Saturday, January 24, 2026

Mock Sibert Winners 2026 #SibertSmackdown

The ALA Youth Media Awards are coming on Monday! (Livestream here on Mon 1/26/26 at 10 am CT.) This is the Super Bowl of the kidlit world, when many of the major book awards are announced including the Newbery and Caldecott Awards. Every year, I try to have my students participate in at least one mock awards vote.

The past few years we've enjoyed Melissa Stewart's Sibert Smackdown. The Sibert Medal is for informational fiction (nonfiction), and each year Melissa shares her slate of top books for schools to host their own Mock Sibert voting. In coordination with our school librarian, my 5th graders have spent the past month reading, analyzing, and discussing their favorites among this year's choices.


We added four additional books to Melissa's list in order to get a full slate of 16. Our third graders participated in a bracket-style challenge, while my 5th graders investigated all 16.

We read aloud different books with each class, and it was interesting to see how much the voting was swayed by books we read aloud vs. books the students read and discussed in pairs. 

And the Winners Are ... 





Our honor books were...


In my second class, the winner was Black Mambas: The World's First All-Woman Anti-Poaching Unit written and photographed by Kelly Crull!

The honors books were...
  • Tomatoes on Trial: The Fruit v. Vegetable Showdown written by Lindsay H. Metcalf and illustrated by Edwin Fotheringham.
    • Back in December, we used the Mock Trial lesson on Lindsay's web site to stage our own Fruit vs. Vegetable showdown, and the kids really had a blast with it! (Spoiler alert: in both our classes, Team Fruit won, contradicting the historical results.) 

Third Grade Bracket Results


Thanks so much to third grade teacher Carol for sharing her student's bracket results. She had each of her classes complete one side of the bracket, then both class's top choice book went head-to-head in a dramatic final vote. 



I love how you can see their careful discussions and tallying across different categories of analysis: information, writing, text features, backmatter, illustration, design, and topic. 



Above is example of the worksheet we used in 5th grade. 

And without further delay, the third grade bracket results ...
  • Honor book: Hurricane written and illustrated by Jason Chin

Who are your top choices for the awards this year! Share a guess in the comments below!

Want more of my 5th graders' favorite books? Click here for all of our #iLoveMG posts

Saturday, January 10, 2026

The Night Ride - book review

"I personally really like this book and recommend it to people who like horses."

#iLoveMG is my continuing series where I share middle grade books recommended by my fifth graders. (Please note that my fifth graders read a wide variety of books across a wide variety of genres, levels, and topics. Do not think that these books are "only" for fifth graders.) For younger readers, #3rdfor3rd for recommendations from when I taught third grade.

Night Ride

Recommended by Anonymous



My book is The Night Ride by J. Anderson Coats. The Genre is Historical Fiction. The main character Sonnia really wants a horse called Ricochet. Ricochet is moved to the racetrack to be a companion horse of a skittery racehorse. Sonnia goes there and is thrilled to join the a junior racing cadre, but soon she discovers that they are participating in a highly dangerous and illegal Night ride. 

I personally really like this book and recommend it to people who like horses. I rate this book 4.9/5. It was a really good book that I would not have chosen but I really liked it.

Click here for all of our #iLoveMG posts. What are your favorite middle grade books?