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Miss Daisy is crazy!  Cover Image Book Book

Miss Daisy is crazy! / Dan Gutman ; pictures by Jim Paillot.

Gutman, Dan. (Author). Paillot, Jim, (illustrator.).

Summary:

Miss Daisy's unusual teaching methods surprise her second grade students, especially reluctant learner A.J.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780060507008
  • ISBN: 0060507004
  • ISBN: 0439700426
  • Physical Description: 83 pages : illustrations ; 20 cm
  • Edition: First Harper Trophy edition.
  • Publisher: [New York, NY] : HarperTrophy, 2004.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Publisher, publishing date and paging may vary.
Formatted Contents Note:
I hate school! -- Dumb Miss Daisy and Principal Klutz -- How to spell read -- Miss Daisy is crazy! -- Most genius idea! -- What do you want to be? -- Bonbons and footballs -- Lot of books! -- Put those books away -- Football players are really dumb -- We rule the school! -- Poor Miss Daisy.
Target Audience Note:
Ages 7-10.
700L Lexile
Study Program Information Note:
Accelerated Reader AR LG 4.3 1 79640.
Subject: Schools > Juvenile fiction.
Teachers > Juvenile fiction.
Learning > Juvenile fiction.
Humorous stories > Juvenile literature.
Schools > Juvenile fiction.
Teachers > Juvenile fiction.
Genre: Humorous fiction.

Available copies

  • 28 of 34 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at De Soto.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 34 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
De Soto Public Library JF GUTMAN Dan (Text) 33858000064673 Juvenile Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9780060507008
My Weird School #1: Miss Daisy Is Crazy!
My Weird School #1: Miss Daisy Is Crazy!
by Gutman, Dan; Paillot, Jim (Illustrator)
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Excerpt

My Weird School #1: Miss Daisy Is Crazy!

My Weird School #1: Miss Daisy Is Crazy! Chapter One "My name is A.J. I like football and video games, and I hate school." Our teacher, Miss Daisy, was taking attendance. It was the first day of second grade. Miss Daisy told everyone in the class to stand up, say our name, and say something about ourself. All the kids laughed when I said I hated school. But there was nothing funny about it. I have learned a lot in my eight years. One thing I learned is that there is no reason why kids should have to go to school. If you ask me, kids can learn all we need to learn by watching TV. You can learn important information like which breakfast cereal tastes best and what toys you should buy and which shampoo leaves your hair the shiniest. This is stuff that we'll need to know when we grow up. School is just this dumb thing that grown-ups thought up so they wouldn't have to pay for baby-sitters. When I grow up and have children of my own, I won't make them go to school. They can just ride their bikes and play football and video games all day. They'll be happy, and they'll think I'm the greatest father in the world. But for now, I wanted to let my new teacher Miss Daisy know from the very start how I felt about school. "You know what, A.J.?" Miss Daisy said, "I hate school too." "You do?" We all stared at Miss Daisy. I thought teachers loved school. If they didn't love school, why did they become teachers? Why would they ever want to go to a school as a grown-up? I know that when I'm a grownup, I'm not going to go anywhere near a school. "Sure I hate school," Miss Daisy continued. "If I didn't have to be here teaching you, I could be home sitting on my comfortable couch, watching TV and eating bonbons." "Wow!" we all said. "What's a bonbon?" asked Ryan, a kid with black sneakers who was sitting next to me. "Bonbons are these wonderful chocolate treats," Miss Daisy told us. "They're about the size of a large acorn, and you can pop the whole thing right in your mouth so you don't need a napkin. I could eat a whole box of bonbons in one sitting." "They sound delicious!" said Andrea Young, a girl with curly brown hair. She was sitting up real straight in the front of the class with her hands folded like they were attached to each other. Miss Daisy seemed like a pretty cool lady, for a teacher. Anybody who hated school and liked to sit around watching TV and eating chocolate treats was okay by me. Me and Miss Daisy had a lot in common. Maybe going to school wouldn't be so terrible after all. Miss Daisy said it was time for us to clear off our desks and see how much we knew about arithmetic. Ugh! "If I gave you fifty-eight apples and Principal Klutz took twenty-eight of them away," Miss Daisy asked, "how many apples would you have left? A.J.?" "Who cares how many apples you would have left?" I said. "I hate apples. If you ask me, you and Principal Klutz can take all the apples away and it wouldn't bother me one bit." "You would have thirty apples," said that girl Andrea Young in the front of the class. She had a big smile on her face, like she had just opened all her birthday presents. Andrea Young thinks she's so smart. "I hate arithmetic," I announced. "You know what?" Miss Daisy said. "I hate arithmetic too!" "You do?" we all said. "Sure! I don't even know what you get if you multiply four times four." "You don't?" "I have no idea," Miss Daisy said, scratching her head and wrinkling up her forehead like she was trying to figure it out. "Maybe one of you kids can explain it to me?" Boy, Miss Daisy was really dumb! Even I know what you get when you multiply four times four. But that smarty-pants-I-know-everything-girl Andrea Young beat me to it and got called on first. "If you put four crayons in a row," she told Miss Daisy as she put a bunch of crayons on the top of her desk, "and you make four rows of four crayons, you'll have sixteen crayons. See?" Then she counted the crayons from one to sixteen. Miss Daisy looked at the crayons on Andrea's desk. She had a puzzled look on her face. "I'm not sure I understand," she said. "Can somebody else explain it to me?" Michael Robinson, this kid wearing a red T-shirt with a dirt bike on it, explained four times four again, using pencils. He had sixteen pencils on his desk, in four rows of four pencils. Miss Daisy still had a look on her face like she didn't understand. "What would happen if you subtracted half of the pencils?" she asked. Michael took away two of the rows of pencils and put them in his pencil box. "Then you would have eight pencils!" we all said. Andrea Young added, "Half of sixteen is eight." Miss Daisy wrinkled up her forehead until it was almost like an accordion. She still didn't get it! She started counting the pencils on Michael's desk out loud and using her fingers. She got it all wrong. We all gathered around Michael's desk and tried to explain to Miss Daisy how to add, subtract, multiply, and divide numbers using the pencils. Nothing worked. Miss Daisy had to be the dumbest teacher in the history of the world! No matter how many times we tried to explain, she kept shaking her head. "I'm sorry," she said. "It will take me a while to understand arithmetic. Maybe you can explain it to me more tomorrow. For now we have to clean off our desks because Principal Klutz is going to come in and talk to us." My Weird School #1: Miss Daisy Is Crazy! . Copyright © by Dan Gutman. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Miss Daisy Is Crazy! by Dan Gutman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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