Sometimes I get ideas for books from stories I read in newspapers,
or hear on the radio, or am told by family or friends. Then the
proverbial light bulb flashes in my brain, "book! book! book!" I
have a file folder filled with these stories.
Writing
a story is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle
I don't just sit down and write the story exactly the way
it happened. It may be a funny story to hear someone tell,
but not so great when I try to make picture book about it.
Why? Well, maybe the story needs more action, more characters,
or different characters. Maybe I need to answer: "And then
what happened?" or "Why did that happen?" For instance, you
might hear a funny story about your Aunt Ethel; but actually,
you would like to change her character to an elephant named
Pearl. If it works, do it! Or a friend might tell you about
her dog who ate the living room curtains. Then another friend
tells you about his dog chewing his favorite shoes. Pretty
soon you are writing a story about an unmanageable dog who
is driving his owners nuts, using both of your friends' stories.
Writing a story is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle. Your
friend's stories are small pieces that make up a bigger picture.
Collecting
'true stories'
- Most kids can tell funny stories about their pets. Do a
bulletin board of classroom pet stories. Can the class invent
a character—perhaps a pet—and then combine some
of their stories into one big story with a beginning, middle
and end?
- Collect family stories about siblings, parents, aunts,
uncles, etc.
- Ask students to be on the lookout for funny human interest
stories in the newspaper. Make a bulletin board of the stories
and ask students to choose one story to generate a story
of their own.
Here are a few other classroom projects collected from teachers
I've met as I have visited schools:
Projects
for The Five-Dog Night:

Weather and The
Five-Dog Night
Make a large thermometer. After reading the book, decide how cold a one-dog
night would be, a two-dog night, etc. Plot the temperatures on the thermometer.
(You could do the same with cats!) -from a school in Kentucky
Similes in The
Five-Dog Night
Betty calls Ezra, "Stubborn as a mule." Ezra calls Betty, "Nosy as a mouse
sniffing for cheese." Ask your students to think of other similes.
Friendship and
Loyalty
Discuss the friendship between Betty and Ezra. Then
discuss what qualities make a good friend.
Projects
for The Great Pig Escape
Postcards:
Write postcards from the pigs to Bert and Ethel. I
had them escape to Florida. But maybe they escaped to some
other place! Take out the Atlas, tell students to find a place
the pigs might escape to. On the front of the postcard, draw
a picture of the place. On the back, write a note that says
something about the place. Don't forget to address the postcard! -from
an art teacher in Rochester, NY

Wanted Posters:
Make "Wanted" posters for the pigs. Students should
describe the pigs and where they were last seen. Hang the
posters around the school. -from a school in Illinois
A Pig Hunt:
Find some stuffed pigs. Hide them around the school.
Students who find them get small prizes. Do this for a few
days or a week, hiding the pig(s) in different places each
day. Post a notice of the different hiding places in the
front hall or announce them each morning on the PA system. -from
a school in Illinois
Projects
for The Great Pig Search
Look at the end papers in The Great Pig
Search. The front end papers have a bird's-eye view
of a real town, Putney, Vermont -with a few changes. The
back end papers are a bird's-eye view of an imaginary town.
Ask your students to draw a bird's-eye view of their town
or neighborhood, or of an imaginary town. This could be
a group project on a large roll of paper. This is a good
mapping project. It's also a good chance to talk about
scale (i.e. a church is larger than a house.)
Then have each student draw a pig in costume
thinking about where they would live in the town, what job
they would have, what their lives are like in this strange
new place. They can write a story about their pig's life.
The kids can cut out their pigs and place them in the town.
(Make sure all the pigs don't have the same jobs! This is
a community. All the pigs need to pull together to make it
work!)
Projects
for Not Until Christmas, Walter!

Walter, the dog in Not Until Christmas,
Walter!, has a very good sense of smell. Find out more
about a dog's sense of smell. You and your students will
be amazed! Students who have dogs might like to see—as
I did-if their dogs will unwrap a dog bone biscuit when
the package is left unattended. Then see if the dog can
still smell the biscuit if it is wrapped in a large box.
Have students observe how their dogs use their noses. Have
them write down their observations for a week. Then discuss
them.