Reviving Reading: School Library Programming, Author Visits and Books that Rock!
Autor Alison M.G. Follosen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 iul 2006 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781591583561
ISBN-10: 159158356X
Pagini: 168
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Libraries Unlimited
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 159158356X
Pagini: 168
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Libraries Unlimited
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
Alison M. G. Follos has been the librarian at North Country School in Lake Placid, New York since 1989. She has worked as the private librarian for an entrepreneur and written feature articles for regional and national publications. She is a contributing book reviewer for School Library Journal and has published numerous articles on school library programming. Alison has served on her town's public library board, the Lake Placid School Board, and the Franklin-Essex-Hamilton School Library Systems Council of New York. She lives on the AuSable River in the Adirondack Mountains of New York with her husband and their dog.
Cuprins
Foreword by Jack GantosIntroductionPart 1:Why LiteratureWhy Literature is Important NowMass Communication Pile-upImportance of Literature in School LIbrariesCooperative PlanningPart 2: Setting-up the Foundations for Literature ProgramsIntegrating Literature Into the CurriculumCollection & Adolescent Development: What is "Appropriate?"Part 3: ProgramsTitle Trekking: A Reading Incentive ProgramReader's Workshop--Storytime Enchantment for Young AdultsReader's Workshop & JournalingVisiting Author ProgramRaising Cash (AKA: Budget R Bogus)YA Literature to Grab AdultsPersonal Conclusion:It Makes a DifferenceIndex
Recenzii
[F]ollos, an experienced school librarian, calls upon librarians to introduce reading for pleasure to middle school students in a manner that will encourage them to make reading a natural part of their lifelong habits..[w]ould be useful for a librarian interested in creating a new program within a middle school or for students in media studies..Upper-division undergraduates through practitioners.
Follos, a school librarian since 1989, focuses on middle school readers and the real-life resources and demands of reading programs and school library programming. She describes why keeping kids involved in literature is more important than ever, especially in an age of mass communication pile-up. She shows the importance of literature in libraries that double as havens and instruments of time management, cooperative planning with other educators and the administration, setting up the foundations for literature programs, including integrating literature into the curriculum and working with adolescent development. She then gives a number of great ideas, such as title trekking, readers' workshops, story time enhancements and journaling, developing a visiting author program, raising cash, and using young adult literature to help adults.
Sounding the call for school librarians to attack the issue head on, Follo's book both explicates the need and presents the author's own small boarding-school library program (fourth through ninth grade) as a case study for success..Professionals who are serious about revamping their programs to emphasize reading will want this book.
This realistic and reasonable guide is recommended for school and public library professional collections and will also serve as effective supplemental text for library-school course work.
An accomplished librarian shares techniques she has used to make reading a priority at her small, private boarding school. The strongest portion of the book deals with specific long-term projects that she has implemented, including a reading-incentive program called Title Trekking, a Reader's Workshop, and a program to encourage faculty to read young adult literature. Follos also gives a thorough discussion of how to host visiting authors..[s]ome sound ideas that middle school and young adult librarians will be able to adapt for their curriculums.
Follos, a school librarian since 1989, focuses on middle school readers and the real-life resources and demands of reading programs and school library programming. She describes why keeping kids involved in literature is more important than ever, especially in an age of mass communication pile-up. She shows the importance of literature in libraries that double as havens and instruments of time management, cooperative planning with other educators and the administration, setting up the foundations for literature programs, including integrating literature into the curriculum and working with adolescent development. She then gives a number of great ideas, such as title trekking, readers' workshops, story time enhancements and journaling, developing a visiting author program, raising cash, and using young adult literature to help adults.
Sounding the call for school librarians to attack the issue head on, Follo's book both explicates the need and presents the author's own small boarding-school library program (fourth through ninth grade) as a case study for success..Professionals who are serious about revamping their programs to emphasize reading will want this book.
This realistic and reasonable guide is recommended for school and public library professional collections and will also serve as effective supplemental text for library-school course work.
An accomplished librarian shares techniques she has used to make reading a priority at her small, private boarding school. The strongest portion of the book deals with specific long-term projects that she has implemented, including a reading-incentive program called Title Trekking, a Reader's Workshop, and a program to encourage faculty to read young adult literature. Follos also gives a thorough discussion of how to host visiting authors..[s]ome sound ideas that middle school and young adult librarians will be able to adapt for their curriculums.