This is a charmingly illustrated story of 2 dogs and a young boy and a year of companionship that results in giving to others. Winner of the Golden Sower Award and an Amazon "Teachers' Picks" designation.
Dominant assumptions about place tend to be defined in relation to urban communities. To assume a singular construction of urban places misrepresents the experiences, perspectives, and identities of urban children, making their identities become invisible to researchers, educators, and curriculum developers. Sharing a wide range of perspectives, Role of Place and Play in Young Children’s Language and Literacy sheds light on language and literacy learning in play-based early childhood settings where place plays an important role in teaching and learning. Drawing on geographic contexts, including northern rural and Indigenous communities, and giving voice to educational leaders in Indigenous professional learning contexts, as well as speech-language pathologists, this book joins forces with literacy and early childhood education researchers to create an interdisciplinary collage of theory, research, and practice. Bringing play and place together, a concept Shelley Stagg Peterson and Nicola Friedrich call playce-based learning, this book provides new and compelling ways to think about equity and educational opportunity in the language and literacy development of young children, and offers spaces for them to construct their own identities in positive ways.
Meet Rosie, born in England to a well to do family. Her father has owned and operated the family business going back many generations. Rosie dreams of moving to America and finding true friends. Meet James Meyers his parents went to work at the paper factory; He was left home alone while they worked. James dreamed of going to America. and meeting new people. Read along with us see how Rosie and James meet, become good friends and make their dreams come true. In this a great story Americas Perfect Rose.
Children’s curiosity about their lives and worlds motivates many interests. Yet, adults often have fixed ideas about what children’s interests are and have been criticised for trivialising children’s interests. This book offers a critical and accessible engagement with research on children’s interests that challenges us to move beyond surface-level understandings. Children’s Interests, Inquiries and Identities argues that the powerful relationship between interests and informal learning has been under-recognised and undervalued. The book proposes new principles for understanding children’s learning. It provides evidence that we need to look beyond the activities or topics children may currently be selecting to find out who and what has stimulated their interests, how we might identify and interpret interests more analytically and deeply, and how we might respond and engage with these in ways that take children’s interests seriously. Moving beyond play-based activities, Helen Hedges explains and illustrates a number of ways by which children’s interests can be interpreted and understood, to get to the heart of what really matters to, and for, children. The book draws on examples from research with children aged under 5 years, and young adults aged 18-25. It also includes a chapter on teachers’ interests. It presents new and original models for interests-based curriculum and sociocultural curriculum and pedagogy for future examination in research and practice. This book demonstrates that leaving behind long-standing, taken-for-granted practices that have influenced understandings of curriculum, pedagogy, learning, and outcomes allows a new perspective of children’s interests to emerge. It will be of interest to researchers, postgraduate students, and practitioners in the early years, parents, and other professionals who work with young children.
""Children's Writer's & Illustrator's Market" is the only market guide available for creators of children's literature. The country's largest organization for writers is the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators--a sure sign that writing for children is the hottest thing going." --Alice Pope, editor.
The Universe has gifted Tooth Fairy Cadet, Dr. Rosie Parker, D.D.S., with her very own Mo Shiorghra, her Fated Mate and One and Only. Life with Declan Fitzpatrick, aka Lord Mac Nuada, is everything Rosie’s ever dreamed love could be. But is it reasonable for a sensible, professional, modern woman to really go ahead and make a serious handfast commitment to someone she’s known for less than a month? A man so completely different from herself in every way and far more comfortable in the Fae Otherworld than the Mundane one Rosie calls home? And what happens if Declan discovers the big secret Rosie’s been keeping from him? Will it change everything? Truthfully, what really keeps Rosie up at night is the notion that those so-called random accidents befalling her during a visit to her future husband’s ancestral home aren’t so random after all. Can someone actually be trying to do away with Lord Mac’s tooth fairy bride before the handfasting can take place? Join the ever formidable and always humorous Dr. Rosie Parker as she makes plans to tie the knot with her beloved Tax Man.