Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Pig Enough Review

Pig Enough
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I am a huge fan of Bynum's books and this, her latest is no exception! It's fun and funny and gave me the warm fuzzies.
Willy is an adorable Guinea Pig who wants to join the Pig Scouts. All the oinkers tell him he isn't pig enough to be real Pig Scout but little Willy proves them all wrong on a Pig Scout outing.
Adults and children both will enjoy the humorous scenes of Willy trying on his Pig Scout uniform and attempting piggy activities.
A perfect picture book that is pig enough for all!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Pig Enough



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Pig Enough

Read More...

Brunettes Strike Back Review

Brunettes Strike Back
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Good for ALL high school students, their parents, teachers and administrators to read. I am a retired school superintendent and ALL students experience this type of treatment. This is definitely a type of school bullying and it has to stop. I feel it would make excellent MANDATORY reading for high school freshmen.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Brunettes Strike Back



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Brunettes Strike Back

Read More...

Box Out Review

Box Out
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Tough issues abound in teenage life, and this book is filled with insightful, challenging situations to which teenagers can relate. John Coy's research into the teenage experience regarding sports, coaches, relationships, and decisions is obvious in the characters and plot of the novel.
Liam Bergstrom's life revolves around the basketball court, and he embraces the opportunity to play varsity ball after a teammate's injury. Coach Kloss tells him, "We're a tight team. If you ever have anything you need to talk about, come on down. My door is open." Liam is ecstatic! On his first big game day, he cannot believe he is wearing a Horizon High School varsity uniform. But when Coach comes into the locker room for the pre-game talk, Liam learns the one big difference between Varsity and JV: prayer. Though raised in the Catholic faith, Liam is not so sure the inclusion of prayer should be part of high school athletics.
Something else troubles Liam about Coach's behavior. Supposedly a believer in team basketball, the man clearly has favorites and disapproves of the style and attitude of the only black player on the team, Darius. When Darius quits, Coach and the teammates act like he was never really a team player, yet others do not receive similar treatment. Darius, however, maintains that Coach does not really respect the game.
When Coach and his teammates encourage (even expect?) him to attend weekly before-school Horizon Athletic Fellowship meetings, where prayer and expression of one's faith are foremost on the agenda, Liam becomes even more uncomfortable in his new role. The members wear HWJC bracelets (How Would Jesus Compete?), and some hypocritical players communicate a totally different opinion in front of other than they express to individuals. Coach, who was always willing to discuss any issues and concerns, assures Liam he has checked out the prayers, and all is legitimate. Frustrated, Liam eventually contacts an organization called Americans United for Separation of Church and State for guidance.
The author builds upon the conflicts on the court and in school to guide Liam to a difficult decision, one which broadens his definition of basketball and enables him to discover the courage within him to do what is right, not always what is easy.
Athletes will find the basketball details accurate and engaging. Non-athletes will understand the terminology and explanations based on the author's contextual information. All readers will be challenged to defend their positions on racism, prayer in schools, peer pressure, and team sports.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Box Out



Buy NowGet 59% OFF

Click here for more information about Box Out

Read More...

First Grade, Here I Come Review

First Grade, Here I Come
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I read this to my grandson, the first grader, and although he enjoyed it, I felt it better suited for a kindergartener going into first grade. It worked great as a discussion tool on how things are done in other schools. For instance, in his class, first graders do not receive a snack outside of lunch; they do not have a class pet; and he does not take the bus to school, but is chauffeured by his cousin--which is my personal preference.
I still rate it 5 stars and suggest buying it before child enters first grade that way it becomes a keepsake because of the anticipation it builds in the youngster.

Click Here to see more reviews about: First Grade, Here I Come



Buy Now

Click here for more information about First Grade, Here I Come

Read More...

Dream So Big: A Parent's Guide to Helping Your Child Believe and Achieve Review

Dream So Big: A Parent's Guide to Helping Your Child Believe and Achieve
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The principles contained in this book can be used in everyone's everyday life... It's especially interesting coming from the father of such a talented young lady.
Great job Christopher. I look forward to hearing more about your "Dream Catchers" and additional Resources on the accompanying website; [...].
A MUST READ!
Thanks.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Dream So Big: A Parent's Guide to Helping Your Child Believe and Achieve



Buy NowGet 90% OFF

Click here for more information about Dream So Big: A Parent's Guide to Helping Your Child Believe and Achieve

Read More...

Suki's Kimono Review

Suki's Kimono
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This charming story is one that every child should read (or have read to them!). Not only does it have an encouraging message and introduce aspects of Japanese culture; it's also VERY beautifully illustrated, and Chieri Uegaki's writing is a pleasure to read. I love the way she phrases things, like when Suki sits close to the taiko drummers and feels "like she'd swallowed a ball of thunder and her whole insides quaked and quivered." Buy this book -- you won't be disappointed.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Suki's Kimono



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Suki's Kimono

Read More...

Lucy the Giant Review

Lucy the Giant
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
its a good book, it shows that anyone can have a life even tho they might not have the best life.
Its shows that people can have love from other people.Its brings oy amd laughter. A adventerous and couragous story. A girl who isnt afraid to be herself when she is around other people. Atrust worthy friend and a good book to read in the free time.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Lucy the Giant



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Lucy the Giant

Read More...

Gloria Rising Review

Gloria Rising
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
It's has been very difficult trying to find books for my twin 8yr old daughters.
I wanted a series of books with the star character being an African American girl just having fun and doing kid stuff. A book that will make them know that reading is fun. This book does just that and more.
If you're looking for a great chapter book for an African American girl, then author Ann Cameron's "Gloria Rising" and "Gloria's Way" is it.
Also, try Valerie Wilson Wesley's series of "Willimena Rules".


Click Here to see more reviews about: Gloria Rising



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Gloria Rising

Read More...

Just Another Day in My Insanely Real Life Review

Just Another Day in My Insanely Real Life
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I am a 9 1/2 year old girl and I simply can't live without a good book like Just Another Day in My Insanely Real Life. I could not put the book down. The main character had the burden of keeping her family's life together. She expressed her feelings about this by writing stories in her English journal. She has a mean English teacher and her friends are not true friends. Her life gets scrambled and gushed all together at the same time. Barbara Dee writes this fantastic story of life. I can relate to it. I too write stories that help me with my feelings. I also ease my burdens by reading books like this. Two thumbs up and a hip-hip hooray for the book of the day!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Just Another Day in My Insanely Real Life



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Just Another Day in My Insanely Real Life

Read More...

Velma Gratch and the Way Cool Butterfly Review

Velma Gratch and the Way Cool Butterfly
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is my kids all time favorite book. They ask me to read it to them over and over again. They just can't get enough of Velma Gratch. I think that we all have a little bit of Velma in us, and that is one of the things that is so applealling about it. I highly recommend it.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Velma Gratch and the Way Cool Butterfly

IT'S HARD TO BE VELMA entering first grade. That's because everyone has marvelous memories of her two older sisters, who were practically perfect first graders, and no one even notices Velma. But all that changes on a class trip to the butterfly conservatory, a place neither of her sisters has been. When a monarch roosts on Velma's finger and won't budge for days - no one will ever forget it . . . or her!Kids will enjoy reading about everything butterflies, from migration to metamorphosis, as they follow Velma's own transformation.

Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Velma Gratch and the Way Cool Butterfly

Read More...

Maggie's Amerikay Review

Maggie's Amerikay
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, I decided that I should find some books on the city for kids who wanted to know more about it. So I searched... and I searched... and I came to the rather frightening conclusion that when it came to New Orleans picture books there are some by Fatima Shaik and that's about it. And there CERTAINLY weren't any historical picture books that involved The Big Easy. No sirree bob. Now a cursory glance at "Maggie's Amerikay" and you might be forgiven for jumping to the assumption that the book is yet another addition to the immigrants-come-to-New-York-via-Ellis-Island genre. Inside, however, you will be delighted to find that not only does it take place in New Orleans back in 1898, but it also puts the antipathy the immigrating Irish had for African-Americans and vice-versa into terms that a small child could understand. A rich warm book that talks about overcoming prejudices without rubbing your face in the message, Russell's book is an excellent addition to any library or personal collection with a yen for the historically accurate.
It's 1898 and Maggie and her family have just moved from Ireland to New Orleans. Maggie would love to stay home from school and help the family by rolling cigars like the other girls, but her father insists that she should get an education. Now as a new immigrant, Maggie knows exactly who to like and who to dislike. She's been told to dislike black people since, "they take our work", but her father keeps on being nice to them. He even goes so far as to give a boy a free cornet, just because the kid yearns for it. When Maggie's little sister Bessie comes down with yellow fever, the family has to start making a lot more money fast to pay for the medical bills. After all, her mother will now have to stay home to tend to the sickly child. Bessie tries to work both in the cigar factory and go to school, but it's too much work for too little pay. Then, all of a sudden, the boy her father gave the cornet to (Nathan) offers Bessie a new kind of work. She'd be writing down the stories of an elderly former slave . At first, both the old man and the young girl view one another with mutual distrust. After a couple of his stories, however, they realize that though America has pitted black against Irish and Irish against black, the two groups have far more in common than they might have initially thought.
At the back of the book, author Barbara Russell includes an Author's Note that talks about the history of the immigrants and the former slaves in New Orleans. The book itself, I should mention, makes several references to the birth of ragtime within its plot. Russell fleshes the history out a little more in her notes to explain how this in turn became the jazz we know today. The book adeptly weaves together different historical facts and elements without ever coming across as deeply depressing or forced. Considering how much information is crammed into this little 40 page book, I was a bit taken aback. When I saw that Russell was also the author of "The Remembering Stone", however, it made far more sense to me.
Perhaps it's cruel to say, but I was rather pleased by the fact that illustrator Jim Burke didn't make Maggie into some exquisitely beautiful little angel of light and life. This kid looks like a real child. She's a little plain, but in a wholly realistic way. I'm actually a little afraid that Mr. Burke based this girl on someone in real life and that I am, unwittingly, insulting that child with my callous praise. Let us hope this is not the case. His pictures have a glow to them. They're seemingly simple but with a kind of light just beneath their surface. I haven't a clue what medium the man was working in, but it's clear that Burke knows how to show action, the slow play of light over a scene, and emotion on the page. There's a shot from Maggie's point of view of the old former slave glaring at her from the bed that says everything you need to know in that shot alone.
The book grows on you. When I read it through the first time, I thought it was good but I didn't linger over it. Now, however, I've sort of fallen for its charms. It's hard to predict who the readership for it might be, though. Certainly it will be a boon to any child who reads at a lower grade level but still has to do an assignment on a work of historical fiction for school. Like Patricia Polacco's, "Pink and Say" the book does not have a built-in audience, but will probably garner a fair amount of attention just by being as good as it is. It might be a good idea to pair it with other historical picture books that discuss newfound immigrants to America. Things like "Peppe the Lamplighter" by Elisa Bartone or "Grandfather's Journey" by Allen Say. As for, "Maggie's Amerikay", this is definitely a book to keep one's eye on. Pleasing.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Maggie's Amerikay



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Maggie's Amerikay

Read More...

The Dunderheads Review

The Dunderheads
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The WHOLE class gets involved in this caper - - trying to wrest a broken cat statue (with attributes that only Miss Breakbone has noticed, in the beginning anyway) from the spooky and well-secured haunted house belonging to Miss Breakbone -- a feared and hated teacher who towers menacingly over all the kids in her class.
This is a delightful little read, for kids in the 5th - 9th grade, that shows how teamwork and ingenuity can make the day.
The illustrations are delightful and very Gorey-esque (but in this case, the humans actually do talk!!). Every kid tells a story -- just by having and demonstrating her or his unique and bizzarre talents. The kids risk everything to bravely get back that little cat statue -- and in the process of doing so, confront their own fears and triumph in their endeavor.
You can bet that the students' newfound solidarity will will give mean old Miss Breakbone food for thought the next time she tries anything remotely nefarious in the future.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Dunderheads



Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about The Dunderheads

Read More...

Keisha Ann Can Review

Keisha Ann Can
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Keisha Ann is irrepressible as she goes through her school day. Whether it's doing her work or doing what's fun, she let's nothing stand in her way. Who can do it? Keisha Ann Can!
This is a fun little book, with nice illustrations of children going through their school day. It teaches kids about politeness and obedience and that school can be fun. And most of all, it teaches kids to have a can-do attitude. This is a very nice book with a great lesson. My four-year-old and I highly recommend it!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Keisha Ann Can



Buy NowGet 57% OFF

Click here for more information about Keisha Ann Can

Read More...

Little Critter: Just Big Enough Review

Little Critter: Just Big Enough
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In "Just Big Enough," Little Critter finds himself feeling like a lot of kids --- wanting to be bigger. He's tried of being bullied around on the school bus, or not being included in the "big-kid" games.
Yes, Little Critter is serious about wanting to be big, so he starts looking for ways to be bigger. He starts eating healthier and exercising. He even invents his very own "growing machine," but none of it is working. Will Little Critter come up with a way to be bigger? Or will he find something about the size he is now?
"Little Critter" continues, after over thirty years, to be a charming and identifiable picture book series.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Little Critter: Just Big Enough

What's so great about being little when it means the big kids take your seat on the bus, eat all of the cupcakes, and won't let you play football? Little Critter wants to grow up -- and quickly. So he builds a growing machine and eats (almost) all of his vegetables, but doesn't grow an inch. What's a critter to do? Just when things seem hopeless, Little Critter's Grandpa shows him that being big doesn't always mean being the best. Fans of all ages will adore Mercer Mayer's classic character as they learn and grow with him

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Little Critter: Just Big Enough

Read More...

The Bad Luck Chair Review

The Bad Luck Chair
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My daughter (3rd grade, 6th grade reading level) has read hundreds of books. She says it's the BEST book she has ever read. She couldn't put it down and read it all in one night. She can't stop talking about it!!


Click Here to see more reviews about: The Bad Luck Chair



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Bad Luck Chair

Read More...

My Shining Star: Raising A Child Who Is Ready To Learn Review

My Shining Star: Raising A Child Who Is Ready To Learn
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Rosemary Wells is known for her commitment to children's literacy. Her "Read to your Bunny" campaign rolled out across the country a few years ago. Wells addressed a group of librarians recently and passionately discussed the education challenges facing our schools and our nation. Young children are struggling more than ever in school. The reasons are numerous and familiar to most of us. Rather than continue to bewail the whys and wherefores of the issue, she used a brilliant analogy to explain what we need to do.
She pointed out that if a building was on fire and hundreds of people needed to be saved it would take the clear voice of a fireman, issuing simple commands to evacuate everyone to safety. (Instead of dithering about discussing why the fire started and how fires really are a problem for certain kinds of structures, the important thing is to get safely away.)
Her book "My Shining Star: Raising a Child who is Ready to Learn" was written with input from teachers and librarians all around the country. Wells lists ten virtues which parents should promote to prepare their child for the most wonderful adventure of all, education.
She addresses parents in the preface:
"All children bring to school what they learn at home.
This book is about creating a home full of harmony
and the preparation of a successful child.
You are your child's first teacher."
Her virtues include Respect, Listening, Patience, Trust, Work, Honesty, Time ("Children spell love T - I - M - E,") Reading, Writing, and Habits.
This little book is only 13 pages long and only has about 25 words (at most) per page. Wells's lovely rabbit drawings warmly illustrate each virtue. She lays out a path for raising a child who is ready for school. It seems so simple and so obvious but so many children arrive in Kindergarten ill-equipped to learn.
If you know a family with young children, present them with a copy of this tiny treasure.
This little book is going to be my gift to new parents along with Goodnight Moon and a Mother Goose book.
During her speech she also related a story about a principal she knows who works tirelessly to awaken parents to the needs of their children. He tells them to "Grow up! Pay attention! Be Responsible for your child!" I did not know that, nationally, only 26% of all parents attend their kids' Open House or Back to School nights.
The alarm has sounded and Rosemary Wells has given us ten simple steps to help children get ready to learn.

Click Here to see more reviews about: My Shining Star: Raising A Child Who Is Ready To Learn



Buy Now

Click here for more information about My Shining Star: Raising A Child Who Is Ready To Learn

Read More...

Being Teddy Roosevelt Review

Being Teddy Roosevelt
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Since I work as a children's librarian, I see plenty of kids coming in for homework on "being" a historical character--so I know this book is very real! As often as not, they have no idea who they are going to portray but end up enjoying the assignment.
A wonderful thing about this book is the many plotlines woven into its 90 pages: Will Riley get his sax? Will this or that kid succeed in the assignment? Will the overachiever triumph this time, too?
The author has a good ear for kid dialogue and a good sense of pacing. All in all an enjoyable book, and at just under a hundred pages long enough for book reports.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Being Teddy Roosevelt



Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about Being Teddy Roosevelt

Read More...