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Children’s Literature (H-810F) Kindergarten–4th Grade Instructor Lolly Robinson (Charlotte Robinson) robinslo@gse.harvard.edu Larsen 613 Teaching Fellow (maybe two) Christina Dobbs cld403@mail.harvard.edu Larsen G10
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Children’s Literature (H-810F) Kindergarten–4th Grade Evaluate books Find books Learn about book creators (Use books)
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Children’s Literature (H-810F) Tuesdays September 16–October 21 5:30–8:30 p.m. Gutman 305
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Children’s Literature (H-810F) Guest speakers, October 7 Molly Bang Laura Vaccaro Seeger Sarah Brannen
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Children’s Literature (H-810F) Enrollment Limited to 30 enrollees Submit a statement via e-mail by 7 p.m. tomorrow night (9/10) Language & Literacy students have priority Will notify via e-mail and post list early Thursday morning Auditing option
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Reading assignments Required books 19 assigned children’s books (picture books, easy readers, chapter books, poetry, traditional literature, information books) From Cover to Cover by K. T. Horning Recommended books The Pleasures of Children’s Literature by Perry Nodelman Using Multiethnic Books in the K–8 Classroom edited by Violet Harris The Essential Guide to Children’s Books and Their Creators edited by Anita Silvey All books in JCRL, on reserve at Gutman, and available at Coop (and Amazon, etc.)
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Written assignments and grading Annotated bibliography (40%) Picture Book paper (20%) Group presentation (20%) In-class and online book discussion (20%)
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Annotated bibliography (40%) Come to first class having chosen a specific focus for your bibliography. Examples might be: Books about the environment for 1 st grade Books for 2 nd and 3 rd graders dealing with cultural identity and understanding Books about dance and music, K–4 visit http://www.doe.mass.edu/frameworks/current.html for ideashttp://www.doe.mass.edu/frameworks/current.html
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Annotated bibliography (40%) Picture books and chapter books in a range of reading levels (up to Grade 4) Introductory paragraph 25 books with short annotations 20 in your focus topic 5 on other related topics Bibliography shared with class on website Exemplar available on website At least twenty of the titles must be books you had not read before this course.
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Picture book paper (20%) Three pages Analyze and evaluate a picture book Exemplar available on class website
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Group presentation (20%) Sign up for author/illustrator at first class Groups of three students 5–7 minute oral presentation Share sample of his/her work Biographical information, career highlights Resources Christina will demonstrate at first class
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Class and online discussions (20%) Discussion board on class website In lieu of book journal Password protected Submit a posting about one book or add to an existing string every week (by 5 p.m. Monday) Respond to reading, recommend other books, continue topics from previous classes In-class discussion in small groups Three diverse groups Moderated by instructor or TF
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Assignment for first class Bring topic for bibliography Read three picture books (on reserve, in JCRL, at Coop)
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Background Studio Art, English Literature M.A. in children’s literature Worked in publishing since 1985 Freelance writing, reviewing, research, graphic design, illustration Horn Book Magazine, Horn Book Guide Taught at Lesley University Book award committees Exhibits at Eric Carle Museum
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Horn Book Receives 4000+ new books/year Horn Book Magazine 6 times a year (bimonthly) articles about children’s books in-depth reviews of top 10% Horn Book Guide 2 times a year Short reviews of all trade books Rated 1 to 6 Websites www.hbook.com and www.hornbookguide.comwww.hbook.com www.hornbookguide.com
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Horn Book: incoming books
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Horn Book Guide: spring 2007 books
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Horn Book office
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Horn Book editors (before star meeting)
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Horn Book editors (editing review section)
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Recent covers
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