Carnegie Shadowing Group News
This week’s featured book, Girl, Boy, Sea, is the perfect example of why we should never judge a book by its cover; our group felt the design suggests a book aimed at younger...
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This week’s featured book, Girl, Boy, Sea, is the perfect example of why we should never judge a book by its cover; our group felt the design suggests a book aimed at younger...
Posted by Teresa Turton
‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ (1960) by Harper Lee This Pulitzer Prize winning novel concerns the essential nature of right and wrong and how good and evil can coexist. Through...
Posted by Lynn Court
Posted by Danielle Bowe
The English Faculty would like to draw your attention to another writing competition opportunity. This one has longer for you to create your masterpiece:
Posted by Lynn Court
I am so proud of the students in our first shadowing group who have been working really hard to read as many of the shortlisted books as possible, despite not being in school to...
Posted by Teresa Turton
I am delighted and excited to announce that all Bushey Meads students and staff now have access to an extensive new digital library collection. With over 2000 titles available,...
Posted by Teresa Turton
Last month, the English Faculty launched a themed Lockdown Poetry Competition. Mr Johnson and Miss Stanton set students the challenge to compose and submit a poem about an aspect...
Posted by Natalie Stanton
‘Things Fall Apart’ (1958) by Chinua Achebe A worldwide bestseller, Amazon summarises ‘Things Fall Apart,’’ as the compelling story of one man’s battle to protect his...
Posted by Lynn Court
Please find another opportunity for our budding writers. It is open to students aged 11-17 and is open until 31st July. The competition welcomes poems on any theme and any length.
Posted by Lynn Court
Bedrock Vocabulary Learning Last month, I wrote about our established Bedrock Vocabulary Learning Programme at Bushey Meads and how busy George Furr, our IT manager,...
Posted by Danielle Bowe
This week’s featured book, Girl, Boy, Sea, is the perfect example of why we should never judge a book by its cover; our group felt the design suggests a book aimed at younger readers, however that certainly wasn’t the case and they appear to have really enjoyed it!
Girl, Boy, Sea by Chris Vick
Fifteen year old Bill is lost and alone on an endless sea after a storm sinks his yacht off the coast of the Canary Islands. In a twist of fate he finds another survivor from a different wreck, clinging to a floating barrel. The girl is Aya, a refugee from the nomadic Berber tribe. Whilst Bill sets about their situation with practical skills to ensure their survival, Aya acts as storyteller, recounting her own versions of the Arabian Nights.
What Bushey Meads Shadowers say:
“Girl, Boy, Sea was an amazing book that was full of friendship! It’s a world of fear and the discovery of an unlikely friendship! ” – Alayna, Yr 7
“I really liked the book, it was nothing that I had expected, it wasn’t like a happily ever after or like a fairytale, it was about a girl and boy who had to help each other survive through excruciating conditions in their little boat with few supplies. They had to figure out how to communicate while in the middle of the ocean and barely alive until they reach land.” – Benigna Yr8
With the sea as a dominant backdrop – both beautiful and tempestuous, the book explores friendship and endurance across cultures. The inclusion of the stories told by Aya, portray the escapism people find in reading fiction. You can see a fascinating interview with Chris Vick talking about this book and reading an extract at https://carnegiegreenaway.org.uk/books/girl-boy-sea/ .
If you would like to read the book, it is available from our new ebook collection. Simply download the Sora app or go to soraapp.com, enter the setup code: uk secondary, find Bushey Meads School and log in with your GMail credentials to get started.
Despite the trials of homeschooling coinciding with the launch of this year’s Carnegie Shadowing Scheme, our students did themselves proud, reading around 40 titles between them...
Friday mornings at Bushey Meads are always very positive; all Character Development Coaches (CDCs) provide set texts for their students and give them a BMS Bookmark. They then...