
Frog and Toad Are Friends by Arnold Lobel is actually a collection of stories, all of which are a little different. Each story is relatively short and about 12 pages at an easy reading level. Today's entry is going to be focusing on the 3rd story in the book-- A lost button. In the story, Toad loses one of the buttons on his jacket. Frog helps toad find his button, but they realize when looking for his button that there are very many different types of buttons-- small, big, white, black, thick, thin, etc. In the end, Toad finds the button on the floor in his home. He feels bad that he made Frog look around for buttons all day, so he uses all the buttons they collected and sews them all on his jacket.
This book is very good for young children-- Pre-K through 1st grade I would say. Students can be introduced to the ideas of sets and attributes, and since buttons are objects from everyday life, they could actually practice sorting buttons into sets according to various attributes. They could also compare and contrast buttons and create a venn diagram if they sort buttons according to two different attributes (black and 2 holes-- buttons that are black in one group, buttons that are black AND have two holes in the middle, and buttons that have 2 holes but are not black in the third group).
Frog and Toad are two characters that could repeatedly be used in math word problems. I had an experience with a student yesterday who was working online solving word problems and would continually raise her hand to have help reading the words. Every time I went over to help her, the word she needed help with was the name of a place or the names of people. If we use characters from stories that children are familiar with, or places the students go to, they will be much more successful solving word problems. Especially in the early years, if students remember Frog and Toad from the story, they will be able to visualize and comprehend the problem with less difficulty.





