The Perks Of Being A Book Addict discussion

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message 1: by Perks Moderator, Know-it-all (new)

Perks Moderator | 594 comments

Team Simpsons




Team Members:

Rachel (captain)
Aurélie (co-captain)
Kamilah (co-captain)
Laura
Megan
Abbie
Barbara
Cathy M.
Allison








Team Spreadsheet



message 2: by Perks Moderator, Know-it-all (new)

Perks Moderator | 594 comments r


message 3: by Perks Moderator, Know-it-all (new)

Perks Moderator | 594 comments r


message 4: by Perks Moderator, Know-it-all (new)

Perks Moderator | 594 comments r


message 5: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments Hello, Team! Looking forward to the challenge. I've been making a list of books and what cards they would cover.


message 6: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Mar 06, 2016 07:32AM) (new)


message 7: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Apr 16, 2016 12:54AM) (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) ◈◈◈Perks UNO cards◈◈◈

Click on Spoiler to see the Cards
(view spoiler)

◈◈◈Points◈◈◈
- For each book read to match a 0-9 card, the team gets 20 points
- For each book read to match a Skip or Reverse, the team gets 25 points
- For each book read to match a wild or Wild draw four card the team gets 30 points
- For each hand completed, the team gets a bonus 15 points

◈◈◈Rules◈◈◈
- For book titles starting with an article (A/An/The), the article can be ignored or used. So The Hiding Place, for example, could be used as title starting with T or H
- Only books STARTED after March 1 count for this challenge
- Books must be more than 100 pages in length and Children's books and Graphic Novels can not be used unless by word count they can be verified as more than 25,000 words using arbookfind.com
- You may do a re-read, it just needs to be more than six months since you last read it


message 8: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Mar 20, 2016 03:44PM) (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Team Simpsons March Book Read List.
Here is a list of all our books read. If you are interested in any of them, add them to your TBR list. :)

Read by Abbie
      Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk The Executioner (Robert Hunter, #2) by Chris Carter Crocodile on the Sandbank (Amelia Peabody #1) by Elizabeth Peters The Bazaar of Bad Dreams by Stephen King Graveyard Games by Sheri Leigh The 5th Wave (The 5th Wave, #1) by Rick Yancey No Rest for the Dead by Andrew Gulli The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making (Fairyland, #1) by Catherynne M. Valente Airframe by Michael Crichton

Read by Allison
      The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr Divergent (Divergent, #1) by Veronica Roth

Read by Aurélie
      Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (Miss Peregrine’s Peculiar Children, #1) by Ransom Riggs Red Queen (Red Queen, #1) by Victoria Aveyard

Read by Barbara
      The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee City of Bones (The Mortal Instruments, #1) by Cassandra Clare

Read by Cathy
      Somebody Killed His Editor (Holmes & Moriarity, #1) by Josh Lanyon Promises (Coda Books, #1) by Marie Sexton The Stocking was Hung (The Holidays, #1) by Tara Sivec Play On (Glasgow Lads, #0.5) by Avery Cockburn Macarons at Midnight (Just Desserts, #1) by M.J. O'Shea The Yard (Scotland Yard's Murder Squad, #1) by Alex Grecian The Score (Off-Campus, #3) by Elle Kennedy Magic Breaks (Kate Daniels, #7) by Ilona Andrews Best Kind of Broken (Finding Fate, #1) by Chelsea Fine
      The Last Kingdom (The Saxon Stories, #1) by Bernard Cornwell The Spirit Thief (The Legend of Eli Monpress, #1) by Rachel Aaron Her Final Breath (Tracy Crosswhite, #2) by Robert Dugoni Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Harry Potter, #5) by J.K. Rowling Ink and Bone (The Great Library, #1) by Rachel Caine

Read by Kamilah
      The Time Machine by H.G. Wells The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett Matilda by Roald Dahl The Marriage Bargain (Marriage to a Billionaire, #1) by Jennifer Probst Pippi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

Read by Laura
      The Ice Queen by Alice Hoffman Voyage of the Heart by Soraya Lane The Devil in the White City Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America by Erik Larson Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer The Mystery of the Ivory Charm (Nancy Drew, #13) by Carolyn Keene George Washington's Socks by Elvira Woodruff The BFG by Roald Dahl Splendors and Glooms by Laura Amy Schlitz

Read by Megan
      Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate The Weed That Strings the Hangman's Bag (Flavia de Luce, #2) by Alan Bradley Number the Stars by Lois Lowry The Penderwicks A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy (The Penderwicks #1) by Jeanne Birdsall The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling Sing Me To Sleep by Chris Simms Five Night Stand by Richard J. Alley Flora and Ulysses The Illuminated Adventures by Kate DiCamillo
      Brooklyn by Colm Tóibín Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri Bird Box by Josh Malerman Murder on the Orient Express (Hercule Poirot, #10) by Agatha Christie The Tiger A True Story of Vengeance and Survival by John Vaillant The Reptile Room (A Series of Unfortunate Events, #2) by Lemony Snicket Walk Two Moons by Sharon Creech

Read By Rachel
      Lailah (The Styclar Saga, #1) by Nikki Kelly The Sword in the Stone (The Once and Future King, #1) by T.H. White Glass Sword (Red Queen, #2) by Victoria Aveyard Dead Wake The Last Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson A Reaper of Stone (A Reaper of Stone #1) by Mark Gelineau The Circle by Dave Eggers Life by Keith Richards The Dressmaker of Khair Khana Five Sisters, One Remarkable Family, and the Woman Who Risked Everything to Keep Them Safe by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
      God Is Not Great How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens The Terror by Dan Simmons The Fairy Boy of Calton Hill by Sean-Paul Thomas The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood Beneath the Surface Killer Whales, SeaWorld, and the Truth Beyond Blackfish by John Hargrove Crocodile on the Sandbank (Amelia Peabody #1) by Elizabeth Peters Ink and Bone (The Great Library, #1) by Rachel Caine


message 9: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Apr 30, 2016 11:43AM) (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) May Hands

Finished Hands are in spoiler

◈◈◈Hand One◈◈◈
3, Skip, 6, Skip, 7, Draw 2, 2

◈◈◈Hand Two◈◈◈
9, 7 Green, 5, 9, Draw 2, Skip, Reverse

◈◈◈Hand Three◈◈◈
8, 6, 1, 4, 8, 9, 1

◈◈◈Hand Four◈◈◈
Draw 2, reverse, 7, 9 Red, 3, Draw 2, Draw 2

◈◈◈Hand Five◈◈◈
3, 4, Wild Draw 4, Wild Draw 4, 2, 7, 1

◈◈◈Hand Six◈◈◈
Wild Draw 4, 6, 8, 4, 9, Skip, 0

◈◈◈Hand Seven◈◈◈
Skip, 0, Wild Draw 4, 4, 3, 4, Reverse

◈◈◈Hand Eight◈◈◈
Draw 2, Wild, Skip, Skip, 6, 9, 4

◈◈◈Hand Nine◈◈◈
9 Yellow, 8, Reverse, 6, 8, Reverse, 2

◈◈◈Hand Ten◈◈◈
Reverse, 5, 8, 2, Wild, 1, 1

◈◈◈Hand Eleven◈◈◈
4, 7, 2, 5, Skip, 6, Wild

◈◈◈Hand Twelve◈◈◈
7, 5 Red, 2, 0, 5, Draw 2, 4

◈◈◈Hand Thirteen◈◈◈
Draw 2, 9, Reverse, 6, 7, 5, 7

◈◈◈Hand Fourteen◈◈◈
1, 3, 3, 5, 8 Green, 4 Red, 8 Red

The Special Cards:
To test your covers here is a color extract to use.
Color Extract

Hand Two
7 Green

Hand Four
9 Red - Laura - Bricking It by Nick Spalding

Hand Nine
9 Yellow

Hand Twelve
5 Red

Hand Fourteen
8 Green
4 Red
8 Red


message 10: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Apr 23, 2016 05:26PM) (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) It's BINGO! Here is the link April Mini Challenge



This is an optional mini challenge for our UNO players.

◈ Books started after April 13 and read between April 13 - April 30 count.
◈ Books started before April 13th do not count
(start of challenge times under spoiler)
(view spoiler)

◈ As a team, get "BINGO" by reading books for five squares horizontally, vertically, or diagonally to create a line (there are 12 possible lines)
◈ Only one book per square (so one book may be used for more than one "line")
◈ For each line completed, your team receives a "BINGO Bonus" of being able to chose one card in any April hand that you can claim double points for
◈ Books used for BINGO do not need to be separate books for what you are claiming for your UNO hands
◈ The usual book length rules apply,
◈ Team spreadsheets have been updated with a BINGO tab so that you can track your books and claim your bingo lines

Tasks are in the spoiler
(view spoiler)


message 11: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments Introduction: I'm from NJ, I teach 5th grade and tend to read a lot of books on that level, but rarely remember to count them on Goodreads. I looked up a bunch of books I've read for school and most would not have counted towards the Uno guidelines, so I assume most of my other school reading won't count either.


message 12: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments I posted before I was done and can't edit from my phone, sorry!

Reading so much for school leaves me with limited time for my personal reading, and that's why I can only read about 2 books per month.

For Round One, I can cover either the 2 or 5, and for Round 2, I can cover the Draw 2 cards 4 and 6 with one book.

I forgot what Round 3 looks like. This would be easier to do on my laptop...rookie mistake ! :)


message 13: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments For Hand 4, I could cover the Draw 2 cards for 2 and 9 with the same book.

If we should be posting a different way, different method, let me know, like listing all possible cards for a single book?


message 14: by Allison (new)

Allison | 269 comments Hello! I'm Allison, from Manitoba, Canada. I'm in my second year or university right now so I'm excited for this challenge to liven up my school year a bit :P I'm happy to meet everyone and ready for the challenge to start! (Well, once I figure out which books to read..)


Ghost in the Stacks Checking in!

Be back later when I have more time


message 16: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Nice to meet you Laura and Allison. Good to see you again Abbie.

Here is a little about me. I read a good amount of books from many different genres. I have been reading a lot of series lately so this will for sure help out with this challenge. I read about 1 to 2 books daily but it depends upon my work schedule. I can cover any kind of book goal needed and finish it in about a day or two, so I'm not too worried about some of our goals to be met. I can cover some of the more difficult goals. I'm in the Seattle area so I'm on PST. Nice to see we have East Coast, West Coast, Canada, and states in the south covered.

I have made a spreadsheet (posted it on message 7) so we can all access to just log in our books to the goals. That way the team captain and co-captains can snag books there to add to our main spreadsheet.


message 17: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) One of the ideas I was thinking about for the group was to selected readers for the first hand. For those of us that read quickly, once we finish our books we can post other books in the spreadsheet to fill in the other goals to fill in the gaps and up coming hands. That way we get each hand and have some extra books to play around with.

Any ideas on our style? Do you like this idea? Have a different idea?


message 18: by Cathy M. (last edited Feb 11, 2016 11:48PM) (new)

Cathy M. (mccathy77) | 505 comments Hi fellow Simpsons team :D

I am also on the west coast (Los Angeles)! I am currently an Office Manager for a law firm so I do try to check in during the day but have more time at night. Generally I read a book every 2-3 days (1 if it's short), and have a lot of series I've started/want to start so this should be great to catch up!

I haven't played Uno before so this is new to me, though I've heard a lot about how fun it was last year from some of the players.

Do we work on multiple hands at once, or do we work on 1 hand and then move to the next? And do we plan for who reads what in the beginning, or just post when we are going to start something that fits a task? This weekend I'll go through and see what I have coming up that fits!

Just in case you need it here is my shelf - Uno 2016.


message 19: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Pereira (babitix) | 285 comments Hey, girls!

I'm Barbara and I'm from Brazil! I'm feeling kinda lonely being the only one from South America, but anyway, I can read LOL
I usually read 4 books/month, but I'll do my best!!! For me, this is an opportunity to practice my English skills and meet Goodreaders friends. I hope we'll have a great time together (:

If I write something wrong, please, feel free to tell me. Do not forget this is a way for me to practice English.

I took a look at our sheet and here it goes:

Numbers:
0 (Zero) - 5
1 (One) - 5
2 (Two) - 8
3 (Three) - 8
4 (Four) - 6
5 (Five) - 6
6 (Six) - 6
7 (Seven) - 6
8 (Eight) - 5
9 (Nine) - 7

Special Cards:
Reverse - 8
Draw 2 - 8
Skip - 7
Wild - 4
Wild Draw 4 - 2


message 20: by Ghost in the Stacks (last edited Feb 12, 2016 03:56AM) (new)

Ghost in the Stacks This is my first time playing, so I have no clue what we are doing.

Shelf: Uno 2016


message 21: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Pereira (babitix) | 285 comments So, I need an explanation about matching books/points.

EXAMPLE

Book:
The Alchemist
It fits in:
0 - "stand-alone" book (Hand 2)
6 - Character first, last, or nickname begins w/S (Hand 1)
Skip - Author first or last name begins w/K or P (Hand 3)

What can we do?


message 22: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments Good morning, ladies! Nice to meet you.

In regards to the planning Cathy and Rachel were talking about, I think makes sense to plan our hands before we read and work through them chronologically so we know we have our bases covered for a particular round.

Barbara - I think The Alchemist could also cover a
2 - Title starting with T
8 - Setting in Egypt
4 - Character named Fatima


message 23: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Pereira (babitix) | 285 comments Laura wrote: "Good morning, ladies! Nice to meet you.

In regards to the planning Cathy and Rachel were talking about, I think makes sense to plan our hands before we read and work through them chronologically s..."


Hey, Laura! I loooove your name!

Well, I think The Alchemist doesn't cover 2 because we can't consider Articles, so the book is "Alchemist, The". But if it covers number 8 and 4 it is great!


message 24: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments Thanks Barbara!

Regarding articles, I just copied and pasted this from the rules:

Note
For book titles starting with an article (A/An/The), the article can be ignored or used. So The Hiding Place, for example, could be used as title starting with T or H


message 25: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Just to clear this up. I will have them posted at the top. Here is the rule:

- For book titles starting with an article (A/An/The), the article can be ignored or used. So The Hiding Place, for example, could be used as title starting with T or H

- Only books STARTED after March 1 count for this challenge

- Books must be more than 100 pages in length and Children's books and Graphic Novels can not be used unless by word count they can be verified as more than 25,000 words using arbookfind.com



message 26: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Feb 12, 2016 07:51AM) (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) We have some planning to do and I think the best way to do it is make sure everyone is involve and we cover every card and for those that read extra can just be the fill ins to make things go smoothly.

I'm going to post the hand what needs to be read. I'd like to hear from everyone to what they will read for March 1st. We cannot start reading before hand.

Hand One:
2:
Reverse:
2:
5:
8:
4:
6:

◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈◈

Quick List:
Title, author name, character name, setting begins with = T, F, I, S, E
Title with word = 2, Two, 4, Four, 5, Five, 6, Six, 8, Eight
# in Series = 2, 4, 5, 6, 8
One member of your team must read a book another team member has already read

(view spoiler)


message 27: by Laura (last edited Feb 12, 2016 08:17AM) (new)

Laura | 1144 comments For Hand One, I was planning to read The Ice Queen by Alice Hoffman which could cover:

2 - Title starts with T
5- Title starts with I
4 - Character named Frances

If anyone has read it, it could count for Reverse.


message 28: by Aurelie (new)

Aurelie | 15 comments Hi Simpson team!
Sorry I'm late to join the conversation.

Just a little bit about myself. I'm Aurelie, I currently live in Orange County, California. If you wonder where I got such a complicated name (I won't blame you if you try to pronounce it at home and butcher it ;-) ), the answer is France. But I've been living in the US for the past seven years.
I read about a book per week (sometimes less if I'm traveling for work), mostly in English (but sometimes in French or Spanish).

I'm really exited about this challenge. We're going to have fun!

Quick question about the books' assignments. How do we pick who reads what? Do we just match the books with the hand and then we all choose one, or do we each pick a number and then match the book of our choice with it?

Aurelie


message 29: by Barbara (last edited Feb 12, 2016 08:53AM) (new)

Barbara Pereira (babitix) | 285 comments So, if you don't mind, if Laura reads The Ice Queen, by Alice Hoffman and I read The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho we will cover:

The Alchemist:
2: Title starting with T
8: Setting in Egypt
6: Character first, last, or nickname begins w/S

The Ice Queen:
2: Title starts with T
5: Title starts with I
4: Character named Frances

Someone has to read Reverse! :D


message 30: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Aurelie, nice to meet you. As for confusion, don't worry it will get easier once we start. You can look at books you want or plan to read and see if it matches to and of the goals. Then ask for the spot. I can place you there for planning. You can read as many books as you want and they are placed in a pool we can pick as needed. We will not be short of books.

I can read anything so I will take the hardest of the selections. I have a series 8 book I have to read. So, if that is where the team needs me, I will read my Kate Daniels book. I recommend using the spreadsheet I made for extra books or for your planning. It will help out a lot.


message 31: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments One book counts for one card, unless we have a Draw 2 in our hand, right? So that means my book could cover a 2, 5, or 4, but not all 3, correct?


message 32: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Laura wrote: "One book counts for one card, unless we have a Draw 2 in our hand, right? So that means my book could cover a 2, 5, or 4, but not all 3, correct?"

Yes.


message 33: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) I can do the reverse if needed. I have compared book with Allison and I can read Ender's Game


message 34: by Barbara (last edited Feb 12, 2016 10:39AM) (new)

Barbara Pereira (babitix) | 285 comments RachelvlehcaR wrote: "Laura wrote: "One book counts for one card, unless we have a Draw 2 in our hand, right? So that means my book could cover a 2, 5, or 4, but not all 3, correct?"

Yes."


Ah! I got it!

So, For Hand 1 I can read The Alchemist to cover number 8 and To Kill a Mockingbird to cover number 2 (:


message 35: by Cathy M. (new)

Cathy M. (mccathy77) | 505 comments I've read both of them (The Alchemist & To Kill a Mockingbird) last year so they can work for the Reverse as well!


message 36: by Aurelie (new)

Aurelie | 15 comments Has anyone read The Girl on the train? I just bought it. I could use it for reverse.


message 37: by Cathy M. (new)

Cathy M. (mccathy77) | 505 comments Yep I read that last year too :)


message 38: by Aurelie (new)

Aurelie | 15 comments okay, then. I will add it to the spreadsheet as reverse.


message 39: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments I added my books to the spreadsheet, and any possible cards they could cover. I don't want to wait another 2 weeks to start them!

I have a feeling one of the books, The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America, is going to take a while to read. I took it off my bookshelf tonight to figure out if it would cover any additional cards than what I had written down originally, and the font is really tiny. Plus, it seems to be filled with a lot of details - many names, dates, etc.


message 40: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Babitix wrote: "Hey, girls!

I'm Barbara and I'm from Brazil! I'm feeling kinda lonely being the only one from South America, but anyway, I can read LOL
I usually read 4 books/month, but I'll do my best!!! For me,..."


Don't feel lonely! Having said that I think you are the only South American on the team. Go Brazil, right. As you can tell we are all here for each other. :)

It's okay if you only read 4 books a month. All books count and if you are having fun and connecting with people that's what counts. :)


message 41: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Aurelie wrote: "Hi Simpson team!
Sorry I'm late to join the conversation.

Just a little bit about myself. I'm Aurelie, I currently live in Orange County, California. If you wonder where I got such a complicated n..."


I think you have a beautiful name. I think I know how to say it but then again I might be butchering it, lol. It's wonderful we have such a diverse team. :)


message 42: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Since I read a lot. If I see a book that I've read one of your books you plan to read or have read during the challenge I'll fill it in under the reverse. I tend to read a lot, about 300+ a year.


message 43: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments That's amazing, Rachel! I can't even get to 30.


message 44: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Abbie wrote: "This is my first time playing, so I have no clue what we are doing.

Shelf: Uno 2016"


Added your shelf.

Don't worry about it being your first time playing. It's much like a spell out challenge. The captains will fit the best possible selection for the books on the cards given. The key thing to remember is we have to do one hand at a time, yet we can read as much as we want to have a endless tote of books to select from.

I've made each of us a tab under the group (not official) spreadsheet so you can list any books you plan to read. It's up to you if you want to use it or not. You can also change it to a style you like for yourself. The main thing is to place your book in your bookshelf so I can double check it for guidelines and to log it in on the group spreadsheet so I can find the best spot for it.

I hope that helps. If not just give a shout out. We have many helpers here. :)


message 45: by RachelvlehcaR (last edited Feb 12, 2016 07:25PM) (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Laura wrote: "That's amazing, Rachel! I can't even get to 30."

Thanks. I love books. It's a nice escape from social work.

30 isn't bad at all. Better than many of the average Americans, so be proud you read!


message 46: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments Good point, thanks.

Do we add the books to our Uno shelves before or after we read them?


message 47: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Either. I sort it to date read. By doing that it will place all the unread books at the bottom of the list.

I look at the date read, date started, and page count. I also check for obvious goals met like title and series. I'm not able to always check on characters and settings. If there are any questions I normally just message you directly.


message 48: by Laura (new)

Laura | 1144 comments I'm sorry for so many newbie questions, Rachel! On the individual spreadsheets you made, should we list a book for only one card, or all the cards it fulfills?

And, I was still annoyed by the fact that so many of the books I read wouldn't count because of word count, so I looked up a few more I plan to read and it looks like they meet the 25,000 word guideline! How about that!

Quick side story - the approach to teaching reading at my school involves each student reading their own novel, or when we move into Book Clubs, each club reads a different book. This way, the students are reading at their own level. The days of a class reading the same story or novel are gone.

Anyway, I'm always reading new books my students are reading so I can have more in-depth conversations with them. It's not possible that I get to read every single one, but I read a lot of them. So in preparation for the challenge, I looked up a bunch on AR Book Finder, and they didn't count. But I just looked again and found a few that would count, as my class moves into Historical Fiction Book Clubs. So, I might be able to contribute a few more books than I originally thought.


message 49: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Laura, don't worry about the questions. It's new to many and always confusing when starting a challenge and with a new group of people. :)

I just put the individual tabs in the spreadsheet for you to have an idea for what you want to read and what is coming up. It might help you just choose books for the cards posted.

You can edit your tab page to do whatever works for you. I just copied and pasted it for everyone only changing the name of the team member. Do whatever works for you because that is your page. Just make sure to have your book in the bookshelf and to post it in the overall tracking page because captains/co-captains will select books from there to put in the official uno spreadsheet.


message 50: by RachelvlehcaR (new)

RachelvlehcaR (charminggirl) Laura, that's really neat that you read your student's books. I do that same. It does help a lot. I also have seen a lot of book bits. This is where the teachers have new books in the classrooms for kids to choose from and they give a little review of it that might interest the kids. I loved that idea and used it in my classroom. Then then students would do their own books bits. It was nice.

It's great you found some that work for the challenge. :)


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