Books I've Read

Ashley's books

A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition
Pride and Prejudice
Divergent
Catching Fire
The Hunger Games
Insurgent
Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother
Memoirs of a Geisha
Superbaby: 12 Ways to Give Your Child a Head Start in the First 3 Years
The Bean Trees
The Help
Through My Eyes
How She Really Does It: Secrets of Successful Stay-at-Work Moms
I Don't Know How She Does It: The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother
The Art of Racing in the Rain
Genius Denied: How to Stop Wasting Our Brightest Young Minds
Thirteen Reasons Why
The Harbinger: The ancient mystery that holds the secret of America's future
To Kill a Mockingbird
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone


Ashley Bowman's favorite books »

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

A Garage Sale Gem

My husband and I go to garage sales on a regular basis. My main reason for garage sale-ing is to find used books for my classroom library. Recently, I came across a book at one of these sales that I hadn't read yet, but the back cover made it sound intriguing. I decided to read it before I put it on my class shelf. Memoirs of a Geisha is a fake narrative of the life and times of a geisha from early childhood to old age, with a focus mainly on her time as a geisha. At first I wasn't certain what a geisha was, so I did some research and found that a geisha is basically a professional entertainer whose responsibilities include engaging company in conversations, dancing or playing music, or involving company in drinking games. I was also unsure of the pronunciation so I went to webster and discovered there are actually two pronunciations. I also learned that there were many geisha districts, such as the setting of the book, Kyoto's Gion Geisha district. I have a friend who recently traveled to Kyoto, whose picture can be seen below: So far, what I've enjoyed about this book are some of the true lines that I've found and enjoyed: "Was life nothing more than a storm that constantly washed away what had been there only a moment before, and left behind something barren and unrecognizable?" pg. 13

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Intrigued...

As I was searching for "multicultural reading material" to incorporate into our curriculum, I came across the short story by Amy Tan entitled "Two Kinds"

I was intrigued by this story because of my recent obsession with chinese parenting. I had read a few other short stories by Amy Tan (fish eyes) and realized I had never read one of her most famous worksThe Joy Luck Club.I picked up a copy at Joseph Beth's in Cincinnati.

The book is broken up into different stories about four mothers and their four daughters woven around this Joy Luck club they have. My favorite story so far is one of the mother's tales "The Red Candle." It discusses the constraints of an arranged marriage.

the battle continues

More Tiger Mom Reading... Today I came into a conversation with one of Brady’s friend’s mom (who is from India) about education. She told me that her husband is spending the year working in India and one of her twin boys is with him, while she stays in America with the other twin boy (Brady’s friend). Apparently, the twin is already reading level 2 books, spelling words, and writing. She said when he comes to America he will be way ahead of his twin brother. This got me thinking AGAIN about the way asian families are educating their children vs. american parenting styles and schools. So, my reading this week turned into a search about Asian schooling/parenting…

Hidden Tigers

Chinese Parenting

Battle Hymn of a Tiger Mother

Last weekend I read Battle Hymn of a Tiger Mother. I flew through this book because of my interest in the subject. After reading, I have a few opinions of my own: 1) Amy Chua takes things too far by rejecting her daughter’s birthday card because “it wasn’t good enough,” calling her daughter “trash,” and criticizing her daughters at every turn. However, there were some take aways from this book. She worked with her daughters at a young age drilling rote memorization of multiplication, site words, etc. and had them practicing piano/violin for 4-5 hours a day. Also, on top of her job as a full-time Yale Law professor, she oversaw these tutoring sessions/piano & violin lessons HERSELF. No matter how crazy you think she is, that is very impressive. So, I was thinking about how I am raising my son, and what I might take away from this. Currently, I’ve moved to working with Brady 1 hour everyday (weekends included) on spelling, writing, reading, and math. Obviously this is nowhere near what her requirements are, but I do believe it will be beneficial to receive this 1 on 1 time learning with his mom, while still having the afternoon to learn through free play While I began trying rote memorization and drilling letters with him, I remembered my former research in early literacy and that it must be enjoyable if it’s going to stick in the long run. Since then, I’ve tried to come up with fun activities that encourage him to learn while being more than rote memorization. For example, we practiced site words by writing them on a large sheet of paper. Then I gave Brady a car and asked him to “park it” on a certain word like “the.” He would race his car around the table, and with some prompting, or not, would eventually find the word and place his car on top. He loved this. I also went out and bought stamps with every letter of the alphabet and different colored ink pads. I made these books where I would spell the word, have a place where he could stamp the word, and then a place where he would write it. He LOVED finding all the different letters and stamping them to form words like “CAT’ “DOG” and “BAT” in his book. After they were stamped he would practice writing them while sounding the word out. I’m continuing to find more ways to teach my four year old. Most of my time has been spent researching math and science ideas for preschoolers because I’m clueless. Some helpful articles I have read this week :

preschool math

preschool math 2

preschool science

Also, I’ve watched some videos surrounding the controversy and conversations started by Amy Chua’s book. The book was met with much criticism: \ interview