What a lovely book for a classroom collection! It celebrates diversity through the different activities mentioned in the text and through the different styles of illustration on each double-page spread.
Summary from the publisher:
Simple text describes
the ample space available to our children in this country, and the freedom they
have to grow and dream and share. With artwork from 13 of Canada’s finest
illustrators,
each page is a celebration and a reminder of the infinite variety of our home
and native land.
Heather
Patterson’s free verse poem I Am Canada, originally published in 1996, gets new
life in this beautiful, illustrated hardcover timed to celebrate both Canada’s
150th year and Scholastic Canada’s 60th anniversary.
Illustrations
by:
Jeremy
Tankard
Ruth Ohi
Barbara Reid
Jon Klassen
Marie-Louise
Gay
Danielle
Daniel
Ashley
Spires
Geneviève
Côté
Cale
Atkinson
Doretta
Groenendyk
Qin Leng
Eva Campbell
Irene
Luxbacher
I Am Canada: A Celebration was published in 2017.
Opening:
“I am
Canada.
I run. I
swim. I skate, I dance.”
My thoughts as a writer:
In a lovely,
child-friendly way, this book shows the space and freedoms of living in Canada,
from “I have space” to “I stay out late and see the northern lights.” I
especially enjoyed the way it celebrates diversity through the different
activities mentioned in the text, as well as through the diversity of
illustrators who created work for this project. It’s a good book to explore if
you’re thinking about how to create a meaningful and expressive text using
minimal words.
If you’re an
illustrator, this book will be very interesting to investigate, since
it showcases 13 different illustration styles. It was also fun to look through the
book to see if I could tell who the illustrator was for each spread (they are
listed at the back). I enjoyed reading the notes at the back, describing the inspirations for creating the
work from the author and each illustrator.
My thoughts as an educator:
I think this
is an important book to read aloud with students. Almost every page provides an
opportunity for young children to share a bit about themselves and will lead to discussion
about similarities, differences and what it means to be part of a community and
culture. I hope to find it in my school library—and it’s on my wish list of
books to purchase for my classroom.
Ages: 4 - 8
Grades: K - 3
Themes:
Canada, community, diversity
Activities:
What is your
favourite page in the book? Why?
Work with your classmates to create your own “I Am Canada” book. What will you create on your page? What is important to you about being Canadian?
Fox Creek
Municipal Library's Time for Tots presents a reading of the book with a northern lights art activity:
Scholastic
Canada provided a short video to promote I AM CANADA:
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