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    The Last Fifth Grade of Emerson Elementary


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      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Text copyright © 2016 by Laura Shovan

      Cover and interior art copyright © 2016 by Abigail Halpin

      All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Wendy Lamb Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

      Wendy Lamb Books and the colophon are trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

      Visit us on the Web!

      randomhousekids.com

      Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at

      RHTeachersLibrarians.com

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Title: The last fifth grade of Emerson Elementary / Laura Shovan.

      Description: First edition. | New York : Wendy Lamb Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, [2016].

      Summary: “A story told in verse from multiple perspectives of the graduating fifth grade class of Emerson Elementary. The kids join together to try to save their school from being torn down to make way for a supermarket” — Provided by publisher.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2015026501 | ISBN 978-0-553-52137-5 (hardback) | ISBN 978-0-553-52138-2 (lib. bdg.) | ISBN 978-0-553-52139-9 (ebook)

      Subjects: | CYAC: Novels in verse. | Schools—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Stories in Verse. | JUVENILE FICTION / School & Education.

      Classification: LCC PZ7.5.S49 Las 2016 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

      Cover design by Kate Gartner

      Interior design by Trish Parcell

      Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

      v4.1

      a

      For all of my students,

      who have been my best teachers,

      but especially Robbie and Julia.

      “And they were all, when their

      souls grew warm, poets.”

      —RAY BRADBURY

      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      First Quarter

      Notebook

      History

      First Day

      The Last Fifth Grade

      Running For President

      School Clothes

      Questions

      Then And Now

      Percussion Poem

      Ping-Pong Riff

      Every Morning

      My Teacher

      I Know This One

      Self-Portrait

      My Name

      Two Haiku

      Top Ten Things That Stink When Your Father Dies

      At The Movies

      “El Palomito”

      “El Palomito” Translation

      Changes

      Writing Time

      Lucky Hat

      My Twin

      Picture Day by Sydney Costley

      Picture Day by Jason Chen

      Posters

      Election Day

      Ode To My Grandpa

      Where They Live

      Green Toenails

      Mr. White Tanka Poem

      Obstacle Course

      Español

      My Song

      Campaign Manager

      Election Day

      My Way

      Field Trip

      News At The Newseum

      Getting The Message

      Speaking My Mind

      SOS

      Hijab

      Is It True?

      I Hate Halloween

      Costume: A Rap Poem For Ms. Hill

      Second Quarter

      One Seat, Two Seats, We Have New Seats

      A Limerick

      Two Fibonacci Poems

      Opposite Poem

      A History Question

      Indoor Recess

      Window

      Ralph Waldo Emerson

      Who Do You Like?

      Special Person’s Day

      My Name Is The Rock

      Talent Show

      El Dueto

      Duet

      Left Out

      Thanksgiving

      How To Make A Mr. Stick Guy Flip Book

      Time Capsule Rap

      Anything

      Rennie And Phoenix

      Different Doors

      Macmess: An Experiment In Pollution

      Things That Annoy Me

      Nickname Rap

      Try Hard

      Crack The Whip

      The Poetry Prompt Jar

      Me Too

      Senryu: Shoshanna Says

      Snow Day

      Winter Tanka Poem

      Jerusalem

      Photograph

      Petition

      Career Day Fibonacci Poems

      Big Yellow Dozer

      Rumors

      Hungry Yellow Bulldozers

      Signature

      Free Speech?

      Report: Nutrition Walk

      Food Desert

      What’s For Dinner?

      In My Food Desert

      After Our Class Debate

      I Don’t Want To

      Third Quarter

      When Your School Has Old Windows

      I Wanted To Stay Home From School Today

      Birthday Party

      Character

      Faces

      Target

      Gracias

      Thank You

      Report Cards

      Tryouts

      Talent

      Ode To My Twin

      Ode To Pajama Day

      Self-Portrait

      Valentine Diamante

      Hugs And Kisses

      Called Down

      In The Principal’s Office

      Bad News

      Japanese Painting

      Tissues

      Remember

      Four Square

      Girl Talk

      Disgusting Discussion

      Ode To Recess

      Show-And-Tell

      Cardinal Watch

      Hunting Frogs With Raj

      Hammy Power!

      Why?

      Rainy Day Poem

      The Field

      Turtle

      Right Now

      No One Knows

      How It Started

      Raj’s Rant

      Lunch

      Insubordinate

      Haciendo El Papel De La Bella

      Playing Belle

      Being The Beast

      Beastly Me

      Stargrams

      Fourth Quarter

      Spring Break Five Senses Poem

      Marvelous Matzo

      You’ve Got A Friend

      Sixth Grade

      Little River

      Holy Angels

      Free Speech

      Student Council

      Ode To My Mom

      The Problem With K–8

      Stand Up, Sit Down

      My Speech

      How Many Hours

      Ode To My Guitar

      Civil Disobedience

      Bored At The Board

      No Show

      What I Missed

      Tigers

      Makeover

      Almost Summer

      Jerusalem

      The Funeral

      Dream School

      Red Dress

      Time Capsule

      One Wall

      To My Teacher

      Moving

      Mr. Stick Guy’s Goodbye

      Something Good

      Painting

      A Tanka Poem For Phoenix

      Nobody Told Me

      Clapping Out, Clapping In

      Haiku


      I’m A Creature

      My Voice

      Zoo Creatures

      Unveiling The Mural

      Dedication

      Moving Up Speech

      Self-Portrait

      Goodbye

      Acknowledgments

      A Closer Look at the Poems in this Book

      Glossary

      About the Author

      August 25

      NOTEBOOK

      Edgar Lee Jones

      Yo, Notebook.

      I am your poet.

      I will fill you with words.

      I don’t mind writing

      a poem for our teacher,

      some rhymes

      Ms. Hill will feature

      in our fifth-grade book.

      My whole class

      is writing down

      what happens this year,

      but I won’t frown.

      I’ve got nothing to fear.

      I’m already a poet.

      My verses are off the hook.

      Hey, Notebook,

      hope you don’t mind

      waiting in my backpack.

      I know you’re hating

      the dark in there.

      Smells murky as old turkey.

      Later today I’ll take you out

      in a sunny place, tell you

      what life’s all about

      for a fifth-grade poet.

      Fresh air, blue sky,

      my notebook and I.

      August 26

      HISTORY

      George Furst

      My name is George Washington Furst.

      Don’t laugh. My parents are history teachers.

      They met at George Washington’s house.

      It’s a museum called Mount Vernon.

      Vernon is also the name of our cat,

      who lives with me and my mom.

      My dad doesn’t live with us.

      He moved out and took half the furniture,

      so probably we won’t visit Mount Vernon

      on my birthday like usual

      because nothing’s like usual.

      If Mount Vernon is still standing

      after nearly three hundred years,

      why do people want to demolish

      Emerson Elementary?

      School is the only place

      I can count on to never change.

      Maybe I’ll run for class president.

      If I’m elected, I’ll tell our principal

      that buildings can last hundreds of years.

      Mrs. Stiffler has to listen

      to the class president, right?

      If I save our school,

      maybe my dad will get it:

      Some things are worth holding on to.

      August 27

      FIRST DAY

      Rachel Chieko Stein

      We only have 180 days

      at Emerson Elementary.

      When this school year ends,

      I will have spent

      one thousand days

      in this building.

      I want a thousand more

      so I’ll never have to say

      goodbye to friends

      like Sydney and Katie.

      I wish Emerson

      could be my school forever,

      but everyone is talking

      about a plan

      to tear the building down.

      Even if we write poems

      about this year and save them

      for the school time capsule,

      it’s going to be

      like we were never here.

      I wish fifth grade

      wasn’t such a tornado,

      whirling and spinning,

      everyone scattered

      in different directions,

      our school gone,

      empty space

      left behind.

      August 28

      THE LAST FIFTH GRADE

      Sloane Costley

      Walking into school in my brand-new clothes.

      Last week of August, still got sunburn on my nose.

      Checking out the little kids, I feel so tall.

      Over summer, someone must’ve shrunk this hall.

      Mom let me get lip gloss and some sparkly pens.

      Sydney’s backpack matches mine because we’re twins.

      I picked out exactly what we both should wear.

      Yeah, we look alike, but you don’t have to stare.

      Did you hear the Board of Ed might sell our school?

      Emerson could be a mall or something cool.

      If they knock this place down, we should have a parade,

      ’cause no one else will ever be the last fifth grade.

      August 29

      RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT

      Hannah Wiles

      My dad says if this school closes down,

      we’ll get to go somewhere better.

      My mom’s a major in the army.

      She says the way to make things happen

      is to take charge. So I’m stepping up,

      being a leader. I got Shoshanna

      and Brianna to help with my campaign.

      Vote for me if you want to say goodbye

      to bathroom doors that don’t shut right,

      sweating in classrooms with broken AC,

      grungy windows, grimy desks,

      basketball hoops without any nets.

      I can’t understand why so many people

      want to save this run-down old building.

      We deserve to go to school

      someplace nice. It’s our right!

      Vote for me if you agree.

      September 2

      SCHOOL CLOTHES

      Brianna Holmes

      I am hot-pink loud

      and no one sees

      the holes that I cover

      with embroidery.

      I am sleek black boots

      up past my knee.

      No one knows they’re plastic

      and too big for me.

      If a hem can be sewn,

      you don’t throw out the sweater.

      Why tear down our school

      when rebuilding is better?

      I love hand-me-downs

      and thrift-store jeans,

      and I’m still stylish

      as the fifth-grade queens.

      September 3

      QUESTIONS

      Katie McCain

      Ms. Hill, do we have to start every morning

      listening to folk music while we write poetry?

      Writing is hard enough without “If I Had a Hammer”

      pounding my head. In twenty-five years,

      when some kid opens the time capsule

      from our school, he’s not going to care about me

      or my poems. Why can’t our class

      do a cool project? The fourth grade

      is making a photo album for the time capsule.

      You could even put in that picture you love,

      the one on your desk where you look like a total hippie.

      Writing is worse than washing the dishes.

      It’s worse than taking out the trash.

      Ms. Hill, don’t you ever have a day

      when you don’t have anything

      to say?

      September 4

      THEN AND NOW

      Shoshanna Berg

      When my sister moved up

      from fifth grade,

      I stood right here,

      so little I held my mom’s hand.

      All the Emerson teachers

      waited near the glass hallway

      that connects our school

      to Montgomery Middle.

      On the other side,

      the middle-school teachers

      were ready for their new students.

      My sister lined up with her class.

      I remember her yellow sundress.

      When the fifth graders

      stepped into the bright hallway,

      all the teachers clapped.

      Goodbye, goodbye!

      As they crossed from elementary

      into middle schoo
    l,

      the teachers on the other side

     


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