I Lost My Hug
You know that feeling when you can't find your things? You look and you look in the same places you already looked in 3 times before. Then you finally think you remember where it is and you rush over and it's not there either. Then, weeks later it turns up in the most unexpected place and you slap yourself on the forehead because you cannot believe you left it where you did. This story, is much worse than that, it's an emotional journey of discovery that leads a young boy home to the realization of the importance of a mother's love. There is absolutely nothing quite like it. The Sir Rhymesalot reading level (lexile) is age 11 - 14 (grade 4 - 6) but parents reading these books to children aged 3 - 7 (K - 2) can strengthen literacy and vocabulary significantly in their young minds. This is due to the power of rhyme as a literacy builder.
About the Author
Simon Mills (Sir Rhymesalot) is the Storyteller in Residence at McGraw Hill Education. His innovative rhyming verse storytelling is reminiscent of Dr. Seuss but with vocabulary building insight.
Rhyming poetry is a great hook to engage readers in reading, writing, and content across the curriculum. Use Literacy’s rhyming poems—told through compelling stories by author Sir Rhymesalot (Simon E. Mills)—to launch into an exploration of rhyme and poetry with your students. Poems often become favorite reads in the classroom, so you may wish to use the same story repeatedly over the year, delving into different aspects each time.
Sir Rhymesalot’s Proprietary Rhyming System (From McGraw Hill Classroom Curriculum)
Sir Rhymesalot has color coded the text of many of his poems for easier reading and comprehension. This system was designed to help readers identify both rhythm and rhyme and make the experience more intuitive.
• Finding the Rhythm: The main text color, often green, indicates where the beat of the rhythm starts—where to emphasize the first accented syllable. (If there are unaccented syllables preceding the first accented syllable, they are in another color, such as black or white.)
• Finding the Rhyme: Other colors at the end of lines, often orange and purple, identify rhyming words. There may be additional rhyming words within lines, or internal rhymes, which are not color coded. Challenge students to find them.
Example: An excerpt from The Great Catsbe
Enjoy the color-coded Sir Rhymesalot series. It is unique.