Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya

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Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya

Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya

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Students engaged in watercolor painting in Lesson 5. In this lesson, the watercoloring involves more skill and attention as students watercolor within the lines of a drawing.

Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya Tree Time: Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya

During Work Time A, prompt students to share the questions they can ask when they don't understand. If needed, review the questions, then model pausing and reconsidering a phrase that may be confusing. Once the painting is complete, thoroughly rinse the brush, clean the watercolor palette with a damp paper towel by blotting gently, and carefully close the palette. Remove the sentence strips from the Reasons to Plant a Tree anchor chart and the Places People Plant Trees anchor chart and mix them together.For ELLs: (Oral Language: Extending Reasoning) When students turn to talk to their partner about the place they've painted, encourage them to practice using the word because to extend their thinking and describe why they used particular colors or designs. (Example: I used green to paint the treetops because they have leaves.) The government sells a lot of land to big companies. They cut down forests for timber and clear land for coffee plantations. the British colonists are no longer the masters of Kenya. The country is free, but the trees are not —they still cannot grow in peace. Kenyans are cutting down trees and selling them as the colonists did. By using the land where the trees used to grow to cultivate the tea, coffee, and tobacco sought by rich countries, they can make more money. (Prévot) I feel that this is a culturally specific children's book. The story is a true story about woman, Wangari Maathai (Mama Miti) that lives in Kenya. All of the individuals portrayed in the story are people of color. The people are wearing clothing customarily warn in Kenya. In addition there are many words used in throughout the book in Kikuyu (Mama Miti's language she speaks in Kenya) and there is a glossary found at the end of the book, detailing what each of the words mean. This juicy yet rich telling can be the foundation for deep discussions with little people and uncover a genuine gratitude for what we have in 'richer' nations and for the undeniably important work of Mama Miti. It might even spark a bit of investigating as to which trees do what.

Mama Miti Reading, Speaking, and Listening: Focused Read-aloud: Mama Miti

Bewitched by the rhythms of jazz all around her in Depression-era Kansas City, little Melba Doretta Liston longs to make music in this fictional account of a little-known jazz great. In college, many of Wangari’s science professors were women. From them she learned that a woman could do anything she wanted to, even it it hadn’t been done before. Wangari grew up in the shadow of Mount Kenya listening to the stories about the people and land around her. Though the trees towered over her, she had loved them for as long as she could remember. Wangari planted trees one by one to refresh her spirit. When the women came to her for help with their families, she told them to do the same. Soon the countryside was filled with trees. Kenya was strong once more. Wangari had changed her country, tree by tree.Ah, Dolly Parton... (happy sigh) A woman who has put millions of books into the hands of millions of children; invested her own money into saving the world from Covid-19, and who has never shied away from speaking about the poverty she and her family suffered as a child. Maathai was the first woman in east and central Africa to obtain a PhD. She was also the first woman professor the University of Nairobi, where she taught veterinary medicine and eventually became head of the faculty. It is no mystery why this little hungry caterpillar is one of the most beloved literary creations for millions of children around the world. Gifted to us all by Eric Carle, who has now himself left to transform into something even more beautiful, at the grand age of 91. Thank you Eric, for feeding our hungry, furry little souls for all the decades of your life. Can’t have a book list about World Hunger without this one! Who can read it and help but understand why the hungry caterpillar is so very hungry? After all, without getting what it needs, how else is it supposed to transform into what it was born to be? Mama Miti is the story of a woman who worked to change her country one tree at a time. Napoli tells the story of Wangari Maathai as if she was a wise elder. While this works within the story, the fact that she is a well educated woman with a PhD might have been worked into the story to emphasize the importance of education imo. The writing is lyrical.

Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya Download [PDF] Mama Miti: Wangari Maathai and the Trees of Kenya Download

Take turns orally processing the matches by forming sentences using the sentence frame: "Plant a tree ___________ because _____________." ("Plant a tree at the beach because trees make shade ." or "Plant a tree beside the playground because trees have trunks and limbs to climb .") For ELLs: During or after Work Time A, guide students through a Language Dive. Refer to Language Dive Guide II: Mama Miti , Questions We Can Ask during a Language Dive anchor chart, and Chunk Chart II: Mama Miti . Display Sentence Strip Chunks II: Mama Miti . To mark this World Hunger Day and thanks to the incredible teams at Trussell Trust HQ and Barrington Stoke, I was gifted the opportunity to drop into the Enfield Food Bank, to see first-hand where all our supermarket donations go, and meet both those working to gift the goods, as well as those needing to receive them.

KIRF: Key Instant Recall Fact Summer Second Half Term

A beautiful introduction for children just learning about the Greenbelt Movement.”— School Library Journal Take turns orally processing the matches by forming sentences using the sentence frame: "Plant a tree ___________ because _____________." the trees are chopped down, erosion carries away the fertile soil, the water in the streams dries up. The land is destroyed and many people go hungry.



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  • EAN: 764486781913
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