Children's & young adult literature: Recent print books
This is a guide for those researching children's or young adult literature.
Recent print books
Cultivating diversity and inclusion: using global and multicultural children's literature in grades K-5 by Paula Saine
Publication Date: 2024Cultivating Diversity and Inclusion: Using Global and Multicultural Children's Literature in Grades K-5, Second Edition shows educators how to assist students in cultivating and appreciating diversity and inclusion in K-5 classrooms. This text offers new children's book titles from across the world in each chapter, advances to grades four and five, engages students with rich cultural language experiences, and provides ways to incorporate apps and social media activities in the classroom.Challenging traditional classroom spaces with YA literature: students in community as course co-designers by Ricki Ginsberg
Publication Date: 2022In this book, Ginsberg, along with more than a dozen teacher contributors, shares course design possibilities for teachers seeking to disrupt and reimagine traditional structures with the inclusion of YA literature. With communities of practice as a guiding framework, Challenging Traditional Classroom Spaces with YA Literature explores how teachers might work with students to build a community that defines their purposes together, how they might investigate new possibilities for existing or traditional courses by harnessing the potential of YA literature, how they might use critical freedom to co-develop YA electives, and how they can lead literate lives together as a community of practice that is engaged with their local and global communities.Integrating social and emotional learning with content: using picture books for differentiated teaching in K-3 classrooms by Katherine Kapustka; Sarah Bright
Publication Date: 2022Integrating Social and Emotional Learning with Content builds a framework for creatively and effectively using picture books to integrate social and emotional learning (SEL) with teaching across content areas. Thoughtful book choices in mixed-ability early elementary classrooms have the power to not only support gifted students as they develop academically, but also to provide an opportunity to address their unique social and emotional needs, such as asynchronous development and an early awareness of complex and challenging issues in their lives and the world at large.Rebellious read alouds: inviting conversations about diversity with children's books by Vera Ahiyya
Publication Date: 2022Students need to see themselves and their peers in the books they read, and to engage with varying viewpoints. In Rebellious Read Alouds,author Vera Ahiyya empowers teachers to encourage classroom conversations about important and culturally relevant topics using daily read alouds as an entry point.Guiding gifted students with engaging books: a teacher's guide to social-emotional learning through reading and reflection by Thomas Hebert
Publication Date: 2022Guiding Gifted Students With Engaging Books supports teachers and counselors in their facilitation of book discussions designed to guide bright young people to self-understanding through high-quality literature.Developing mathematical literacy through adolescent literature by Paula Greathouse (Ed.); Holly Anthony (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2022Giving students opportunities to read like mathematicians as they explore content has the potential to move their thinking and understandings in monumental ways. Each chapter presented in this volume provides readers with approaches and activities for pairing a young adult novel with specific mathematics concepts.Queer adolescent literature as a complement to the English language arts curriculum by Paula Greathouse (Ed.); Henry "Cody" Miller (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2022This text offers secondary ELA educators guided instructional approaches for including queer-themed young adult (YA) literature in the English language arts classroom. Each chapter spotlights the reading of one queer-themed YA novel, and offers pre-, during-, and after reading activities that guide students to a deeper understanding of the content while increasing their literacy practices.Expanding the foundation: African American authors of young adult literature, 1980-2000 by Steven T. Bickmore (Ed.); Shanetia P. Clark (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2022This volume focuses on a group of authors who began writing in the late 1980s. These authors are: Rita Williams-Garcia, Jacqueline Woodson, Angela Johnson, Nikki Grimes, Sharon Draper, Christopher Paul Curtis, and Sharon G. Flake, and Jewel Parker Rhodes. This volume has a chapter for each of these eight authors that focuses on their critical reception as authors, then discusses in some detail a single representative work, and, finally offers classroom activities for individual, small group, and whole class activities that will engage students in the work discussed.STEAM meets story: using adolescent fiction and film to spark deeper learning by Gloria Campbell-Whatley; Diane Rodriguez; Jugnu Agrawal
Publication Date: 2021This innovative STEAM guide will help general and special education teachers to increase effective instruction with adolescents (grades 5-10). The authors show teachers how to link STEM concepts with popular fiction and film selections as a catalyst to launch student interactions, discussions, projects, and investigations. This approach will promote problem solving and reasoning skills by initiating the scientific process, rather than simply presenting established facts.Adolescent realities: engaging students in SEL through young adult literature by Judith A. Hayn; Holly Sheppard Riesco
Publication Date: 2021Adolescent Realities: Engaging Students in SEL through Young Adult Literature offers a connection between young adult literatures and social and emotional learning.Fostering mental health literacy through adolescent literature by Brooke Eisenbach (Ed.); Jason Scott Frydman (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2022Fostering Mental Health Literacy through Adolescent Literature provides educators a starting point for engaging students in the study of adolescent literature that features mental health themes with the intended goal of developing students' mental health literacy while simultaneously attending to English Language Arts content and literacy standards.Teaching with children's literature: theory to practice by Margaret Vaughn; Dixie D. Massey; Elfrieda H. Hiebert (Foreword)
Publication Date: 2021Perhaps no factor has a greater influence on children's literacy learning than exposure to engaging, authentic, culturally relevant texts. This concise practitioner resource and course text helps K-8 teachers make informed choices about using children's literature in their classrooms, from selecting high-quality texts to planning instruction and promoting independent reading.Exploring relationships and connections to others: teaching universal themes through young adult novels by Mike P. Cook; Leilya A. Pitre
Publication Date: 2021Exploring Relationships and Connections to Others: Teaching Universal Themes through Young Adult Novels offers readers opportunities to explore the most common universal themes taught in secondary English Language Arts classrooms using contemporary young adult literature. Authors discuss adolescence and adolescent readers, young adult literature and its possibilities in the classroom, and ways to teach thematic analysis. The book provides context, traditional approaches to teaching, and examples of thematic explorations of each of the chosen themes.Reading and teaching with diverse nonfiction children's books: representations and possibilities by Thomas Crisp (Ed.); Suzanne M. Knezek (Ed.); Roberta Price Gardner (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2021Argues for the importance of including in K-8 classrooms high-quality diverse books that accurately and authentically represent the world students live in and explores the ways in which engaging with diverse nonfiction children's lit provides opportunities to counter constricted curricula and reposition the possibilities of pedagogical policies and mandates through centering the histories, lives, and cultures of historically marginalized and underrepresented people.5 kinds of nonfiction: enriching reading and writing instruction with children's books by Melissa Stewart; Marlene Correia
Publication Date: 2021In 5 Kinds of Nonfiction: Enriching Reading and Writing Instruction with Children's Books, Melissa Stewart and Dr. Marlene Correia present a new way to sort nonfiction into five major categories and show how doing so can help teachers and librarians build stronger readers and writers.Exploring challenging picturebooks in education: international perspectives on language and literature learning by edited by Åse Marie Ommundsen, Gunnar Haaland, and Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer
Publication Date: 2022What should children and students read? This volume explores challenging picturebooks as learning materials in early childhood education, primary and secondary school, and even universities. It addresses a wide range of thematic, cognitive, and aesthetic challenges and educational affordances of picturebooks in various languages and from different countries.Teaching young adult literature by Mike Cadden (Ed.); Karen Coats (Ed.); Roberta S. Trites (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2020The essays in this volume suggest ways high school and college instructors can incorporate YA texts into courses in literature, education, library science, and general education. The first group of essays explores key issues in YA literature, situates works in cultural contexts, and addresses questions of text selection and censorship.
- Last Updated: Jan 21, 2025 2:30 PM
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