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Edition: Hardcover: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0525460004
ISBN-13: 9780525460008
Ã¥ Å©±â : 23.7cm x 28.6cm
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Book Description
Miss Bindergarten, that beguiling teacher with a tail who made getting ready for the first day of kindergarten so much fun, returns for another milestone. Tomorrow she and her students will have been together for 100 days. To celebrate, each student must bring 100 of some wonderful, one-hundred-full thing! Popsicle sticks, paper-chain links, stickers, a drawing, a design, a string of beads--that night the students get busy finishing up their projects. Meanwhile, Miss Bindergarten gets ready, too, buying ingredients for 100-day punch (made with 100 cherries), folding paper hats (that mark off 100 days on their brim), and piling up blocks to make the number 100. The clever text moves briskly in rhyme (with alphabetical order tucked in); the celebration is joyous; counting and early math concepts abound; and everyone's one-hundred-full efforts are recapped in a notebook Miss Bindergarten puts together on the last pages. Children will surely revel in the pictures, which are filled with the love that Miss Bindergarten pours into her classroom and students, and the pride and pleasure that they take in their own work and in one another. This is a book that will both satisfy and motivate on many levels.
Annotation
To celebrate one hundred days in Miss Bindergarten's kindergarten class, all her students bring one hundred of something to school, including a one hundred-year-old relative, one hundred candy hearts, and one hundred polka dots.
Horn Book
The lively, rhyming text is accompanied by illustrations that reveal details worth poring over.
Publisher's Weekly
"In this exuberant follow-up to Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten, the border-collie teacher builds up to a celebration of the 100th day of class, a party that's certain to inspire similar festivities in kindergartens everywhere," wrote PW. Ages 3-7.
Publisher's Weekly
In this exuberant follow-up to Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten, the border-collie teacher kicks off a celebration of the 100th day of class by asking her students to bring in "100 of some wonderful, one-hundred-full thing!" The results, reported in alphabetical order of the student's name and species, brim with the humor of children giving their ingenuity full rein. Brenda the beaver almost dozes off while gluing a 100-link paper chain, and Ian the iguana proudly escorts "a relative who's lived a hundred years." As readers of the previous book will anticipate, Miss Bindergarten works every bit as hard as her students: she pins 100 bows to her dress, makes a paper snake with 100 colorful scales and puts together a roomful of related activities. Once again, Wolff's sturdy, genially observed illustrations prove a perfect match for Slate's rhyming text, and together they build momentum to the big event--a party that's certain to inspire similar festivities in kindergartens everywhere. Ages 3-6.
Children's Literature
Great, motivational, funny, and creative-the children in Miss Bindergarten's class celebrate enthusiastically the first 100 days of kindergarten. Each student brings in 100 things-the students are busy with their project. The result is paper chains, stickers, 100-day punch, hats, blocks, cereal, flowers, and crayons. Math becomes fun. Each turn of the page is a surprise. The illustrations are bright, colorful, and convey the festivities of celebration. - Emily Ferren
School Library Journal
Miss Bindergarten, who helped readers learn the alphabet in Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten (Dutton, 1996), returns in this lively picture book. To celebrate the 100th day of school, she asks her students to bring in "100 of some wonderful, one-hundred-full thing." As each of the children, whose names begin with letters from A to Z, gather together 100 objects, their teacher makes her own preparations, shopping for food and supplies with her pet cockatoo, preparing refreshments, and jazzing up the classroom. Always stylish (even though she is a dog), Miss Bindergarten decorates her dress with 100 multicolored bows. Creativity, hard work, and enthusiasm are catching and the children strive tirelessly to bring in imaginative projects. On the day of the celebration they arrive with 100 balloons, 100 ants in an ant farm, 100 marbles, and other surprises. Brightly colored pictures filled with details, some on double-paged spreads, and a sprightly rhyming text with the repeated phrase, "Miss Bindergarten gets ready for the 100th day of kindergarten," make this a great read-aloud or read-alone.-Marlene Gawron
Kirkus Reviews
The ebullient canine kindergarten teacher (Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten, 1996) is preparing for the 100th day of school. For homework, Miss Bindergarten tells her students to bring "100 of some wonderful, one-hundredful thing." In verse, each student (alphabetically, with names that start with letters from A to Z) creatively undertakes the task, by building forts made from 100 popsicle sticks, to drawing a portrait of a 100-year-old face, to placing 100 stickers head-to-toe. In the meantime, busy Miss Bindergarten works hard behind the scenes to make the party perfect. As did its predecessor, this spirited educational tool yields itself to classroom tie-in fun and makes for read-aloud enjoyment; it's a bonus that children will also grasp the concept of 100. Miss Bindergarten's enthusiasm is irresistible, while the students provide a grand mix of ingenious creations. (Picture book. 3-6)
Booklist
Miss Bindergarten, the most industrious candidate for the Imaginary Teacher Hall of Fame since Ms. Frizzle, sends her students home at the end of day 99 with instructions to bring 100 wonderful things to class tomorrow--then bustles off to make elaborate, ingenious low-overhead preparations of her own. As in her spectacular debut, Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten (1996), alternating spreads switch back and forth between Miss B, shown shopping for supplies, making name tags, and creating displays, and the children, who in alphabetical order are seen getting their collections together; the short, rhymed text both comments on what's going on and provides a unifying backbeat: "Jessie pokes her polka dots. Kiki carries tarts. Lenny hugs a bagful of a hundred candy hearts . . ." Wolff's big cartoon illustrations are full of cheery faces (everyone here is portrayed as a familiar animal in human dress) and bunches of clearly drawn bows, balloons, beans, blocks, and other items to count. Happily, there are less than 100 of each to be seen. By morning, Miss B is ready with a capital R, and the room into which her class marches is decorated wall to wall with intriguing handmade games and exercises designed to stretch number skills. Children and adults both will be delighted by such a seamless mix of fun and pedagogy; the author and illustrator append a tribute to the real superteachers behind their ideal one. John Peters |
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