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Hi Marcell!
I've never read "Wonderous Words", so my interest is piqued. Would a middle school teacher get anything out of reading it?
I use both picture and chapter books as mentor texts in my classroom. For picture books, I love "Ted" for teaching dialogue, "Saving Sweetness" for figurative language and "Skippyjon Jones" for voice. As you can see, I don't stick to one author for picture books because it seems that once you've read one picture book by an author, their other books fit a prescribed format and I need variety in picture books because I have middle-schoolers. For chapter books, Gary Paulsen is excellent for voice and I've read excerpts from "Hatchet," "Harris and Me," and "How Angel Petersen Got His Name," at various times during the school year. His books hook my boys and adventure-loving kiddos. I also love Laurie Halse Anderson for teaching theme. Her books may be too mature for elementary students, but you may be able to find something that you can use from her. She is awesome because her stories draw you in and make you love her characters. Jerry Spinelli is a favorite for figurative language and creating a setting. Any of his books fit the bill here and I enjoy him because his writing is REAL and the kids connect with that.
I don't have any specific lessons to help you with your second question. Unfortunately, by 7th and 8th grade, my students aren't interested in thinking about "other" ways the text could have been written. They are stuck in the here and now and how this affects THEM. The few times I've tried to further the dicussion, it ends in disaster, so I don't try too much anymore. Sorry.
I hope this helps. Enjoy your last few days of summer!
Lisa
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