Title: How Much Can a Bare Bear Bear?: What are Homonyms and
Homophones?
Author: Brian P. Cleary
Illustrator: Brian Gable
Non-Fiction #4
Non-Fiction #4
How Much Can a Bare
Bear Bear is an adorable book about homonyms and homophones. Before the
student can even read the book, the two words are defined on the first page of
the book. This is good because it gives the student an understanding about the
terms before delving into the book. Homonyms in the book include can, may,
coast, toast, light, trunk, scale, lean, punch, jam, bowl, and roll. The
context in which the words were used in was very clear and also quite funny. I
loved the illustrations that went along with each page. Not only did they help
illuminate meaning but they added to the story and educational value of the
text greatly.
Homophones in the book include praise/pray/prey, their/they’re/there,
bee/be, flea/flee, burro/burrow, horse/hoarse, ewe/you, fowl/foul, toad/towed,
heir/air, whale/wail, male/mail, pair/pare/pear, bust/bused, Barry/bury/berry,
band/banned, Mary/marry/merry, sea/see, ball/bawl, moose/mousse, creek/creak,
bear/bare, would/wood, Sioux/sue, knew/gnu/new, grease/Greece, etc. Again, the
context in which they were used was very clear and funny. The illustrations
that were on each page helped the meaning of the text and were cute and funny
to look at. I liked them a lot and think kids would like them too.
In the end, I love this book because of its versatility. So
many lessons could be done using this book, it could be used for many grades,
and the information is so important to know! I can’t tell you how many adults I
run into that don’t know how to correctly use certain forms of words. Thus,
this text is very educational and very useful. I would suggest having this book
in any classroom. Even in the younger grades, only a few pages could be used at
a time. Once the children had the meaning down of those homonyms or homophones
you could move on to the next few pages and so forth. The educational
opportunities this book presents are wonderful! I absolutely loved the clever
usage of all of the words and the cute pictures that accompanied them.
No comments:
Post a Comment