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The Pumpkin Book Project

Join us in celebrating fall by creating pumpkins that look like famous characters from storybooks. Engage in reading, character analysis, and pumpkin decorating. Don't miss out on this fun family project!

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The Pumpkin Book Project

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  1. The Pumpkin Book Project Combining Reading With Creativity

  2. Dear Parents, Happy Fall! It is that time of year for candy, apples, festivals, and PUMPKINS! I always love the exciting fall activities we get to incorporate here at school. In our classroom, we will be celebrating fall…pumpkin style; however, our pumpkins won’t just be any ol’ pumpkin. This year the students will be creating pumpkins to look just like famous characters from storybooks. The best part…this project involves you! The activity has TWO elements: a book report which will be completed at school and the pumpkin project which will be completed at home. Attached you will find directions for the pumpkin project as well as dates when certain parts are due. The students will be choosing their favorite fiction story and reading it in class and for homework. As the students finish reading their books, they may begin to create their pumpkins at home. Students are welcome to complete this on their own or have fun completing it as a family project. On our class website (Miss Trofa’s Page) you will find examples of the Pumpkin Project as well as an extra copy of this packet. I can’t wait to see all of the students’ pumpkin creations on display at the end of October. Happy Fall! Miss Trofa

  3. Pumpkin Project Project Packet Look through the entire packet for this project. Be sure that you understand what is expected. Keep all of the steps and directions in mind when you are choosing your character. Selecting a Book Select a high quality book to use for your project. The book should be at or above your current reading level. *If you are also participating in the reading fair you can feel free to use the same book* Reading with a Purpose You are reading to find out more about a character. While you are reading look for clues the author gives you that tell more about the character’s personality, likes, and dislikes. As you find clues and evidence that describe your character mark your page! This will help you during our in-class writing portion. In Class You will be conducting a character analysis in class. The character you choose to decorate your pumpkin will be the character you will do your analysis on. Make sure you are choosing a MAIN character so there is plenty of information about them throughout your book. During this portion we will make a list of character traits that describe your character. This is where you will need to cite your evidence from the story (just like our prove it papers). At Home You will be responsible for completing several pieces of this project at home. Each piece has its own due date. The first step will be to choose your book. Next you will read your book. You will need to draw a “Pumpkin Blue Print” and fill out a supply list in order to organize your ideas and plan out what your pumpkin will look like. Lastly, you will be decorating your pumpkin. Grading Each piece of the Pumpkin Project is receiving a grade. In this packet you will find a scoring rubric. Turning each assignment in on its due date is part of your grade.

  4. How to Make a Pumpkin into a Book Character • Start with a pumpkin. The foam pumpkins that are available at craft stores are very much preferred as real pumpkins quickly rot. *DO NOT CARVE INTO A REAL PUMPKIN. • Use the “pumpkin project blueprint” to sketch out ideas and make a list of supplies that you will need. • Gather your supplies and have fun being creative. You are welcome to do this on your own or have fun completing it as a family project. • There are no specific guidelines regarding the materials you use. Below is a list of supplies that others have used. You may find it useful for generating ideas. Please plan to bring a copy of the book to display with your completed project. If your book was borrowed from the library, you could print a scanned or photocopied image of the book instead. Some students also bring in additional “props” to display (example: Johnny Appleseed- apples, seed packet).

  5. Pumpkin Project Due Dates October 2018 Rubric:

  6. Pumpkin Project Character Traits Great authors do not simply list specific traits for the characters in the books they write. Instead they provide information that allows the reader to infer the character traits based on things the characters do (actions), say (dialogue), and think (thought/feelings). As you read books you will encounter “evidence” that will help you get to know a character. Below is a list of some character traits that can often be used to describe individuals you will meet in books. Use the Pumpkin Reading Log to record examples from the text to support your opinion that the traits you select describe the character in your book. generous grouchy hard-working helpful honest impatient impolite independent intelligent kind spoiled stubborn trustworthy understanding adventurous afraid ambitious annoyed anxious arrogant bossy brave calm careful careless rude silly smart cautious cheerful childish clever confident confused cooperative courageous cruel curious daring demanding dependable sneaky depressed determined easygoing energetic evil fearless foolish friendly funny gentle selfish serious talented thoughtful lazy lonely loving mean messy mischievous mysterious naughty nervous obnoxious polite proud responsible shy

  7. Pumpkin Project Reading Log

  8. Pumpkin Project Reading Log

  9. Pumpkin Project Examples

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