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Peer reviewedSullivan, Ed – English Journal, 2001
Argues that English teachers should remember that nonfiction is the preferred reading choice of many of their students, and can be a "good read" and have superb aesthetic qualities. Offers guidelines to help educators design strategies to elicit student responses about nonfiction in the classroom. Describes 25 recently published outstanding…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Books, Class Activities, Nonfiction
Peer reviewedCrowe, Chris – English Journal, 2001
Discusses and answers objections to young adult literature which generally fall into one of two categories: that young adult books are bad because they are not the classics, and/or they corrupt the young. Offers brief descriptions of 12 new or overlooked young adult books worth reading. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Classics (Literature), English Instruction, Language Arts
Peer reviewedHolt, Janice; Bell, Barbara Halliwill – Primary Voices K-6, 2000
Highlights an elementary school where teachers help children build good reading lives by teaching reading through literature circles. Discusses five essential strands of thinking that guide the teaching of reading through literature study: building community, reading literature, having choices in reading, participating in open and lively…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Education, Literature Appreciation
Peer reviewedPotter, Cheryl A.; Haynes, William O. – Infant-Toddler Intervention: The Transdisciplinary Journal, 2000
Twenty 2-year-olds and their mothers performed joint book-reading tasks involving narrative and expository genres. During the expository genre, the mothers asked significantly more questions, used more labels, and provided more positive and negative feedback to their children compared to the narrative genre. (Contains references.) (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Feedback, Interpersonal Communication, Parent Child Relationship, Performance Factors
Peer reviewedWorthy, Jo; Turner, Margo; Moorman, Megan – Language Arts, 1998
Finds that the 35 middle-school language-arts teachers studied agreed that Self Selected Reading (SSR) is an important way to improve students' reading attitudes and achievement, but that their schools rarely provided funds for buying student-preferred materials, and that finding time for SSR was difficult because of the pressure to prepare for…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools, Reading Achievement
Peer reviewedKaywell, Joan F.; Joseph, Rebecca J. – English Journal, 1998
Discusses the power of books and literacy, the power of giving students their own books to take home, and young adult novels in which the importance of books is a major theme. Offers brief descriptions of 27 books (mostly novels) whose stories focus on the power of books and literacy. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Books, Human Dignity, Individual Power
Peer reviewedColes, Martin; Hall, Christine – Journal of Research in Reading, 2002
Presents evidence from the W. H. Smith Children's Reading Choices Project research in order to examine the relationship between achievement in English and the reading habits of 10- to 14-year-old children. Argues for the importance of recognizing and respecting the range of reading children engage in, and the popular reading cultures in which they…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Intermediate Grades, National Surveys, Reading Interests
Peer reviewedOlenchak, F. Richard – Voices from the Middle, 2001
Presents brief descriptions of 24 books that are likely to interest gifted readers in the middle grades. Notes that such literature can serve to bolster their overall development and also enhance appropriate self-advocacy for their talents. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Annotated Bibliographies, Books, Childrens Literature
Peer reviewedZanarini, Anna – Voices from the Middle, 2001
Offers brief descriptions of 23 mysteries that will appeal to adolescent readers. Notes that further lists of excellent titles in the category of juvenile and young adult mystery are available on the Edgar Allen Poe website at http://www.mysterywriters.org/awards.html. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Annotated Bibliographies, Books, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedShafer, Gregory – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2001
Considers how reading Jane Tompkins'"Sensational Designs" helps foster a new appreciation of the ways in which students contribute to the creation of a literary work. Discusses how students responded to their semester-long study of various "neglected" 19th-century women writers. (SG)
Descriptors: Authors, English Instruction, Females, Politics
Peer reviewedPrater, Mary Anne – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2000
This article provides teachers with a list of books and ideas for teaching about disabilities. Forty-six books are identified, 17 received either the Newbery or the Newbery Honor Award. The list of books includes a brief summary of the plot, the main disability discussed, and other curricular applications. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Attitudes toward Disabilities, Childrens Literature, Coping, Disabilities
Peer reviewedJohnson, Nancy J.; Giorgis, Cyndi; Bonomo, Annamarie; Franklin, Abby; King, Janine; Pottle, Pam – Reading Teacher, 1999
Presents brief descriptions of 42 illustrated children's books, and notes how these books can provide support and demonstration to guide, inspire, and even instruct young writers. Presents the books in groups called: Igniting Ideas, Offering Perspectives, Revealing Self and Discovering Surroundings, Mixing Genres, Falling in Love with Language,…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Books, Childrens Literature, Childrens Writing
Peer reviewedSmead, Valerie S. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 1999
In this article, an annotated bibliography of 24 book-length accounts of people with exceptionalities is provided. Content areas include gifts and talents, physical health impairments, autism, emotional disorders, learning disabilities, and making the transition to adulthood. Potential limitations and misuses of such narratives are also discussed.…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Coping, Developmental Stages, Disabilities
Peer reviewedBacharach, Nancy; Miller, Terry – Middle School Journal, 1996
Examines the psychosocial development of middle school readers and suggests ways to use fiction with admirable African American characters to help develop cultural awareness and sensitivity during the middle school years. Covers mystery or problem-solving units, historical and survival units, and friends and family relationships units. Includes a…
Descriptors: Black Literature, Black Students, Blacks, Childrens Literature
Peer reviewedPantaleo, Sylvia – English Quarterly, 2000
Explores third graders' responses to the question "What's Canadian about Canadian Children's Literature?" Describes 6 picture books and summarizes students' responses to each. Finds students mentioned geographical aspects as characteristic of Canadian literature, and they felt Canadian children's literature should reflect Canadian "experiences."…
Descriptors: Canadian Literature, Childrens Literature, Cultural Differences, Grade 3


