In an age of electronic games, TV, videos, and the Internet…You can raise a book lover. Reading opens up a lifetime of learning and delight to children. In How to Grow a Young Reader, Kathryn Lindskoog and Ranelda Mack Hunsicker offer suggestions for creating a reader-friendly home, truths about how literature strengthens character development, and helpful strategies for nurturing a love of reading in any child. Includes a helpful guide to over 1,800 books.
These "New Westers", Johnson reveals, line-dance and two-step, listen to Garth Brooks and George Strait, drink beer from long-neck bottles, wear clothes ordered from Sheplers, watch rodeo on ESPN, play Wild West arcade games, eat fajitas and tacos in stuccoed Mexican cafes, collect Western art and Native American crafts, and vacation in and move to the West. "New Westers" rewrite the history and biography of the West. They reimagine the West in Cowboy sagas and poetry, Native American novels, Mexican-American drama, nature writing, revisionist films, eclectic visual artwork, and neo-traditional music. They flock to movies like Thelma and Louise, Unforgiven, and Dances with Wolves, watch mini-series like Lonesome Dove, and read bestsellers like The Crossing and All The Pretty Horses. "New Westers" are men and women who may or may not have ever hitched up a horse but who crave connection with the West. At the end of a century of urbanization, technological change, and cultural confusion, they seek a more natural home, a fuller and wider sense of place, and a deeper and more colorful personal identity. They also want to revive the dream of the mythic West - but on different terms. They overrun the Old West and yet strive to preserve it, raising troubling new concerns about the differences between the mythic and the real, between traditional and contemporary cultural influences.
Compiled by teachers, administrators, curriculum planners, and librarians. Designed to: 1. encourage school children to read and to view reading as a worthwhile activity; 2. help local curriculum planners select books for their reading programs; and 3. stimulate educators to evaluate and improve their literature programs. More than 1,200 annotated titles represent the finest works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama. The literary contributions of specific ethnic and cultural groups are represented. Best seller! Illustrated.
Hillerman describes places to visit and special celebrations in Santa Fe, New Mexico, as well as nearby Indian villages and sites and areas suitable for hiking and fishing. Includes a Spanish vocabulary.
CHAPTER 1: BEGINNING-- "It isn't fair!" Antibias curriculum for young children / Louise Derman-Sparks-- Talking about differences children notice / Elizabeth Crary-- "Where do we begin?" Bringing the world into your classroom / Bonnie Neugebauer-- CHAPTER 2: MEETING THE NEEDS OF ALL CHILDREN-- Obstacle courses are for every body / Carol Stock Kranowitz-- Helping whole children grow: nonsexist childrearing for infants and toddlers / Judith Leipzig-- Lost in a distant land: The foreign child's dilemma in child care / Athol B. Packer, Sharon C. Milner, and Marion H. Hong-- Guidelines for helping non-English-speaking children adjust and communicate / Karen Miller-- Recognizing giftedness in early childhood settings / Donna Garnett Chitwood-- Exploring diversity through the arts / Interviews with Jim Lasansky and Richard Lewis by Susan Epeneter, and an interview with Bob Blue by Candace Chang-- CHAPTER 3: STAFFING WITH DIVERSITY-- Honoring diversity: Problems and possibilities for staff and organization / Margie Carter-- Are you a dad and a teacher? Fathering- A year long curriculum / Cory Gann and Sharon Stine-- CHAPTER 4: LEARNING FROM PARENTS-- Tossed salad is terrific: Values of multicultural programs for children and families / Janet Brown McCracken-- Building positive images: Interracial children and their families / Francis Wardle-- Parenting a child with special needs / An interview with Meg Robinson-- CHAPTER 5: LIVING IN A CHANGING WORLD-- The impact of current changes in social structure on early childhood education programs / Gail Raymond and Dean K. McIntosh-- Children are caught-between home and school, culture and school / Betsy West-- Diversity and conflict: The whole world will never sing perfect harmony / Jim Greenman-- Meeting the needs of all children- An Indian perspectives / Harold Gossman-- All children are special / Jan Cole Krick-- CHAPTER 6: CONSIDERING OUR RESOURCES-- What are we really saying to children? Criteria for the selection of books and materials / Bonnie Neugebauer-- Reflecting diversity- books to read with young children / Bonnie Neugebauer.