Barbara Feinberg
Autor/a de Welcome to Lizard Motel: Children, Stories, and the Mystery of Making Things Up, A Memoir
4 obres 86 Membres 3 Ressenyes
Obres de Barbara Feinberg
Etiquetat
11/13 (1)
1900s (1)
2005 (3)
5th Grade SS - Great Depression and New Deal (1)
bookhouse (1)
children's non-fiction (1)
children’s-lit (1)
Crítica literària (2)
dtb (1)
educació (6)
Escriptura (4)
family relationships (1)
Family. Mothers. Memior (1)
Gran Depressió (1)
high school (1)
història (1)
Història americana (2)
Infantil (1)
Infants (5)
Library Science - Books (1)
Literary Analysis/Read in 2005 (1)
Literatura (2)
literatura infantil (2)
llibres (4)
llibres sobre llibres (3)
memòries (7)
no ficció (9)
Nord-americà (1)
Obra de referència (2)
parenting (2)
read 2010 (1)
read in 2011 (1)
reading and writing (1)
reading guide (1)
social studies (1)
stock (1)
study aids (1)
tbr-lt 75 (allthesedarnbooks) (1)
UW-EarlyChildhoodEd (1)
YANF (1)
Coneixement comú
- Gènere
- female
Membres
Ressenyes
Black Tuesday (Spotlight on American History) de Barbara Feinberg
This book highlighted the events of the Stock Market Crash of 1929. It showed how the stock market reacted, and also how the citizens reacted. When I teach my main focus will be in Social Studies and history classes. I would use this book in an American History class. This will teach my students about the events that took place during this crisis.
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Swelker | Sep 8, 2013 | I have to remember that this is a memoir first rather than an informative nonfiction book because I would have loved more analysis on the YA and children's books that she discusses. Feinberg's basis for this book is her 12-year-old son's school reading requirements of "problem" novels and how they're too upsetting/depressing for kids to read. She makes a good point, and I would love to hear about solutions/alternatives to these types of books. But this is really a memoir, so she doesn't actually have to come up with any solutions herself. This should be read by the people choosing these books for kids to read though, and they should all take a note out of Feinberg's Story Shop and find out what works for kids by just letting them express themselves.… (més)
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spinsterrevival | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Oct 26, 2011 | Feinberg became interested in children's literature when she realized that her middle-school son didn't want to read any of the books that he was assigned for school. Many of them were Newberry Award Winners, but he complained that they were all too sad. That's what Feinberg finds when she reads some herself. The protagonists deal with hell, all of them without the help of adults. None of them imagine or play. It seems to Feinberg like a misguided attempt to force children out of childhood instead of just letting them have fun. She also discusses how writing is taught in schools; one particular program does not allow children to write fiction, but only to write about their real lives. She relates the heartbreaking story of a friend's first-grader who wrote a story about lizard brothers who fly to the sun, only to have their tails catch fire. The class writing consultant tells him he needs to "seriously re-think his material," and should write about his real brother. The little boy who once said he loved writing now claimed to hate it.
Ultimately, though, it's a book long on introspection, digression, and problem identification, and short on solutions. The digressions are always thought-provoking and entertaining, but I wanted more substance—a more in-depth analysis of the literature, a proposal for what kind of literature should be taught, and how. Feinberg more than once describes something that contradicts what she earlier described, without pausing to notice that she has done so, much less to resolve the contradiction. For instance, she doesn't pause to ask why some kids love these "problem novels." I had a friend in middle school who couldn't get enough of those Lurlene McDaniels books about teenagers that die.… (més)
Ultimately, though, it's a book long on introspection, digression, and problem identification, and short on solutions. The digressions are always thought-provoking and entertaining, but I wanted more substance—a more in-depth analysis of the literature, a proposal for what kind of literature should be taught, and how. Feinberg more than once describes something that contradicts what she earlier described, without pausing to notice that she has done so, much less to resolve the contradiction. For instance, she doesn't pause to ask why some kids love these "problem novels." I had a friend in middle school who couldn't get enough of those Lurlene McDaniels books about teenagers that die.… (més)
1
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jholcomb | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Jan 27, 2008 | Estadístiques
- Obres
- 4
- Membres
- 86
- Popularitat
- #213,013
- Valoració
- ½ 3.6
- Ressenyes
- 3
- ISBN
- 6