In a recent Chalk + Ink Zoom chat (an offshoot of the awesome podcast hosted by fourth-grade teacher Kate Narita),
uber-dedicated elementary school librarian and children’s
book author Marcie Flinchum
Atkins described an idea I love—Nod to Nonfiction book
displays. I thought other librarians and teachers would be interested too, so I
invited Marcie to share her idea here. I’m so grateful that she agreed.
Thank you, Marcie, for all
you’re doing to cultivate a love of nonfiction in your students.
In the fall, I led a
group book study for other school librarians on 5 Kinds of Nonfiction:
Enriching Reading and Writing Instruction with Children’s Books by Melissa
Stewart and Marlene Correia. We discussed ways we could elevate nonfiction
programming, improve our lessons on nonfiction, and display nonfiction effectively
on a regular basis. We wanted students and teachers to be aware of all of the
good nonfiction out there. I didn’t want nonfiction to be something we only
highlight when we have research to do.
After brainstorming ways
I might highlight all the cool nonfiction we have, I decided to do a weekly book
display called “Nod to Nonfiction.” It would feature different types of
nonfiction, authors of nonfiction, nonfiction awards, and special
subgenres.
I worried that
committing to a weekly display could quickly become daunting, so I created a
content calendar to map out the weeks ahead of time.
Content Calendar
|
January 2 |
April Pulley Sayre |
|
January 9 |
MLK bios |
|
January 16 |
MLK bios |
|
January 23 |
Jess Keating books |
|
January 30 |
Continue with Jess |
|
February 6 |
Black History Month |
|
February 13 |
Black History Month |
|
February 20 |
Graphic Nonfiction |
|
February 27 |
Melissa Stewart |
|
March 6 |
Women’s History |
|
March 13 |
Women’s History |
|
March 20 |
Infographics |
|
March 27 |
Sibert Award & |
|
April 10 |
Poetic Nonfiction |
|
April 17 |
Steve Jenkins |
|
April 24 |
Critters books – Elise |
|
May 1 |
Jewish American bios |
|
May 8 |
Jewish American bios |
|
May 15 |
AAPI bios |
|
May 22 |
AAPI bios |
|
May 29 |
Exploring nature–field |
First, I filled in book
display ideas connected to holidays or special months: Martin Luther King Jr
Day, Black History Month, Women’s History Month, Asian American and Pacific
Islander Heritage Month, for example. Then I developed ideas for the remaining weeks.
Here are some examples:
- Authors: Melissa Stewart, Steve
Jenkins, Jess Keating - Subgenres of Nonfiction: Poetic
Nonfiction, Graphic Nonfiction, Infographics - Awards: Sibert Award and Honor
Books
I find that batching my
work helps me to be more efficient. For this project, I created book lists for several
months-worth of displays all at once and printed them out. Then I wrote
introductions for each display for our school’s news show. Each Monday, the sixth-grade
news crew reads the relevant introduction, so the whole school knows the theme
of the Nod to Nonfiction book display. The display stays up all week in a
designated spot. And every Friday afternoon, I switch out the display. Since my
book lists are already printed out, it goes quickly.
Sometimes I pair the
book display with student work. For example, during a recent sixth-grade
project, students researched natural disasters in connection with their weather
unit, and I showed them how to create infographics on Canva. When the
infographics were complete, I printed them out and added them to the weekly Nod
to Nonfiction display on Infographics books. For the timing to work out, I
looked ahead and planned the project a couple of months before the display was scheduled
to go up.
If you’re a classroom
teacher, you can create displays utilizing books in your classroom collection
or highlight books on topics related to your grade-level curriculum. You can
also ask your school librarian for a set of books about different types of
nonfiction. If you’re worried that creating displays will be too time
consuming, you can feature a single book in a designated area and swap it out
each week. Or you can create monthly displays instead of weekly ones.
The goal of my Nod to
Nonfiction book displays is to raise awareness around nonfiction and to feature
lots of different kinds of nonfiction in an intentional way. Now that I’ve been
doing it for a few months, I’m making notes about tweaks I want to make in the
future. I’m also noticing areas of my nonfiction collection that could be more
robust, and I’m making a list of books I want to order for next year. I’ve also
begun thinking about ways to incorporate the 5 Kinds of Nonfiction in my
instruction and in my library displays.
So far Nod to Nonfiction
is a success. It’s encouraging students and teachers to think about nonfiction
in new ways, and it’s showing the breadth and depth of books available for
projects and for personal enjoyment.
Marcie
Flinchum Atkins is a teacher-librarian by
day and a children’s book writer in the wee hours of the morning. She holds an
M.A. and an M.F.A. in Children’s Literature from Hollins University. Wait,
Rest, Pause: Dormancy in Nature (Millbrook Press, 2019) is her most
recent book. You can find her online at www.marcieatkins.com and
on Twitter and Instagram as @MarcieFAtkins.
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