MyTrib - The Night Before Kindergarten Graduation - May 5, 2021

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WEEKLY FAMILY MAGAZINE

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THE NIGHT BEFORE KINDERGARTEN GRADUATION INSTALL THE

INSIDE! • 100 BOOKS TO READ ALL ABOUT THE NUMBER 9, ACTIVITIES ON PAGES 2-3 • KID SCOOP READ MORE ON PAGES 4-5


Number of the Week

9

Check out our FREE interactive literacy app! Kids games, puzzles & much more!

1.

START HERE!

2.

Download the app from the Google Play or Apple Store by searching “We Read - Free Games for Kids.”

3.

Provide the first letter of your first name.

4.

Select your student’s grade in school.

100 Books to read together MOUSE PAINT BY ELLEN STOLL WALSH

Pick up a copy at the Natrona County Public Library! 2

| WEDNESDAY, MAY 5-11, 2021

5.

Select the school your student attends.

FINISH! You’re ready to start playing and earning medals! Questions? E-mail weread@trib.com or call (307) 266-0521

We Read is a partnership between the Casper Star-Tribune, the Natrona County School District and the Natrona County Public Library, supported by local businesses and foundations. Its aim is to promote and support literacy as a community-wide value and reading as an important, multi-age, mentoring activity. The overall goal mirrors NCSD's to increase the students percentage of reading studentsatproficient Reading, and Language. NCSD’sGoal #1 goal — to have K-3 or aboveingrade levelWriting, by theListening, end of theSpeaking third grade. “My Trib” is published weekly by the Casper Star-Tribune as part of the We Read program.


1, 2, JUST FOR YOU! NINE IS FINE Count each group of objects in this spring picture and draw a line to match it with the correct number. Practice tracing the numbers 1 to 9 and also trace the word nine in the corner. Fine job, friend!

3, 4, ASK FOR MORE! Make learning fun! Grab some sidewalk chalk and draw a game of hopscotch. You could use the ABCs rather than numbers or a mix of both “A1, B2, C3”.

FINGERPLAY: COUNTDOWN Climb aboard the spaceship,

And buckle up real tight.

(climb up a ladder with your arms) We’re going to the moon. (point to the moon in the sky)

(pretend to buckle up a seatbelt)

Hurry and get ready, (pump arms like you are running)

So count with all your might! 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1!

We’re going to blast off soon.

(use your hands to count)

(keep pumping arms)

BLAST OFF!

Put on your helmet

(raise and shake hands in the air)

Cause here comes the countdown (take a deep breath)

(pop on an imaginary helmet)

Wednesday, May 5-11, 2021 | 3


and ___________ it across the Texas desert to the Gulf of __________. And that’s how the _________ called the Rio Grande was born!

Standards Link: Grammar: Use nouns, adjectives and verbs correctly in writing; understand the meaning of words from context clues.

Complete the grid by using all the letters in the word PECOS in each vertical and horizontal row. Each letter should only be used once in each row. Some spaces Forbeen aboutfilled as long asasfolks have for you. ed remember, cowboys have been namcan w rsine about For long as folks can remember, cowboys have … been ’sasho Billtall cosabout y cowboy Pe telling tales the greatest ever known wbo co no e us ca be er ak telling tall tales about the greatest cowboy ever known … m . m Widow attempt to ride hi d an e iv rv su d ul an co uld, of course, But Pecos Bill cod Bill became the Widowmaker an best of friends.

© 2021 by Vicki Whiting, Editor

Replace the missing words.

Jeff Schinkel, Graphics

Vol. 37, No. 23

© 2021 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 37, No. 23

Now, you Now,find you won’t won’t Bill find Pecos Pecos Bill in history books … in history

No, to find out No, to find out about ol’ Bill, about ol’ Bill,to you just have you just have sit around a to campfire and sit around a listen as someone campfire and tells the tale. listenyou as someone

Create a Tall Tale

books …

Thetells fun of a tall you thetale, tale. like Pecos Bill, is that How many cactus plants can you find on this page? the story gets a little taller and more the biggest cyclone anyone hadoutrageous ever seen How many cactus plants can you find on this page? withPecos each telling. Find blew into town one day, Bill jumped the biggest cyclone anyone had ever a days sportsand story inseen the right on it, riding it for days. The blew into one day, Bill jumped cowboys know how a lasso out It was saidLots Bill of could ride anything. Noto makecyclone gottown frustrated andPecos started crying newspaper and start right on it, riding itadding forUtah. days andstrange days. horse could evenBill rode a tears around Today thatThe Bill was the youngest of 17 kids. ofthrow a rope.him. ButHe Pecos invented thebig, firstsalty lasso silly, and mountain lionanything. once. So No when pool of tears is known as When Bill was just a baby, he fell It was said Bill could cyclone got frustrated andthe: started crying larger-than-life details to and he didride not use a rope. Lasso every other out his the folks’ wagonof out the horse could throw him. Hetoeven rode ahe used. big, salty tears around Utah. Today Billofwas youngest 17onkids. it to create a new that tall tale. letter see what Texas And, mountain lion once. So when pool of tears is known as the: Whenprairie. Bill was justnaturally, a baby, hehefell Standards Link: Writing began and wagon howl asout theon the out ofto hiscry folks’ Applications: Write stories with wagon traveledAnd, out of sight. His a setting, main characters, Texas prairie. naturally, he beginning, middle and end. howling attracted a pack ofStandards Link: Reading Comprehension: Read a variety of genres including tall tales. The cyclone mixed up began to cry and howl as the coyotes. They joined in howling the letters. Unscramble wagon traveled outa of sight. His with Bill, but after few hours, them to reveal the howling attracted a pack of their voices were gone. They The cyclone up name of thismixed famous coyotes.that They joined water. decided Bill must in behowling a the body letters.ofUnscramble withWidowmaker Bill, but after athey few nohours, ordinary horse. Instead of apples or coyote at heart, andwas WIDOWMAKERthem to reveal the their voices gone. Theyon this unusual treat that Pecos Bill adopted him into pack. name of this famous carrots, hewere usedtheir to chomp PECOS week’s body of water. decidedThis that Bill beword: a every other apple to reveal it. gave him.must Cross out COWBOY coyote at heart, and they Find the OUTRAGEOUS coyot That poor cyclone had E T A R E G G A X E adopted him into their pack. e that never met a cowboy like The adjective outrageous differe is Pecos Bill and after trying n means going farFbeyond in t.

th to shake him loose from coyot e That poor cycloneithad what is correct tor true. Texas to Arizona, gave e hat is never met a cowboy up and decided to turnlike to differe Pecos Billrain andflowed after trying nt. rain. That and Tall tales contain outrageous to shake him loose one from flowed and created to Arizona, it gave the wonders of the characters and details. ofTexas d

natural up andworld: decidedThe to turn to Grand Canyon! rain. That rain flowed and

Try to use the word flowed and created one outrageous in a sentence of the wonders of the today when talking with yournatural world: The friends and family members.Grand Canyon! Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions.

DROUGHT CYCLONE TEARS RANCH HORSE EXAGGERATE TEXAS PACK WONDERS WILD HOWL RAIN

R S A X E T D W H Y I A P L T H L D O C

H O I

O W A R R A S R O

E L S

R E K

the Texas desert to the Gulf of __________. And that’s how the _________ words. called the Rio Grande was born!

Replace Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognize identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling the patterns. missing

All About Mom

e was named Pecos Bill’s hors cause no cowboy maker be m. WidowLanguage Action attempt to ride hi could survive an uld, of course, and ReadBtoday’s s Bill co and highlight ut Peconewspaper e theeach of becamwriting: illactive B d an er the following examples of ak Write about a special day or a m Widow s. was naor ed iendcommands m • A sentence directs action best of frthat e rs

Replace the missing words.

Create a Tall Tale

The fun of a tall tale, like Pecos Bill, is that the story gets a little taller and more outrageous with each telling. Find a sports story in the newspaper and start

Create a Tall Tale

ANSWER: A kettle rustler!

special you had ho Bill’sexperience cosmore Pe • One or exciting verbs e no cowboy caus be er ak m ow id with your mom (or special Wshortest sentence de him. toari • The you can find rvive an attemptcourse, and could su lady your oflife). uld,different Standards Link: Grammar: Identify kinds of sentences. s Billinco But Peco became the ill B d an er idowmak W 4 | Wednesday, May 5-11, 2021 best of friends.

During a __________ B WBillP G I Pecos E Cdrought, needed to get water to A L wasn’t U W B There NhisC_______. During __________ a cloud in theasky, so he C C O L aPecos Ndrought, E got himself big Y ol’Bill stick and ___________ it across needed to get water to K B toI the R Sdesert YtheCTexas his _______. There wasn’t Gulf of __________. a Ecloud inNtheOsky, he WsoLAnd D Rthat’s how the _________ got himself a big ol’ stick Rio IGrande W OtheD Mcalled A and ___________ itW across was born!

Lots of cowboys know how to make a lasso out

_________________________. Houses rolled like tumbleweeds, and a large _________________ landed in a ______________. It took Pecos Bill more than a Have a friend give you each year to ___________ Have a friend give everything you each type of word to fill in the blanks.

type word to fill in the blanks. Then read the story aloud! back toofwhere Then read it thebelonged. story aloud!

Pecos Bill once traveled to Standards Link: Grammar: Use nouns, adjectives and verbs correctly in writing; understand the meaning of words from _______________ to help build context clues.

Pecos Bill once traveled to

_______________ to help build

an ____________ __________.

an ____________ __________. People came from miles around

Complete the gridfrom by using all the letters People came miles around to seeword this _________________ in the PECOS in each vertical and horizontal row. Each letter should only toused seeonce this _________________ cowboy in in person. be each row. Some spaces have been filled in for you.

cowboy in person.

Bill picked up a huge stack of _________________ some Bill picked up a hugeand stack of

_________________ to _________________and andgot some right to work. Widowmaker

_________________ and got to

carried ___________________

right to work. Widowmaker

__________________.

carried ___________________ __________________.

At lunchtime, Pecos Bill poured _________________ and black

At lunchtime, PecosSuddenly, Bill poured pepper on his chili. he _________________ and felt a sneeze coming on, soblack

everyone to ___________! pepper onbegan his chili. Suddenly, he This week’s word:

felt a sneeze coming on, so

OUTRAGEOUS

Pecos sneezed so hard that everyone began to ___________! TheBill adjective outrageous

means going far beyond ________________ ended up in

what is correct or true. Pecos Bill sneezed so hard that Tall tales contain outrageous Houses rolled like tumbleweeds, ________________ ended up in characters and details. _________________________.

and a large _________________

_________________________. outrageous in atumbleweeds, sentence Houses rolled like today when talking with your a large friends and_________________ family members. Itand took Pecos Bill more than a use the word landedTry in ato______________.

landed in a ______________. year to ___________ everything back to where it belonged.

All About year to ___________ everything Mom Write about a special day or a It took Pecos Bill more than a

Standards Link: Grammar: Use nouns, adjectives and verbs correctly in writing; understand the meaning of words from context clues.

back to where it belonged. special experience you had Complete the grid by using the letters Standards Link: Grammar: nouns, with your mom (orUse aallspecial verbs correctly writing; and inadjectives the wordand PECOS in each invertical lady in your life). understand row. the meaning of words fromonly horizontal Each letter should context be used clues. once in each row. Some spaces have been filled in for you.


that’s how the _________ called the Rio Grande was born! Replace the missing words.

e was named Pecos Bill’s horsecause no cowboy Widowmaker b attempt to ride him. could survive an uld, of course, and But Pecos Bill cod Bill became the Widowmaker an best of friends.

Create a Tall Tale

Lots of cowboys know how to make a lasso out of a rope. But Pecos Bill invented the first lasso and he did not use a rope. Lasso every other letter to see what he used. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Read a variety of genres including tall tales.

Widowmaker was no ordinary horse. Instead of apples or carrots, he used to chomp on this unusual treat that Pecos Bill gave him. Cross out every other apple to reveal it.

Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions.

The fun of a tall tale, like Pecos Bill, is that the story gets a little taller and more outrageous with each telling. Find a sports story in the newspaper and start adding silly, strange and larger-than-life details to it to create a new tall tale. Standards Link: Writing Applications: Write stories with a setting, main characters, beginning, middle and end.

WIDOWMAKER PECOS COWBOY E T A R E G G A X E DROUGHT R S A X E T D W H Y CYCLONE TEARS I A P L T H L D O C RANCH H O I E C G I B W P HORSE O W A N C U W B L A EXAGGERATE R R A E N O L C Y C TEXAS S R O Y C R S B I K PACK E L S R E D N O W L WONDERS WILD R E K A M W O D I W HOWL Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognize identical RAIN words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns. Wednesday, May 5-11, 2021 | 5

S a u c

C i h b h


IK NDERGARTEN BOOK OF THE MO Dear families, It is almost time for Kindergarten graduation. This is a fun story about all the things that could happen before graduation. It recounts all the fun things that they did during the year. Have fun reading and sharing some great Kindergarten memories with your child. Remember to read 20 minutes every day to build strong reading skills and encourage a love for reading.

Happy reading!

About the author Natasha Wing was born in Milford, Connecticut, in 1960. At the age of 20 she moved to Arizona where she finished college at Arizona State University in 1982 with a BS in advertising. In 1991 she decided to write children’s books. She sold her first book, Hippity Hop, Frog on Top, within six months and has been writing children’s books and articles ever since. The Night Before series began with The Night Before Easter and has grown into a best-selling series of more than 25 titles. She lives in Fort Collins, Colorado.

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ONTH

Natrona County School District Standard

Use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to narrate a single event or several loosely linked events, tell about the events in the order in which they occurred, and provide a reaction to what happened.

Dear students, Kindergarten is such a fun year. Full of wonderful experiences. You met new friends and learned many new skills. You formed relationships with some great teachers. You had some of the same experiences as the students in the book. In the space provided, write about your favorite experience from Kindergarten. If you can’t decide on just one, write about two or three. You can include a picture if you would like. Have fun remembering the many things that you enjoyed about Kindergarten.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5-11, 2021 |

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The Valley of

No Return Written by John Tomerlin | Illustrated by Michael Lacapa

CHAPTER EIGHT: Beaver Falls STORY SO FAR: Jamie and Salia have succeeded in reaching shore again. Wet and cold, with night approaching, Jamie manages to start a fire. alia raised her head to stare at the small blaze Jamie had got going, then jumped up and began helping him feed it. They broke up the rest of the branch and then took turns looking for more wood; after a while the bed of coals grew large enough to ignite a few of the still-damp branches. At last they were able to stop work long enough to warm themselves and let their clothes begin to dry. Along with warmth came renewed pangs of hunger. They’d eaten little since the remains of Salia’s picnic lunch almost twentyfour hours earlier, and the need for food had become almost unbearable. Salia searched for some, but found only a handful of withered looking mushrooms. “Are you sure they aren’t poisonous?” Jamie asked, having been

S

warned against eating unknown types of fungus. “If you’d like, I will eat yours for you,” the girl said haughtily. “Uh—no, I’m sure they’re okay.” In fact, the mushrooms were very good, but there weren’t nearly

enough of them. To help them forget their hunger, they worked busily at gathering more wood. Salia used Jamie’s knife to cut an armload of boughs from the nearby trees. Then she shook water from them, dried them near the

fire, and wove them into a sort of pallet. They spent their second night in the valley on this soft and fragrant mattress. Jamie dreamed of a haunch of venison roasting on a spit, the grease dripping in the fire; of ears of corn turning brown amongst the coals; of chunks of Indian bread toasted in bacon fat; and of a whole plateful of fried eggs. Most of all, he dreamed of something to drink . . . and woke up with his mouth so dry his tongue had stuck to the roof. Salia was tending the fire, having been up several times during the night to add wood to it. Jamie crouched as close to the blaze as he dared, turning one way and then another, trying to warm all sides of himself at once. The sky was still clear, and the air felt colder than before. Salia had searched for food, but—”This is all that I could find,” she said, showing Jamie a few more small mushrooms that had grown overnight.

Text copyright © 2002 John Tomerlin. Illustrations copyright © 2002 Michael Lacapa. Reprinted by permission of Breakfast Serials, Inc. www.breakfastserials.com 8 | Wednesday, May 5-11, 2021


“Did you see a pool or spring?” he asked. When she shook her head, he knew they would have to go on. People could live a long time without food, but not without water. Unless they wanted to drink from the silt-filled river, they would have to search for another spring. The level of the river had fallen during the night. When they’d gone to sleep, they’d been only a few yards from the shoreline; now it had moved thirty feet or more away. If it dropped further, Jamie thought, they might make their way back upstream. Looking in that direction, he saw that the river still filled the narrow gap

between the canyon’s walls. “Nothing to do but keep going,” he said. “We might as well get started.” Turning back, he was surprised to see that Salia was no longer beside him. Listening, he thought he heard her voice coming from beyond a small outcropping of the rock face. When he went nearer, he saw her sitting on the ground, legs folded and arms crossed, her head tilted back and her eyes closed. She was murmuring softly in Havasupai—a high-pitched chant, some of which Jamie could understand. She sang: “Land that I wandered, Listen to me, Forget about me, Ha na. I thought I’d live

forever, That’s how I was, But now my strength is gone, Ha na. Horned animals I used to hunt, Fallen logs I’d jump over, Boulders I would leap, Trails that I once followed, Forget about me. Jackrabbit I ran after, A young one, A brown one, I caught him and roasted him. I ate him. But now my strength is gone, Ha na. Land that I wandered, That place. Listen to me, Forget about me . . .” Salia opened her eyes. Tears streamed down her cheeks. “I am ready to go on,” she said when she saw Jamie. They found another spring about midday and drank their fill from it; then they rested a short while. The ground was still spongy and the footing uncertain, but they walked two more miles before the canyon walls began closing in again. Soon, they found themselves forced to wade in the edges of the stream. Late in the day they came to a large boulder that all but filled the canyon. Jamie thought he heard falling water, and was right. When they climbed the boulder, they found themselves looking down from the crest of Beaver Falls—the last large cataract before the Colorado River.

To be continued. Text copyright © 2002 John Tomerlin. Illustrations copyright © 2002 Michael Lacapa. Reprinted by permission of Breakfast Serials, Inc. www.breakfastserials.com

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May 5 - 11 MAY 10: NATIONAL WASHINGTON DAY Natrona County Public Library Hours: Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. • Friday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. • Sunday, 1 p.m.-5p.m.

STORYTIMES WEDNESDAY MAY 5 Reads & Rhymes StoryTime 10 AM, Crawford Room, Ages 3+ Afterschool at the Library: Children’s Day Koinobori (Japanese Flying Carp) 4 PM, Crawford Room, Grades K-6 THURSDAY May 6 StoryTime Dance Party 10 AM, Crawford Room, Ages 3+ MONDAY MAY 10 Take & Make for Kids & Tweens: Egg Carton Turtles Children’s Desk, Grades K-6 Tween Monday: Ferris Wheels 4 PM, Crawford Room, Grades 4-6 TUESDAY MAY 11 Tiny Tots StoryTime 10 AM, Crawford Room, Babies & Toddlers WEDNESDAY MAY 12 Reads & Rhymes StoryTime 10 AM, Crawford Room, Ages 3+ Afterschool at the Library: Lego Build 4 PM, Crawford Room, Grades K-6

Call 577-7323 or visit our website for more information. The Library is now offering a service called tutor.com. It provides free online tutoring for all ages, from young children all the way up to adult learners. It’s a free online service (all you need is a library card to access it through the library’s website - natronacountylibrary.org).

For more content like this, visit: https://bit.ly/390PHXA

EXTRAWildlife’s CONTENTWild FROMTimes WYO GAME & FISH DEPT. – WGFD.WYO.GOV/WILDLIFE-IN-WYOMING/WILDLIFE 6 • Wyoming

My Trib is supported by:

NATRONA COUNTY

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Zimmerman Family Foundation


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