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The Joy Cowley
Collection NEW!
Written by Joy Cowley Illustrations by Elizabeth Fuller-Fulton
Mrs Wishy-Washy
and the Big Farm Fair
The Joy Cowley Collection Mrs Wishy-Washy and the Big Farm Fair
This edition is published under the imprint of Nelson Education Ltd. 1120 Birchmount Road, Toronto, Ontario M1K 5G4.
© Text Joy Cowley© Illustrations Elizabeth Fuller-Fulton
Publisher: Frances McBeathDesigner: Sacha McCoskrieConsultants: Helen Thompson and Mary Wise, RT: LitsThe levelling and Teacher’s Notes provided are suggestions only.
Originally published by Clean Slate Press Ltd. © 2009 Clean Slate Press Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
15 14 13 12 11 10
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN: 978-0-176390-73-0
Printed in China
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.nelson.com
Mrs Wishy-Washy and the
Big Farm Fair
Mrs Wishy-Washy has four rules.
1. Be clean.
2. Be neat.
3. Look tidy.
4. Smell sweet.
2 3
Mrs Wishy-Washy has four rules.
1. Be clean.
2. Be neat.
3. Look tidy.
4. Smell sweet.
2 3
Today is the day
of the big farm fair.
The cow is not clean.
The pig is not neat.
The duck is not tidy.
They do NOT smell sweet.
4 5
Today is the day
of the big farm fair.
The cow is not clean.
The pig is not neat.
The duck is not tidy.
They do NOT smell sweet.
4 5
“You are a mess!”
screams Mrs Wishy-Washy.
“You are a big disgrace!”
She f inds a hose, a scrubbing brush,
and some rose soap.
“Come here!” she says.
6 7
“You are a mess!”
screams Mrs Wishy-Washy.
“You are a big disgrace!”
She f inds a hose, a scrubbing brush,
and some rose soap.
“Come here!” she says.
6 7
Scrub, scrub, scrub!
The cow moans and groans.
Scrub, scrub, scrub!
The pig mumbles and grumbles.
8 9
Scrub, scrub, scrub!
The cow moans and groans.
Scrub, scrub, scrub!
The pig mumbles and grumbles.
8 9
Scrub, scrub, scrub!
The duck tries to f ly away.
Mrs Wishy-Washy turns off the hose.
“That’s much better,” she says.
“Now it is time for the judges.”
10 11
Scrub, scrub, scrub!
The duck tries to f ly away.
Mrs Wishy-Washy turns off the hose.
“That’s much better,” she says.
“Now it is time for the judges.”
10 11
The judges look at the cow.
“Very clean cow,” they say.
They look at the pig and the duck.
“Very neat pig! Very tidy duck!”
12 13
The judges look at the cow.
“Very clean cow,” they say.
They look at the pig and the duck.
“Very neat pig! Very tidy duck!”
12 13
Then the judges say,
“These animals smell l ike roses.
They are the cleanest, neatest,
tidiest, sweetest animals
at the big farm fair.”
14 15
Then the judges say,
“These animals smell l ike roses.
They are the cleanest, neatest,
tidiest, sweetest animals
at the big farm fair.”
14 15
“Well done, cow, pig, and duck!
Here are your prizes!”
16
Mrs Wishy-Washy and the Big Farm FairFeatures of the text:
• Punctuation: speech marks, exclamation marks, bold print• Problem solving• Rhyming • Humour
Before Reading• Ask the children to tell you what they know about a
competition at a farm fair.• Ask the children to tell you about rules that they know.• Ask, How would you get an animal ready to be judged at
a fair?• Introduce the text: Mrs Wishy-Washy and the Big Farm
Fair.• Look at the cover and title page. What clues do they give
about the story?
• Making meaning: making personal connections, prediction
• Analyzing the text: visual literacy
Reading the Text• Ask the children to read the text quietly.• Give them something specific to focus on. For example,
Read the book to find out how Mrs Wishy-Washy got the animals ready for the fair.
• If necessary, guide the children’s reading of one or two pages, then encourage them to read on quietly.
• Children may draw upon all four practices during the reading of the text. Help individual children as necessary.
After Reading• Focus on synonyms and antonyms. Look at pages 2, 3, and
5. Ask, What opposites can you think of for “clean”, “neat”, “tidy”, and “sweet”?
• Look at page 6. Ask, Why does Mrs Wishy-Washy say that the animals are a disgrace?
• Look at page 7. Ask, Why do you think Mrs Wishy-Washy used rose soap?
• Look at page 14. Ask, Why did the judges award prizes to the animals?
• Focus on suffixes. Look at page 14 and notice the -est suffix.• Look at pages 2, 3, and 5. Notice the long vowel rimes
ee/ea.• Notice rhyming patterns on pages 8 (oan) and 9 (umbles).
• Using the text: considering how words are used (vocabulary)
• Making meaning: recall, inference, drawing conclusions
• Cracking the code: punctuation, compound words, decoding
Today is the big farm fair.
But the animals
are not clean!Level 17 • Word Count: 173
9 780176 390730
ISBN-10: 0-17-639073-1ISBN-13: 978-0-17-639073-0