opfbad.blogg.se

Miss Spider's Tea Party by David Kirk
Miss Spider's Tea Party by David Kirk






Miss Spider

She invites other animals over to have tea and cake with her but the other insects just fly past her without giving her a chance. Summary: This book starts with a spider who has no friends and she really wants to make some friends. I would reenact the tea party as part of a social skill lesson. I would have the children tell of a time that they felt like an outsider because they were new to school or the looked a little different from everyone else. I also like how the story shows how people judge others by stereotype instead as individuals, but once we get past the stereotype, we can become friends and have a healthy relationship. I like how the illustrator drew the emotions of Miss Spider that gave her a human effect, like sad, happy, caring, and hopeful. “Miss Spider’s Tea Party” has very colorful illustrations. They all end up having a tea party with Miss Spider. He finds all his friends and tells them what Miss Spider did for him and that she just wants to be their friend. She helps him get dry and gives him tea and he flies away. Miss Spider seeing this starts to help the moth, he starts to show his fear she makes him a promise that she would not hurt him. The one left behind had wet wings and could not fly. One night a group of moths becomes caught in the rain and land on the sill where Miss Spider lives, she again invites them to tea, and again they fly away, all but one. When she asks them to come to her party, they all run away, this happens time after time. She decides to she would invite them to a tea party. Miss Spider watches other bugs get together, and she wants to have a gathering with them. “Miss Spider’s Tea Party” shows a conflict between a person and society.








Miss Spider's Tea Party by David Kirk