Monday, February 27, 2012

Katie Kazoo Switcheroo Tip-Top Tappin' Mom!


Katie Kazoo Switcheroo Tip-Top Tappin' Mom! by Nancy Krulik is a series about a fourth grade girl who makes wishes and a giant wind comes and makes the wish come true. However, the wish is not something that she actually wants to happen anymore and she wants to return to her normal life. In this book of the series Katie gets her mom a pair of tap dancing shoes for Mother's Day so her mom can live out her childhood dream of tap dancing. In this book Katie and her friends are studying their hardest to win a geography bee. Katie gets tired of her mom tap dancing and wishes that the dancing will end and it does. She soon realizes that tap dancing made her mom happy and she wants her mom to dance again. Katie and her mom end up dancing together for a mother-daughter activity that they can do together.
    I thought this was a good book. I thought the story line was great and it had a great lesson/moral for students. The audience appeal will be more for females since the main character is a girl and the book is mostly about tap dancing but I think males might enjoy having this book read to them but I don't think they would choose to read this book on their own.
    This book could be used as a read aloud in prek-2nd grade or for students to read on their in first and second grades. I would not recommend this book for beginning readers to read on their own because the words and content of the book may be too hard for them. I would use this book as a read aloud in my classroom and have it in my classroom library for my students to read when they have free time. This is a great book for emergent and more advanced readers to read for pleasure. They will enjoy and be entertained by the book. Reading this book will increase their motivation.

1 comment:

  1. My daughter got one of the books in this series at the library during winter break when each child got to choose a book to keep. We will have to read it soon. I would imagine that all in the series have similar lessons, so it will be interesting to see how closely the lesson in the book she got is to this one.

    A lot of my students have read her How I Survived Middle School. It looks like she has quite a few series that are at relatively easy reading levels for the target age groups.

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