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Henny-Penny von Jane Wattenberg
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Henny-Penny (2000. Auflage)

von Jane Wattenberg (Autor), Jane Wattenberg (Illustrator)

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While on their way to tell the king that the sky is falling, Henny Penny and her friends meet the very hungry Foxy-Loxy.
Mitglied:ErinLeary
Titel:Henny-Penny
Autoren:Jane Wattenberg (Autor)
Weitere Autoren:Jane Wattenberg (Illustrator)
Info:Scholastic Press (2000), Edition: 1st, 40 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:****
Tags:Keine

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Henny-Penny von Jane Wattenberg

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Summary: This book stars a chicken named Henny-Penny. Henny-Penny is hit by an acorn and is convinced the sky is falling and is in a hurry to tell the king. Along the way Henny-Penny is joined by multiple friends who are also determined to inform the king. Before they can make it to the king the friends come across a fox who tricks them into going into his cave. The fox has a few snacks but Henny-Penny manages to escape the foxes trap but doesn't get to tell the king she thinks the sky is falling.

Personal reflection: This wordy and rhyme filled book supplies endless fun with the occasional tongue twister. I really enjoyed reading this story.

Classroom Extension: Have the students write a journal entry on a time they were in a hurry to tell somebody something. ( )
  Bethanyhines | Sep 25, 2017 |
This book tells the classic story of Henny Penny, who thinks the sky is falling after an apple falls on her head. Henny Penny goes on a journey to tell the King about the sky falling, meeting up with many friends along the way who accompany her on her quest. Henny Penny and all her friends run in to the mean Foxy Loxy, who eats Henny Penny's friends, but she escapes and lays an egg.

I love this book because of the colorful language used and the whimsical nature of the story. There are many words in this story that are made up and fun to read with kids, and the book does a great job of detailing the actions that Henny Penny and her friends perform on their journey.

This book could be used to teach a lesson on different parts of speech and nonsense words. There are many words in this book that are descriptive even though they are not real words. Teachers can talk to children about how they know certain words are real or fake and have them act out pieces of the story. ( )
  ErinLeary | Dec 5, 2016 |
"Chickabunga!" The alarmist chicken and all her funny feathered friends are back! Henny-Penny thinks the sky is falling when an acorn smacks her on her fine red comb. Come flock along as she and her barnyard pals take a side-splitting trip around the world to tell the king.
  wichitafriendsschool | Nov 26, 2016 |
Jane Wattenberg retells the story of Henny-Penny with really spunky illustrations. When Henny-Penny things the sky is falling, she goes and tells cocky-locky, and then a progression of telling people the sky is falling occurs. Everyones' ultimate goal is to go tell the king that the sky is falling. But this plan gets interrupted when they run into a mean animal, Foxy-Loxy. ( )
  jcofsky | Feb 10, 2011 |
Summary:
After an acorn falls on Henny-Penny's head, she mistakenly thinks the sky is falling. She runs to tell the king that the sky is falling! Along her way, animal after animal hears Henny-Penny's news and joins her on the way to tell the king. However, before reaching the king, Foxy-Loxy outsmarts them by luring them into a cave as his dinner. The only one to escape is Henny-Penny because she luckily remembers she has to go home to lay her egg.

Personal Reaction:
I like the illustrations of this book. They are realistic as well as humorous. I like the moral of this story because, as the characters in the story found out, you shouldn't believe everything you are told.

Classroom Extension Ideas:
In the classroom, I could have the class 1) play the broken telephone gossip game to teach them how words can easily get mixed up or 2) we could make a class picture book with rhyming animal names like in the story. (Ducky-Lucky, Goosey-Loosey, ect.)
  jromero3 | Feb 8, 2011 |
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While on their way to tell the king that the sky is falling, Henny Penny and her friends meet the very hungry Foxy-Loxy.

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Jane Wattenberg ist ein LibraryThing-Autor, ein Autor, der seine persönliche Bibliothek in LibraryThing auflistet.

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