surface of the lake.
Vocabulary Usage in the Book
- In the deep winter/Papa harvested ice/from Greenwich Lake,/and Mama kept the stove going/in the house all day and all night.
- We played mumblety-peg/in the graveyard/and picnicked on Grandpa Will’s stone/the black one that stayed warm all day/by soaking up the hot summer sun.
- A rainbow trout leaped after a fly/and the water rings rippled through/my father’s careful mapping.
- No one wanted to bother with them/but I thought it right/they remain in sacred ground.
- The wind whispered comfortably/through the long branches/of the willow by my bedroom window.
Comprehension
- Mother would let me walk alone all the way to the crossroads.
- We would have picnics on Grandpa Will’s stone.
- When we slept outside in the backyard we would listen to the trains.
- At night, we would catch fireflies in mason jars.
- During the winter we would hang buckets on the maple tree to catch sap for making syrup.
- After the people in Boston decided to drown our city, they began to dig up graves.
- The governor of Boston sent his woodpeckers to clear scrub, brush and cut down the trees.
- Georgie and I watched them push down the Old Stone Mill.
- I never heard where Georgie went and I never even got to say good-bye.
- It took seven long years for the water to cover the Swift River towns.
- When I was older, Papa and I rowed out on the Quabbin Reservoir.
- When it got dark the stars reflected like fireflies.

