Several weeks ago, I wrote a blog post about
The Saint Nicholas Day Snow by Charlotte Riggle. In that post, I wrote about the benefits of reading a story multiple
times to help students improve their comprehension of the story.
Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers by John S. Armstrong is
another story in which students can benefit from reading multiple times.
It lends itself well to choral readings, dramatic play, and music... making
repeated readings of Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers FUN! Keep reading to learn more about Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers and how you can integrate it into your language arts lessons.
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Author's Summary
Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers is an inspiring children's book with beautiful illustrations that takes the reader through the struggles and personal growth of Broccoli Rob, a shy stalk of broccoli who loved to sing. After several days of heavy rain, Rob was able to persuade his vegetable friends to come together and sing to encourage the sun to come out behind the clouds and shine bright, despite the other vegetable's initial reluctance towards Rob's plea. However, once the garden singers began to sing, Broccoli Rob was so shy even his vegetable friends can't hear his beautiful singing, let alone the sun. Rob found himself needing encouragement of his own from his garden friends in order to sing loud and proud, and that day he discovered a very important lesson from his experience.🍎 Title: Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers
🍎 Author: John S. Armstrong
🍎 Illustrator: David Miles
🍎 Publisher: Heartland Publishing LLC
🍎 Date: August 21, 2020
🍎 Pages: 30
🍎 Author: John S. Armstrong
🍎 Illustrator: David Miles
🍎 Publisher: Heartland Publishing LLC
🍎 Date: August 21, 2020
🍎 Pages: 30
Before Reading the Story
Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers is a fun story to read out
loud to your students and lends itself well to choral reading and dramatic
play. The children's song Mr. Golden Sun plays a
significant role in the story's plotline, so introducing the song before
you read Broccoli Rob to your students will increase the
fun factor while you read it to them. If you or your students are
not familiar with Mr. Golden Sun, you can watch the video below:
Mr. Golden Sun by Pinkfong... the singers who made Baby
Shark famous
(Enjoy your earworm...)
Reading the Story
John S. Armstrong wrote Broccoli Rob in a nice, clean style
that young readers and listeners can easily understand. The characters,
setting, problem, and solution can be easily identified whether the
students read the story independently or you read it to them.
- characters: Broccoli Rob, Carlton Carrot, Rufus Radish, Rosy Tomato, Pepe Pepper, Poppy Cornstalk
- setting: outdoors, on a farm, in a garden, modern-day or recent past
- problem: It has rained for a long time and Broccoli Rob wants the sun to come back out.
- solution: Broccoli Rob's friends helped Broccoli Rob feel more confident and together they all sang for the sun to shine again.
When you read Broccoli Rob to your students, have fun
with it... it is a story about singing, friends, and sunshine after
all! Read it with emotion. Dramatize it a bit and sing the
musical bits. If your students beg you to read it again, go for
it! With minimal prompting, they will soon be reading parts of
the story with you.
Even the youngest readers will be able to identify and illustrate the
main characters.
Identifying Characters
After reading Broccoli Rob with your students, do a
quick review of the main characters. Who are they? What do
they look like? What did they do? Which characters are
their favorites? Once you are confident that your students can
recall and describe the main characters of the story, have them select
one character they'd like to use to create a character puppet.
You will need:
- paper lunch bags (brown or white)
- crayons, markers, colored pencils, paint, etc.
- scissors
- glue
- construction paper
- an assortment of crafty embellishments
- googly eyes
- anything else you can think of
Character puppets are simply paper bag puppets with an
academic-sounding name. There are no hard and fast rules about
making them. Take a paper bag, color and decorate the outside of
it to look like a character from the book, pop it on your hand, and
move your fingers inside of it to make it look like the puppet is
opening and closing its mouth.
I happened to have a lot of felt stashed away in my craft closet, so I
used it to make my sample puppet. I added some googly eyes and
puffy paints for details. Depending on the ages of your
students, the supplies you have on hand, and the amount of time you
are willing to dedicate to making puppets, you can have your students
make them as detailed as much as you want. As long as the
character puppets are cute and your students had fun creating them,
it's all good!
Rereading the Story
Now that you've read Broccoli Rob several times, made
character puppets, and sang Mr. Golden Sun a bazillion times,
it's time to choral read the story with the character puppets.
Choral reading is when the teacher and class read a text aloud
together. Choral reading takes the 'spotlight' off of
struggling readers while encouraging them to try their best.
Repeated readings of stories help students build their knowledge base
of sounds, language, and vocabulary. They also help students
acquire early literacy and comprehension skills. Why the
character puppets? Those puppets help spark your students'
imagination and curiosity. They also help your students focus
and concentrate on what's being read. Granted, you may need to
choral read Broccoli Rob several times. The
first time or two your students try to choral read with their puppets,
it may be all silliness and playfulness. Roll with it... kids
are silly and playful. After your students have gotten their
sillies out, they'll be able to use their character puppets to choral
read properly.
Kelly, I'm humbled to have such a positive and thoughtful review from you! I wrote "Broccoli Rob and the Garden Singers" to provide a powerful message of self-identity for young children, and I am thrilled to have reached so many children so far! Thank you for spreading the word. Kindly, Author John S. Armstrong
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