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ePub Behind the Museum Door: Poems to Celebrate the Wonders of Museums download

by Stacey Dressen-McQueen,Lee Bennett Hopkins

ePub Behind the Museum Door: Poems to Celebrate the Wonders of Museums download
Author:
Stacey Dressen-McQueen,Lee Bennett Hopkins
ISBN13:
978-0810912045
ISBN:
081091204X
Language:
Publisher:
Harry N. Abrams (April 4, 2007)
Category:
Subcategory:
Poetry
ePub file:
1575 kb
Fb2 file:
1124 kb
Other formats:
lrf rtf lrf txt
Rating:
4.4
Votes:
921

Behind the Museum Door book.

Behind the Museum Door book. The poems are selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins not written by him. The illustrations are acrylic paint, oil pastel, and This book contains fourteen poems about exhibits you would find in a museum. They include suit of armor,mummies, dinosaur skeletons, the wheel, woolly mammoths,trilobites, and moccasins. This book would be a good read aloud before a visit to a museum to introduce the exhibits they will be seeing there, and then after a visit to prompt ideas for writing about their experiences.

Behind the museum door. Poems to Celebrate the Wonders of Museums. Hopkins selects 14 child-appealing poems centered on the allure of museums and their treasures. Most poems speculate about precious artifacts of the past, as in Suit of Armor, by Beverly McLoughland and The Moccasins, by Kristine O’Connell George. Homer henry hudson's curio museum. by Lee Bennett Hopkins and Stacey Dressen-McQueen. In striving to enrich the lives of all readers, TeachingBooks supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read. Seen Art? by Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith.

Behind the Museum Door: Poems to Celebrate the Wonders of Museums. Illustrated by Stacey Dressen-McQueen. Hamsters, Shells, and Spelling Bees: School Poems. Illustrated by Sachiko Yoshikawa. America at War. Illustrated by Stephen Alcorn.

Long before Night at the Museum hit the silver screen, Claudia and her brother Jamie spent a week as runaways at the .

Long before Night at the Museum hit the silver screen, Claudia and her brother Jamie spent a week as runaways at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The two young siblings slept in an Elizabethan-era bed-also the site of an alleged murder-bathed in the Fountain of the Muses, and attempt to uncover the true artist behind the Met’s latest acquisition: a sculpture of an angel that may or may not be a genuine Michelangelo.

Behind the Museum Doors is about the wacky and cool things that children (and . A great book of poems that tell about the wonders of museums!

Behind the Museum Doors is about the wacky and cool things that children (and anyone) can learn about museums. This collection of poems focuses on the different things that can be featured in a museum, along with interesting and colorful illustrations of kids having fun in front of them. I love the concept of a poetry book about learning because it makes the act of going to a museum sound artistic and like an adventure instead of a time in which to gain more facts. A great book of poems that tell about the wonders of museums! Acrylic paint, oil pastels and colored pencils illustrate this book in bright and beautiful colors, with pictures of relics and ethnic children abound!

Reveals the wonders of museums! By Thriftbooks. com User, June 12, 2007.

book by Lee Bennett Hopkins. Reveals the wonders of museums! By Thriftbooks. A museum isn't as much fun as going to a water park, stadium or a state park. What lies within the museum's walls have a history all their own.

Behind the Museum Door" talks about things like a suit of armor .

Behind the Museum Door" talks about things like a suit of armor, mummies, Native Americans, forms of art and a whole bunch more. Stacey Dressen-Mc Queen has brought every poem to life with her bright colors and children smiling and enjoying each part of the museum. Lee Bennett Hopkins starts with his poem, Behind the Museum Door that lists some of these treasures: "Ancient necklaces, African art, armor of knights, a peasant cart", and all these objects are vibrantly illustrated in a two-page spread. Beverly McLoughland in her poem, Suit of Armor pens: In its human shape.

Praise for Lee Bennett Hopkins University of Southern Mississippi Medallion for “outstanding contributions to the field of children’s literature” Parents Choice Gold Award winnerChristopher Award winner “Hopkins . . . captures the wonder and exuberance of childhood.”—School Library JournalFourteen poems on the many dazzling collections featured in museumsThe art, artifacts, and anthropological treasures found in museum collections are coupled with stunning poetry by acclaimed writers Lee Bennett Hopkins, Jane Yolen, Myra Cohn Livingston, Rebecca Kai Dotlich, and many more in this unique volume. Perfect for art, natural history, and children’s museums, this is also an ideal book for classroom teachers before they bring their students on a museum visit. The lively verse captures the wonder and amazement of the exhibition experience, from mummies to medieval relics, and from fine art to fossils. Selected by children’s poetry luminary Lee Bennett Hopkins and illustrated by award-winning artist Stacey Dressen-McQueen, Behind the Museum Door will allow young readers to bring the experience home with them to enjoy again and again, long after the museum doors are closed.
  • Book is in mint condition. My students are enjoying the wonderful museum poems.

  • Reviewed by Brianne Plach for Reader Views (5/07)

    Why do we have to go to the museum anyway? That sounds like a boring field trip! You have probably said it yourself. A museum isn't as much fun as going to a water park, stadium or a state park. What lies within the museum's walls have a history all their own. Lee Bennett Hopkins has selected a wide range of poems about museums in this collection. "Behind the Museum Door" talks about things like a suit of armor, mummies, Native Americans, forms of art and a whole bunch more.

    Stacey Dressen-Mc Queen has brought every poem to life with her bright colors and children smiling and enjoying each part of the museum. "Behind the Museum Door" would be a great addition to primary-grade classrooms to help introduce the children to a museum experience before going on a field trip. This book is written for younger kids than this reviewer but it's an enjoyable book for young children.

    You never know what exciting things can lie within the museum walls. Reading the book "Behind the Museum Door" is almost as much fun as discovering what lies behind the museum's door.

    Book received free of charge.

  • Behind the museum door: poems to celebrate the wonders of museums

    Selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins and illustrated by Stacey Dressen-McQueen.

    Previously published and new poems by the likes of Myra Cohn Livingston, Lilian Moore, Jane Yolen, and J. Patrick Lewis celebrate the many treasures found in museums. Lee Bennett Hopkins starts with his poem, Behind the Museum Door that lists some of these treasures: "Ancient necklaces, African art, armor of knights, a peasant cart", and all these objects are vibrantly illustrated in a two-page spread.

    Beverly McLoughland in her poem, Suit of Armor pens:

    In its human shape

    of molded steel,

    It looks as though

    There's someone real

    Inside. You Knock:

    "Hello in there,"

    And hear a dull

    Echo of air

    As though a voice

    Were drifting through

    The lonely centuries

    To you.

    A girl stares wonderingly at the suit of armor and in the background a knight on a horse fights a dragon.

    Another poem, Stirring Art shows multicultural children dancing underneath a mobile.

    Beauty

    suspended in

    suspence.

    A breath of air

    Awakens

    Lifeless form--

    See

    it

    dance.

    O Trilobite by Alice Schertle is an ode to these little microscopic creatures. She begins her poem with:

    O trilobite, there are a few,

    here in the Fossil Room, of you.

    Once billions strong you ruled the sea,

    A Cambrian Age majority.

    Trilobites swim across a dark page surrounding the words that are set against a teal background. Multicultural children, although their facial expressions are not very distinctive from one another, reveal in posture their pleasure as they point excitedly to exhibits; some children hold hands or stand with their arms across the shoulders of their friends. These twelve poems encourage an appreciation for the wonders of museums. They can be read aloud, however; there often is a bit of clutter in the illustrations that requires closer examination.

    Behind the museum door: poems to celebrate the wonders of museums

    Selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins and illustrated by Stacey Dressen-McQueen.

    Previously published and new poems by the likes of Myra Cohn Livingston, Lilian Moore, Jane Yolen, and J. Patrick Lewis celebrate the many treasures found in museums. Lee Bennett Hopkins starts with his poem, Behind the Museum Door that lists some of these treasures: "Ancient necklaces, African art, armor of knights, a peasant cart", and all these objects are vibrantly illustrated in a two-page spread.

    Beverly McLoughland in her poem, Suit of Armor pens:

    In its human shape

    of molded steel,

    It looks as though

    There's someone real

    Inside. You Knock:

    "Hello in there,"

    And hear a dull

    Echo of air

    As though a voice

    Were drifting through

    The lonely centuries

    To you.

    A girl stares wonderingly at the suit of armor and in the background a knight on a horse fights a dragon.

    Another poem, Stirring Art shows multicultural children dancing underneath a mobile.

    Beauty

    suspended in

    suspence.

    A breath of air

    Awakens

    Lifeless form--

    See

    it

    dance.

    O Trilobite by Alice Schertle is an ode to these little microscopic creatures. She begins her poem with:

    O trilobite, there are a few,

    here in the Fossil Room, of you.

    Once billions strong you ruled the sea,

    A Cambrian Age majority.

    Trilobites swim across a dark page surrounding the words that are set against a teal background. Multicultural children, although their facial expressions are not very distinctive from one another, reveal in posture their pleasure as they point excitedly to exhibits; some children hold hands or stand with their arms across the shoulders of their friends. These twelve poems encourage an appreciation for the wonders of museums. They can be read aloud, however; there often is a bit of clutter in the illustrations that requires closer examination.

    Behind the museum door: poems to celebrate the wonders of museums

    Selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins and illustrated by Stacey Dressen-McQueen.

    Previously published and new poems by the likes of Myra Cohn Livingston, Lilian Moore, Jane Yolen, and J. Patrick Lewis celebrate the many treasures found in museums. Lee Bennett Hopkins starts with his poem, Behind the Museum Door that lists some of these treasures: "Ancient necklaces, African art, armor of knights, a peasant cart", and all these objects are vibrantly illustrated in a two-page spread.

    Beverly McLoughland in her poem, Suit of Armor pens:

    In its human shape

    of molded steel,

    It looks as though

    There's someone real

    Inside. You Knock:

    "Hello in there,"

    And hear a dull

    Echo of air

    As though a voice

    Were drifting through

    The lonely centuries

    To you.

    A girl stares wonderingly at the suit of armor and in the background a knight on a horse fights a dragon.

    Another poem, Stirring Art shows multicultural children dancing underneath a mobile.

    Beauty

    suspended in

    suspence.

    A breath of air

    Awakens

    Lifeless form--

    See

    it

    dance.

    O Trilobite by Alice Schertle is an ode to these little microscopic creatures. She begins her poem with:

    O trilobite, there are a few,

    here in the Fossil Room, of you.

    Once billions strong you ruled the sea,

    A Cambrian Age majority.

    Trilobites swim across a dark page surrounding the words that are set against a teal background. Multicultural children, although their facial expressions are not very distinctive from one another, reveal in posture their pleasure as they point excitedly to exhibits; some children hold hands or stand with their arms across the shoulders of their friends. These twelve poems encourage an appreciation for the wonders of museums. They can be read aloud, however; there often is a bit of clutter in the illustrations that requires closer examination.