本帖最后由 帅亮亮妈 于 2013-1-16 09:51 编辑
为了保证现场配音的效果,仅限绘本俱乐部的成员且能参加1月18号能参加现场活动的同学报名。本次绘本共分了8部分,请大家认领。音频请在1月15日前交给我。感谢Tim妈妈辛苦打绘本。
红色--顺顺
绿色--TIM
橙色--亮亮
紫色--Betty
黑色--Philip
蓝色--Rosy
粉色--Mandy
棕色--彤
http://www.tudou.com/programs/view/oE1zMmM4BAs/
里面有点不寻常,看看大家能不能听出来。另外录音不清楚的下次努力了,争取找到合适的录音设备,省得糟蹋咱们孩子的好声音哈!
附文本:
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
We were all sitting around the big kitchen table. It was Saturday morning. Pancake morning. Mom was squeezing oranges for juice. Henry and I were betting on how many pancakes we each could eat. And Grandpa was doing the flipping.
Seconds later, something flew through the air headed toward the kitchen ceiling……
……and landed right on Henry.
After we realized that the flying object was only a pancake, we all laughed, even Grandpa. Breakfast continued quite uneventfully. All the other pancakes landed in the pan, even the one that landed on Henry.
That night, touched off by the pancake incident at breakfast, Grandpa told us the best tall-tale bedtime story he’d ever told.
“Across an ocean, over lots of huge bumpy mountains, across three hot deserts, and one smaller ocean……
……there lay the tiny town of Chew andswallow.
In most ways, it was very much like any other tiny town. It had a Main Street lined with stores, house with trees and gardens around them, a schoolhouse, about three hundred people, and some assorted cats and dogs.
But there were no food stores in the town of Chewandswallow. They didn’t need any. The shy supplied all the food they could possibly want.
The only thing that was really different about Chewandswallow was its weather. It came three times a day, at breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Everything that everyone ate came from the shy.
Whatever the weather served, that was what they ate.
But it never rained rain. It never snowed snow. And it never blew just wind. It rained things like soup and juice. It snowed mashed potatoes and green peas. And sometimes the wind blew in storms of hamburgers.
The people could watch the weather report on television in the morning and they would even hear a prediction for the next day’s food.
When the towns people went outside, they carried their plates, cups, glasses, forks, spoons, knives and napkins with them. That way they would always be prepared for any kind of weather.
If there were leftovers, and there usually were, the people took them home and put them in their refrigerators in case they got hungry between meals.
The menu varied.
By the time they woke up in the morning, breakfast was coming down.
After a brief shower of orange juice, low clouds of sunny-side up eggs moved in followed by pieces of toast. Butter and jelly sprinkled down for the toast. And most of the time it rained milk afterwards.
For lunch one day, frankfurters, already in their rolls, blew in from the northwest at about five miles an hour.
There were mustard clouds nearby. Then the wind shifted to the east and brought in baked beans.
A drizzle of soda finished off the meal.
Dinner one night consisted of lamb chops, becoming heavy at times, with occasional ketchup. Periods of peas and baked potatoes were followed by gradual clearing, with a wonderful Jell-O setting in the west.
The Sanitation Department of Chewandswallow had a rather unusual job for a sanitation department. It had to remove the food that fell on the houses and sidewalks and lawns.
The workers cleaned things up after every meal and fed all the dogs and cats. Then they emptied some of it into the surrounding oceans for the fish and turtles and whales to eat. The rest of the food was put back into the earth so that the soil would be richer for the people’s flower gardens.
Life for the townspeople was delicious until the weather took a turn for the worse.
One day there was nothing but Gorgonzola cheese all day long.
The next day there was only broccoli, all overcooked.
And the next day there were brussel sprouts and peanut butter with mayonnaise.
Another day there was a pea soup fog. No one could see where they were going and they could barely find the rest of the meal that got stuck in the fog.
The food was getting larger and larger, and so were the portions. The people were getting frightened. Violent storms blew up frequently. Awful things were happening.
One Tuesday there was a hurricane of bread and rolls all day long and into the night. There were soft rolls and hard rolls, some with seeds and some without. There was white bread and rye and whole wheat toast. Most of it was larger than they had ever seen bread and rolls before. It was a terrible day.
Everyone had to stay indoors. Roofs were damaged, and the Sanitation Department was beside itself. The mess took the workers four days to clean up, and the sea was full of floating rolls.
To help out, the people piled up as much bread as they could in their backyards. The birds picked at it a bit, but it just stayed there and got staler and staler.
There was a storm of pancakes one morning and a downpour of maple syrup that nearly flooded the town. A huge pancake covered the school. No one could get it off because of its weight, so they had to close the school.
Lunch one day brought fifteen-inch drifts of cream cheese and jelly sandwiches. Everyone ate themselves sick and the day ended with a stomachache.
There was an awful salt and pepper wind accompanied by an even worse tomato tornado. People were sneezing themselves silly and running to avoid the tomatoes. The town was a mess. There were seeds and pulp everywhere.
The Sanitation Department gave up. The job was too big.
Everyone feared for their lives. They couldn’t to outside most of the time. Many houses had been badly damaged by giant meatballs, stores were boarded up and there was no more school for the children.
So a decision was made to abandon the town of Chewandswallow.
It was a matter of survival.
The people glued together the giant pieces of stale bread sandwich-style with peanut butter……
……took the absolute necessities with them, and set sail on their rafts for a new land.
After being afloat for a week, they finally reached a small coastal town, which welcomed them. The bread had help up surprisingly well, well enough for them to build temporary houses for themselves out of it.
The children began school again, and the adults all tried to find places for themselves in the new land. The biggest change they had to make was getting used to buying food at a supermarket. They found it odd that the food was kept on shelves, packaged in boxes, cans and bottles. Meat that had to be cooked was kept in large refrigerators. Nothing came down from the sky except rain and snow. The clouds above their heads were not made of fried eggs. No one ever got hit by a hamburger again.
And nobody dared to go back to Chewandswallow to find out what had happened to it .They were too afraid.”
Henry and I were awake until the very end of Grandpa’s story. I remember his goodnight kiss.
The next morning we woke up to see snow falling outside our window.
We ran downstairs for breakfast and ate it a little faster than usual so we could go sledding with Grandpa.
It’s funny, but even as we were sliding down the hill we thought we saw a giant pat of butter at the top, and we could almost smell mashed potatoes.
The End
The weather is delicious in the town of Chewandswallow!
1、顺顺:顺顺不是很熟悉,好些单词吃螺丝。
2、TIM:tim 读得很不错,但是有些断句没断好。Whatever the weather served, that was what they ate. Served 没读对。
3、亮亮:亮亮读长句也有进步, 该停的时候停,该连的时候连。圈出来的这些是读的时候连在一起了, 美语里面很多连读的部分, 连读是没错,就是读的时候也要每个单词读清楚,如果单词读不清楚,连读出来就听不清了。这本书好多食品的名字, 比较难读, 这句亮亮不太熟,前面都还不错。
4、BETTY:Betty 前面有些单词没读好,大概也是不认识, 后面半段读得很好, 也读得比较流利
5、Philip:下面是Philip和妈妈读的,这个对Philip有点难了,读起来比较勉强,妈妈读得很好
6、ROSY:Rosy读得很好,这个flooded读错了。Rosy读得很好,好些比较难的单词她都很轻松读出来了.
7、MANDY:几个单词读错,mandy 读不好的单词大都是比较长的单词, 这个可能是拼读没有熟练, 看到长单词不要想当然地就直接拼,看看里面单词的构成,想一想平时的拼读原则,再不行听听音频, 尤其是比较生的单词,开始的时候一定要多听音频,等拼读规则熟练掌握了, 后面就好了总的来说 mandy的单词量还是蛮大的,她读的这段,还是比较难的, 所以能读到这个也很不错了。
8、彤:彤最后一段没读好, 去听音频跟读去,meatball的音频 是比较适合跟读的,速度一点也不快。
虎妈要求:多听音频, 之前他们朗诵组的,我还有个要求,就是读的时候一定要每个单词读清楚不要含糊,包括语法的变化,这样读熟了,语感就有了,包括单词的过去式, 过去分词,这个该是什么读什么 通过读就能够记下来