Sunday, May 4, 2014
The Invention of Hugo Cabret
I use read alouds daily in my classroom. One of the books that I read every year to my students is Brian Selznick's "The Invention of Hugo Cabret". Brian Selznick told the story of Hugo using both text and pictures. The pictures and text alternate in telling the tale.
I have a lot of English Language Learners in my room and the use of pictures and text draws in my class. Even the students with very limited English can access the story. I use the pictures to discuss what is happening, which gives the students the opportunity to use their oral language.
Besides the usefulness of this book in my classroom, ultimately, "The Invention of Hugo Cabret" is a great story. The students care about the characters. They become excited about Georges Melies, an early film maker in France. It is a beautifully illustrated book and I highly recommend it in every teacher's library.
** Comments are actually not from me! I am at a blog training and my neighbors are posting on my account. :)
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I like this idea of using a book that has pictures to help ELL students access text. What is it about this book and pictures in particular that work with those students? What grade are you teaching?
ReplyDeleteit is an amazing book. Kids are excited about having 'read' a 400 page book. Visual literacy and understanding the pictures is an important skill. I like the idea of discussing the pictures to work on speaking skills.
ReplyDeleteThe previous two comments were not from me! We were at a class on blogging in the classroom and the two people in my group made comments using my account. :)
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