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Richards, Janet C. – Reading Improvement, 2020
Studies indicate thoughtfully planned chants integrated with shared book reading help young children remember concepts and vocabulary they hear in literature, capture children's imagination, develop their rhyming acuity, and background knowledge, and increase their sense of story structure, understanding of story sequence, phonological awareness,…
Descriptors: Evidence Based Practice, Phonological Awareness, Memory, Auditory Perception
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Zaleski, Joan; Zinnel, Vera – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2013
Over her 23 years of teaching elementary school, Vera, a third grade teacher (and co-author of this article), had often fallen into the familiar rhythm of the fall social studies curriculum, with its predictable narrative of discovery, bravery, heroism, and thanksgiving. Her journey to becoming a more reflective, thoughtful, and equitable teacher…
Descriptors: State Standards, Childrens Literature, Social Studies, Imagination
Palmer, William S. – 1971
The author emphasizes the importance of imagination in literature for children and suggests that teachers can use books of fantasy and fiction in teaching emotional and creative responses as well as concepts and facts. In particular, the author discusses teaching about temporal and spatial relationships and explains how imaginative books combined…
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Concept Formation, Imagination
Stern, Lois W. – 2001
This paper, three of four on literature and the young child, investigates two more ways that a parent's simple act of reading to a child during his or her early years helps him or her grow into a successful reader, namely: reading to the child will help him or her broaden the range of experiences; and reading to the child will help him or her…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Child Development, Childrens Literature, Concept Formation
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Dyson, Anne Haas – New Advocate, 1990
Focuses on young children's grappling with such themes as existence, good and evil, and knowing. Suggests that the development of language seems dependent on children's sensitivity to such abstract concepts. Suggests that children's intellectual and social lives are sustained by symbols. Offers examples of children's story-making discussions,…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Development, Childrens Literature, Classroom Research