Thank you, Lynda Mullaly Hunt,
for giving my sixth graders a community-building novel
with characters of the utmost character–
authentic young people with whom we’re all identifying.
I typically read two chapters of Fish in a Tree daily–before we have independent reading. Each day, I look out into the eyes of my students, and I see engaged learners who’ve begun to feel as though Ally, Keisha, and Albert are classmates, even friends. (Shay, for the time being, isn’t well-liked, but I have a feeling we’ll start to understand that mean-spirited young lady soon enough.)
Today, after we wrapped up our typical two chapters, I introduced six-word memoirs as a way to give all the Fish in a Tree characters a voice–and show what we know about characterization. Students crafted their own six-word memoirs in their choice of character. Then we shared out, trying to guess which character “authored” the memoir. I’m posting some of these inventive memoirs that crystallized fictional characters in a way that made this teacher mighty proud. Any fellow FIAT devotees who happen upon our blog, we encourage you to try your hand at naming the character behind each six-word memoir. By all means, leave us a comment with your guesses.
When it comes to teaching, there isn’t impossible, only possible. Thank you to all of the gifted authors who enter our classroom and in a few hundred pages alter how we view one another and our world.
Can you guess which Fish in a Tree characters “penned” these six-word memoirs?
1. I am the queen bee, loser. – Sam
2. I am alone. You can’t help. – Michael
3. I am not who she says. – Derek
4. One day, fish will climb trees. – Zoe
5. Mean is cruel. Add some sugar. – Mackenzie
6. Stuck in a spider’s web. Alone. – Thiviya
7. There are mean people in life. – Amanda
8. Cars and tools are my life. – Ananya
9. Ally is smart. She’s something else. – Cecilia
10. Mr. Daniels is the kindest person. – Bryan
11. I don’t know what I’m writing! – Minahil
12. Star Trek. Star Trek. Star Trek. – Sean
13. Pickle color is my new style. – Kayla
14. The world of chess is unpredictable. – Alexa
15, Stuck under a hovering black cloud. – Rylie
16. Am I doing the right thing? – Spencer
17. Everyone is equal. There’s no favorites. – Owen
18. There’s more inside her, I know. – Rachel
19. Wooden nickels. Silver dollars. Love coins. – Jordan
20. Mental capability isn’t defined by writing. – Marissa
21. Dreams are determined by your will. – Kayce
22. Old things have lots of value. – Andrew
23. Broken. Being fixed by Mr. Daniels. – Ella
24. Why do people pick out differences? – Amanda
25. You can do it. I believe. – Ashrita
Until the next chapter,
Mrs. Rombach
Hi Ms.Rombach-
It’s me, Meher from your 2/6 block with Ms.Fields. You know I was checking out the edublogs award nominee list and you were in the best class blog section. So Congratulations!
Hi Esha!
How could you guess? HA HA Of course, you’re right!
How are things at Trailside? I miss seeing you in the halls of ERMS! I bump into a few former students, but you know how the house are separated so it’s usually just a quick look if I have the good fortune of seeing anyone. What’s the best book you’ve read this year? I just finished “The Night She Disappeared” by April Henry, author of “Girl Stolen”. Check them out! We’re working on book trailers right now…should have them up soon. We’re blogging a little…but should get back to that after Thanksgiving. Miss ya-
Mrs. Rombach
http://mrsrombachreads.edublogs.org
Miss you too! Trailside is good, but I really have to come see everyone at Eagle Ridge! We are getting BYOT in January, I think Eagle Ridge has it. Lately, I am reading Winter, the last book of the Luner Chronicles series. This series are my favorite books this year. I haven’t heard of The Night She Disappeared, but I’ll definitely check it out! Have a great Thanksgiving!
Hi Mrs.Rombach, how are you? Memoirs… I remember when we did those! These are really good! I read Fish In a Tree last year, so this is a guess but is #12 Albert?