Flotsam
by David Wiesner
New York: Clarion Books, 2006.
Suggested Age and Interest Level: K through 5th* and beyond
Editions: Hardcover, eBook
Awards: Caldecott Medal, New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book, Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year, Kirkus Reviews Best Children’s, Booklist Editor’s Choice, School Library Journal Best Book, and more.
Languages: English, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Korean, Spanish
Topics to Explore: Beaches and seashore, Fantasy, Humor, Ocean creatures, Perspective-talking
Skills to Build:
Semantics: Vocabulary, Categories, Homonyms, Synonyms, Associations, Adjectives, Prepositions
Grammar and syntax: Noun + Verb agreement, Plural forms of nouns, regular and irregular, Present progressive tense structures, Negative structures, Advanced syntactic structures
Language literacy (a.k.a. Language discourse): Sequencing events, Cause-and-effect relationships, Problem solving, Drawing inferences, Verbal expression (Giving explanations), Compare and contrast, Answering Why questions, Predicting events, Discussion
Pragmatic social language: Nonverbal communication
Articulation: Carryover for most any phoneme, especially S, Sh, and Ch
Executive Functions
Fluency
Summary: A wordless picture book about a curious, science-minded boy on the beach examining flotsam (i.e., objects that have washed ashore). He has come with microscope, binoculars, shovel, collection box, and pail. While fascinated with a sand crab, a huge wave knocks him into the ocean. Back on the beach, he sees that the wave deposited something of interest lodged in the sand – an old, barnacle-encrusted, box camera known as a Melville underwater camera.He discovers a film roll inside, so he runs to the seaside camera shop to get it developed. He leaves the store with incredible photos in hand, leading him to astounding revelations of where the camera has been and what it has recorded over many eras – in fact, going back as far as the invention of the camera! Follow the magical images and see how he solves the mystery with his scientific aids, then see what he contributes in furthering its magical journey.
Strategies: Consider book talk by viewing just a few pages at a time, leaving off at a suspenseful part to come back to later. This fantastic tale with multiple images per page has plenty of details. The many images on a page requires study. Allowing time to figure out the scene so key revelations aren’t missed makes book talk more rewarding. On some pages, you may wish simply to allow your audience to view the image in silence to process the wonders of the artist’s talent and imagination.
Methods:
Before the read-aloud, show the book’s cover, read the title and author, and discuss the illustration.
Vocabulary
Ask children to describe the cover with questions such as –
- What is the “eye” in the center?
- What are the creatures in the corners?
- Where might the story take place?
Talk about the meaning of flotsam. Ask for a definition, an idea, or guess, then supply your own. Read the inside jacket cover that explains it this way –
Something that floats.
If it floats in the ocean,
it may wash up on the beach,
where someone may find it,
and be astonished,
and share the discovery
with someone else –
Vocabulary, Present tense constructions
On a page turn, reveal what sets the stage for the story in order to add meaning. Describe the beach scene, scaffolding targeted grammatical structures with the elements, including –
- The boy is (by himself) on the beach.
- He is holding a shovel.
- He’s reaching to find something in the ______ (water/wave that came ashore).
Vocabulary, Categories
At the inside title page, ask children to name the items on the page that define flotsam, as used on the story. Flotsam shown includes –
- Shells (sand dollar, conch, and clam shells)
- Starfish
- Driftwood
- Tools,
- Compass
- Bottles,
- Coins
- Feather
To work on categories, ask children what all the items are called to name the category flotsam. Then ask children to name some of the flotsam pictured. To continue working on categories, ask what items came from the sea, what items came from land, animals, are handmade, and so on.
Vocabulary, Prepositions, Giving explanations
On a page turn, see the story open with a sand crab and a large eye behind it. Identify the sand crab and its interesting parts, including its eyestalks, antennae, pinchers, shell, and walking legs, called pereiopods.
Ask children to identify the object behind the crab, the human eye. Support children in explaining the illustration using prepositions.
- The boy’s eye is behind the sand crab.
- The boy picked up a sand crab at the beach.
- The boy is looking at the sand crab in front of him.
Vocabulary, Present progressive tense and Advanced syntax constructions.
Continue to share in the storytelling as you turn the page and see the boy enjoying his discovery of the crab. Use various verbs in describing each scene, such as –
- The boy _______ (stares, gazes, looks out) at the sandcastle.
- He __________ (walks, strolls, wanders) along the beach.
- He ________ (sees, discovers, finds) a sand crab.
Then all of a sudden, a big wave comes unexpectedly crashing onto the beach. The boy gets knocked off his feet, into the splashing wave. Support advanced syntax structure in descriptions about the boy and what is happening with the wave at the same time, such as –
- The boy looks at the crab as the wave crashes behind him.
- The wave crashes and the boy is knocked down.
- The boy gets knocked over when the wave crashes onto the shore.
Cause-and-effect relationships
On a page turn, see that the boy back on the sandy beach, farther away from the waves. Yet the scene has changed. Seaweed wraps around his feet. He stares at an old box camera that washed ashore.
To work on cause-and-effect relationships, ask how the old box camera got lodged in the sand. Structure sentences with connecting words since, because, as a result of. For example –
- A camera is stuck in the sand as a result of a big wave that brought it ashore.
- A camera appears in the sand because of a big wave from the sea.
- A camera is on the beach since it got washed up by a big wave.
Vocabulary, Noun + Verb agreement, Syntax structures, Pronouns
On a page turn, see the boy fascinated with the old box camera, how it functions, and the film inside the camera.
To work on vocabulary, label and define a roll of film as it is shown in the story. It can be described as a thin sheet of (usually) celluloid that is covered with emulsion, rolled up, attached to a spool. The film is inserted into the camera to record a photograph.
To work on N + V agreement, syntax structures and pronouns, support sentence constructions about the boy sharing his find with his parents and the lifeguard as they try to figure out if the camera might belong to anyone around them. For example –
- He shows the camera to his mom and dad.
- They show the camera to the lifeguard.
- The lifeguard doesn’t know.
- His parents don’t know.
Then describe the boy’s actions as he finds a roll of film inside the camera.
- He opens up the camera
- He finds an object inside the camera.
- He removes the yellow roll of film.
Sequencing events, Adjectives, Nonverbal communication
The next picture sequence shows the boy hurriedly leaving the beach, running to the seaside town, and finding Bob’s One-Hour Photo shop. After an exchange with the woman behind the desk, he goes outside to wait.
To work on sequencing, ask children to describe the picture sequence of the boy waiting on the bench. How does the artist show the passage of time? Scaffold with connecting words first, then, next, and finally. For example –
- First, he sits and crosses his arms.
- Then he lays on the bench
- Then he disappears.
- Then he comes back and puts his head in his hands.
- Next, he turns around and looks in the store window.
- Finally, he comes out of the store with the photos in hand.
To work on adjectives and nonverbal communication, support children in interpreting the expression on the boy’s face as he views the photos from the camera.
Start a sentence, then brainstorm words to complete it. For example –
He looks ________.
- fascinated
- amazed
- shocked
- perplexed
- stunned
- astonished
Compare and contrast, Vocabulary, Stating functions, Giving explanations
On a page turn, see the fantastic image of a school of orange fish, one of which is a mechanical version, with its various machinery exposed.
To work on compare and contrast, support children in giving a description of the unusual fish and comparing it to the others. Ask questions such a s-
- How is this fish like the others?
- How is this mechanical fish different from the other fish?
- What is the same about all the fish?
- What makes this mechanical fish able to swim?
To work on vocabulary, stating functions, and giving explanations, name the unusual parts of the mechanical fish and its function. Then ask what each part does. For example, ask –
- What is its function?
- A turnkey winds up the mechanism inside the fish.
- Gears operate the fish.
- Propellers make the fish go.
- Rudders help balance the fish.
and so on.
Plural forms of nouns, regular and irregular
Use the images in the next four page turns to work on plural forms of nouns such as –
- fish/fish
- octopus/octopuses (correct plural noun)
- shell/shells
- seahorse/seahorses
- starfish/starfish
- whale/whales
Descriptions, Syntax constructions, Prepositions, Drawing inferences
On a page turn, see the images from another perspective, that of the boy as he holds the photos in hand.
On the opposite page, the other photo is revealed – a frog-like octopus reading a book in an underwater living room among friends and family.
Allow time for children to absorb all that is going on in the image. There is a lot to discover. Ask for descriptions of their favorite part of the scene.
- What’s funny about the photo?
- What is unusual in the photo (developed from the camera’s roll of film)?
To work on syntax constructions with prepositions, support children in expressing humorous details, such as –
- The octopus creature lifts a tentacle up on a footstool.
- A group of fish are lined up on the couch (like sardines) (ready to be sat on).
- A fish is upside down under a lampshade (because it is under water).
- A little fish looks at another fish inside a fishbowl (when they are both under water).
To work on drawing inferences, point out the upside down trailer in the upper corner labeled Moving and Storage. Pose questions about how the trailer got there and the consequences it had on the scene. For example –
- Why might the door of the trailer be open?
- How did the living room furniture, like lamps, armchairs and couch, get there?
- What might have happened when the octopuses found it?
Answering Why questions, Syntax constructions (including negation)
On the next two page turns, find more unusual, fantastical photographs from the camera. Support children’s descriptions by focusing on one aspect or event at a time.
To work on answering why questions with negative syntax structures, ask –
Why is it unusual for…
- …a fish to ride in the basket of a hot air balloon? (e.g., Fish don’t live out of water.)
- …a hot air balloon to be a blown up fish (a pufferfish) with fins for wings? (e.g., Fish can’t fly.)
- …a sea turtle to swim with a village of cone-shaped shells on its back? (e.g., Turtles don’t carry shells on their backs.)
- …a spacecraft with space aliens to land on the ocean floor? (e.g., A spaceship probably wouldn’t land underwater.)
- …giant starfish with forests on their backs to walk on the ocean floor? (e.g., Starfish don’t grow that big; Forests can’t grow under water.)
Verbal Expression, Nonverbal communication, Adjectives, Vocabulary, Drawing inferences
On a page turn, see another photo from the film roll. To support verbal expression, scaffold descriptions that express why the photo is unusual, such as –
- The photo shows a girl from one country holding a photo of a boy from another country who is holding a photo of a boy in another country.
Build anticipation for problem-solving by asking how this could happen. For example, ask –
- How could the camera have taken a picture of one child from one land holding a picture of another child from somewhere else in the world who is holding another photo of another child?
On the opposite page, see the boy bewildered by the photographs.
To work on nonverbal communication, ask children to describe the boy’s actions and expressions and what they indicate about his thoughts and feelings. Support constructions such as –
He _______
- …holds the photo at arms’ length.
- …scratches his head.
- …holds it close to his eyes.
- …looks at the photo with his magnifying glass.
To work on the use of adjectives, ask children to complete the sentence with a word about how he’s feeling, as in –
- confused
- inquisitive
- bewildered
- mystified
- baffled
- puzzled
To work on vocabulary, describe the word magnify. Talk about the microscope with a lens that magnifies the photo. and that he is able to see even more in the photo with the magnifying glass and microscope.
To work on drawing inferences, ask what is making the boy so intent on the photo with his microscope. Then ask what this says, or infers, about what he is thinking and feeling. Scaffold responses such as –
- He can’t figure it out.
- He wants to see more details.
- He is surprised (baffled, mystified, etc.) at what more he sees.
Drawing inferences, Problem solving
On a page turn, see another photo of another girl in the same scenario, holding another photo.
Work on drawing inferences by talking about the magnification process and what it’s revealing, then asking questions such as-
- What has made the boy so intent on looking deeper into the photo?
- What could the microscope do for him?
- What could be learned from using the microscope?
To work on problem solving, point out the boy who now holds his head in his hands, gazing at the equipment he brought with him to the beach?
- What is the boy’s problem?
- How does he solve the problem of (not being able to see, understanding) what intrigues him?
- What does a microscope do?
- What is his solution to understanding what is in the photos?
Perspective-taking, Problem solving
On a page turn, look carefully at each photo inside the circle with a number and x next to it.
To work on perspective-taking, ask from what and whose perspective they are seen. For example –
- Why are the photos in a circular shape inside a black background?
- On the previous page, what is the instrument the boy is looking through?
- Who is seeing these images inside the black background? (the boy)
- How is the boy seeing these photos? (through a microscope)
To work on problem-solving, discuss a microscope and its purpose of enlarging. Then discuss the microscope’s effect on the photos. Consider asking yes/no questions such as –
Could it be that __________
- …the more he increased the number, the more he magnified the lens?
- …the more he magnified the lens, the more he magnified the picture?
- …the more he magnified the picture, the better he could see another picture inside it?
- …the more pictures he saw, the farther back in time the pictures were taken?
- …higher the number beside the photo, the more he magnified the picture?
- …the more he magnified the picture, the more he saw pictures taken farther back in time?
Point out that each person in the photos looks different. Ask for explanations of the problem the boy solved with the microscope.
- What is different about them? (They are from different time periods).
- Why isn’t the boy in the last photo, the largest, holding a photo? (Before that time, there were no cameras, so there would have been no photographs.)
Advanced Syntax construction, Problem solving
On a page turn, see the boy on the beach with the towel around his shoulders. The day is coming to an end. His parents and other beachgoers are packing up. He remains perplexed, contemplating, thinking about, his discovery.
Encourage complex syntax constructions by supporting children’s descriptions the two events happening at the same time. Consider sentence starters if needed. Some examples –
- The boy stays on the beach as (the beachgoers pack up and leave).
- At the end of the day, the beachgoers leave but (the boy stays with the camera).
- The boy’s parents go home, but the boy (wants to stay at the beach).
To work on stating the problem and solution, we can appreciate that the concept of a photo within a photo within a photo showing people in different places in the world during different eras can be challenging, even for most children.
Start with a smaller concept and build on it, such as a picture description, as in –
- The boy stays on the beach because he wants to keep looking at the photo.
So, then ask –
- Q: What is the problem?
A: He is puzzled by the photo.
Next, ask what is puzzling for him. Support language that describes what he is trying to solve. For example,
- Q: What is he trying to figure out?
A: He is trying to understand why he sees more photos inside the photo when he magnifies it.
Next, ask what he did to try to solve his problem. Support children’s responses, as in –
- Q: What does he do to solve the problem?
A: He looks at the photo under his microscope. He magnifies the photos
Next, ask how he solved his problem. Support responses in a few parts, such as –
- Q: What did he finally realize? What did he figure out by magnifying the photo?
A: The boy figured out that over the years, different children in different places found the camera.
They got a photo out of the camera and took a picture of themselves holding the photo that they found.
Perspective-taking
On the opposite page, see the boy figure out how to take a picture of himself with the camera holding the first photo of the girl from the film roll. Then see the scene from different perspectives. Study the illustrations for meaning.
Ask from what or whose perspective the images are seen. Point out details and support responses such as –
- The first image is from the perspective of a viewer beside the boy.
- The second image is from the boy’s perspective (as he pushes the camera button with the handle of his shovel).
- The third image is from the perspective of a viewer in front of the boy, with the ocean behind.
- The fourth image is from the same perspective, in front of the boy, but very close to the camera’s lens. (See the camera’s eye on the opposite page for a comparison.)
Perspective-taking, Drawing inferences, Predictions
On a page turn, see the image of the boy holding the photograph from the perspective of the camera’s lens. It IS the photograph, and the camera captured it of the boy with a big wave crashing behind him, washing the other photos out to sea.
On the opposite page, still from the perspective of the sea, see the photos floating away and the boy watching as he stands on the shore. With a faraway look in his eye, he tosses the camera out to sea, waving goodbye. Support children’s explanations with inferences based on events that led up to the present.
- What might the boy have been thinking as he threw the camera into the sea?
- Did he think the camera would sink to the bottom of the ocean and never be found?
- Why don’t you think so?
- Did he think the camera would float away to capture another adventure? Why do you think so?
- If someone found the camera in the future, what would they find on the roll of film?
Vocabulary, Grammar & Syntax, Literate Language, Predicting
On the next few page turns, continue book talk about what the camera captures on its fantastical adventures in the same way as with the previous pages.
Support descriptions with scaffolding, such as modeling a sentence, providing a sentence starter, and expanding an utterance to incorporate the target objectives.
At the story’s end, see a girl in another part of the world kneeling on the beach, reaching for a half-buried camera in the sand. Ask children to predict what might happen next.
Other skills to address throughout the shared book reading:
Articulation
To work on correct production of a phoneme or particular phonemes at the level of carryover to spontaneous speech, use the images to encourage descriptions during book talk.
Book talk can be heavily loaded with sibilant sounds S (i.e., sea, microscope, splash, seaweed, octopus, spaceship, inspect, etc.), CH (i.e., multiple uses of pictures), and SH (i.e., ocean, fish, shore, shovel, etc.).
Fluency
Wordless picture books provide wonderful opportunities to work on communication goals for children who stutter.
To work on fluency techniques, structure participation in book talk by demonstrating and supporting fluency techniques such as easy start, light contacts, pausing, and speaking on a steady breath stream.
To work on adjusting attitudes and increase verbal participation in life, hold a discussion on avoidance. Use the illustrations of the boy in conversation with other beachgoers and the lifeguard.
Discuss how events might have been different if the boy had avoided inquiring about the camera due to fears about stuttering. Some suggestions include –
- Why was it important to speak with the beachgoers, no matter how he spoke?
- Why was it important to ask the lifeguard about it, no matter how he spoke?
- If the boy had not spoken with others about the camera, what might have been the result? (E.g., He wouldn’t know if it belonged to another beachgoer, he might not be comfortable taking it in his possession, etc.)
To work on techniques combined with avoidance issues, use the same methods for fluency techniques at the page where the boy goes into the camera store. Ask the child to supply the dialog. Notice he was asking for the film to be developed as well as for another roll of film to purchase.
Additionally, talk about how the clerk is not directly looking at him while he is talking because she is on the phone. Discuss the real-life dynamics of interaction with others.
- Are there times when we need to speak to another while they are busy doing something else?
- Is this realistic? Understandable?
Ask how the story would have been different had the boy avoided interacting with the clerk since she wasn’t giving the expected eye contact or focusing directly at him. .
After the read-aloud, revisit the book’s pages and continue book talk to build any of the following skills:
Vocabulary, Associations, Homonyms, Synonyms
To work on vocabulary and associations, review the meaning of flotsam. Talk about the word frequently associated with flotsam, which is jetsam.
The literal meaning of flotsam is debris in the water that was not deliberately thrown overboard.
Jetsam, on the other hand, is debris that was deliberately thrown overboard. It was usually tossed to the sea to lighten a ship’s load.
Ask children what the proper word would be for the camera when it was found by the boy. Some examples –
- Do you think that the camera, when it was found by the boy, was deliberately thrown in the water?
- Or did it accidentally end up in the ocean?
- Is it correctly called flotsam?
- Do you think the camera the boy threw out to sea at the end of the story could be called flotsam?
- Why not?
- Why should it now be called jetsam?
To work on homonyms, talk about another meaning for the two words used together.
Flotsam and jetsam can be spoken in a nonliteral way. Used this way it means odds and ends.
When people talk about the flotsam, or flotsam and jetsam of life, they mean the miscellaneous, or unimportant things.
To work on synonyms, talk about other words used for flotsam, such as
- debris
- litter
- garbage
- waste
- trash
- junk
Executive Functions
The neural networking of executive functions is mostly driven by language. It can be helpful for children to verbalize strategies characters put in place that lead to the story’s outcome. Strengthening these skills can also enhance many literate discourse skills.
To work on planning and organization, talk about what the boy would want to bring with him as he planned for a day of discovery at the seashore. While we don’t see him in preparation, we can assume he had plenty on his list. Ask questions such as –
- If the boy wanted to study ocean crabs, what would he need to gather up for a day at the beach?
- How did good planning affect his ability to learn about the camera when it washed ashore? (E.g., He already had what he needed, like a magnifying glass, microscope, a bucket to set the camera on, etc.).
- What did he pack and how was it later used ?
1. A magnifying glass to look closer at the photos and discover there was more there for the eye to see
2. A microscope to look even closer. It allowed him to see the photos went back in time.
3. A pail to place the camera on to take a photo
4. A long to press the button on the camera
5. A towel to wrap up in when he was wet or cold. - How might planning ahead and organizing for an event help you with an unforeseen event?
Discussion
There are many avenues for holding discussions about this imaginative story. Given the amount of material to choose from, consider asking viewers for their favorite page. Focus on the underwater creatures the camera captured in never-before-seen activities. Discuss why the image is fascinating and holds so much interest.
- Is that you might have to look a little further to figure out what’s going on?
- Is it that the wildly imagined image might make sense?
- Is It funny because _______?
Then think of other sea creatures, such as a whale, shark, or sunfish. Imagine what that creature might do under the water that has never before been revealed!
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Note: See other book treatments by the three-time Caldecott award-winning author/illustrator, David Wiesner, in the catalogs of Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth Edition).
Browse through three, age-related catalogs to find literally hundreds of quality picture book entries, easily attainable through school and local libraries. Find your favorites and discover other excellent choices ideal for the specified skills. Get treatment plans that provide you with methods, prompts, word lists, activities, and loads of ideas, whether for one child, or multiple learners.
Use the Skills index to look under the Skills headings for suggested picture books ideal for supporting those skills. Then see book titles cross-referenced to three age-related catalogs. You’ll also find picture books that cover this book’s topics and a whole lot more in the Topic Explorations Index of Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth Edition).
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Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth Edition)
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Available on Amazon: https://a.co/d/efcKFw6
Extended Activities: See a YouTube video “read along” of Flotsam by the Canadian production company, Whimsical Productions, at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1v9-UT93R4