Our 2023 Mock Caldecott Program
Every year at my K-3 school we do a Mock Caldecott program. Here’s a run down of how we’re Mock Caldecotting this year.
Week 1
- I introduce the Caldecott. I show the honor and the medal. I explain it’s given for the best illustrations. I talk about how it’s chosen. I explain that soon we’ll be reading books that might win and our school will be choosing our favorite.
- We read a past winner. I’m reading Kitten’s First Full Moon with kindergarten, This is Not My Hat with 1st grade, Beekle with 2nd and Officer Buckle and Gloria with 3rd grade. When finished, I ask students why they think it won. Discussions about art ensue.
- We watch the most recent (2022) Caldecott announcements to get a feel for what it’s like:
Weeks 2-3
- We read two books back to back. After we finish each one, I ask students if anything stood out to them about the illustrations. Discussions about art ensue.
- After reading the two books, students pick the one they thought had the best illustrations. For K-1 it’s a show of hands, for 2-3 we are going to try voting via a google form – this is just an informal “Which of the two had the strongest illustrations?” vote. The official vote comes in week 4.
Week 4
- We review all the books. I remind students that the Caldecott Medal is an award for the illustrations. K students get a ballot with pictures of each book on it. They circle their top pick. 1-3rd grade students vote via a google form.
After
- I add up the votes. Most votes gets the medal, the next closest batch of vote getters receive honors. I announce the winners to students!
- Fast forward to Monday, January 30, 2023. I show the 2023 Youth Media Awards video to students. Did any of our Mock Caldecott picks get awards?
Here are the books we’re reading this year. Admittedly, it’s a fairly limited list. Be sure to check out the Mock Caldecott list on Goodreads, the discussion list at Calling Caldecott, John Schu and Colby Sharp’s Mock Caldecott list, and the Caldecott predictions at A Fuse #8 Production for more ideas:
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How do YOU Mock Caldecott? Leave advice in the comments.
Filed under: Articles
About Travis Jonker
Travis Jonker is an elementary school librarian in Michigan. He writes reviews (and the occasional article or two) for School Library Journal and is a member of the 2014 Caldecott committee. You can email Travis at scopenotes@gmail.com, or follow him on Twitter: @100scopenotes.
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Angie says
I love that it is a short list, especially for K-3. They won’t forget by the end 🙂
Travis Jonker says
Yeah, we tried doing 12 books in the past and it was just too many. Next year we are going to try just 4 books, and then have a bunch of other contenders that we don’t read aloud, but show to students in case they want to investigate further.