Category Archives: Gifted

Summer Reading 2014

I’ve seen several new Summer Reading lists for children in the last few days. Some have various prizes for accomplishing them, for others the prize is just getting introduced to some great books.

Thought I’d share:

Reward based mega-list: http://www.capitallyfrugaldc.com/2014/05/29/business-sponsored-summer-reading-programs-2014/ 

American Library Association picks:
http://www.ala.org/alsc/2014-summer-reading-list

Scholastic Challenge:
http://www.scholastic.com/ups/campaigns/src-2014

From SummerReading.org:
http://www.summerreading.org/booklists.php

From a reliable teacher-website:
http://www.education.com/seasonal/summer-reading/

Annual Reading Rockets List:
http://www.readingrockets.org/books/summer

and of course, my favorite:

Classic Children’s Books (20 years or older, but still readily available):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_children's_classic_books

Happy Summer Reading! 🙂

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Summer Reading 2013

I am very pleased to announce that one of my favorite Oldies But Goodies has been selected by my local school system for their 9th grade gifted summer reading program: A Walk Across America, by Peter Jenkins

(along with Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers – not an Oldie But Goodie, but a fine read nonetheless). Great choice, Local School System!

Students (and adults) of both sexes will enjoy this book, a first-hand account of Peter Jenkins’ 1970’s true life adventure, in which he finds his dog, his bride and ultimately himself.

Additionally, a sister Oldies But Goodies novel is making news this season with its re-release from Ballantine Books. Formerly very difficult to find (believe me, I’ve tried and there’s NOTHING out there for under $75.00…) The Girl of the Sea of Cortez

by Peter Benchley is available for pre-order with a shipping date of August 20, 2013. Although Benchley is best known for Jaws, The Girl of the Sea of Cortez is (in my opinion) his masterwork. A beautifully visual read, it is the story of Paloma, a girl who lives near the Sea of Cortez in Mexico (a.k.a. The Gulf of California, located between the Baja Peninsula and the mainland. For more on this area of the world, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_California ).

Her love of the sea and the creatures in it is threatened by greedy outsiders without a care for the destruction they will leave behind. Not only is it a great book, it makes my environmentalist heart go pitter-pat.

Both Walk Across America and The Girl of the Sea of Cortez (and Outliers and Jaws, too, for that matter) are great books for a summer read at the beach, the pool, or curled up in bed with the air-conditioner blasting on you. Even if you don’t have plans to travel this summer, after you’ve read them, you will feel well-rested and dream of faraway places.

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I Already Read That

Many, many times when I have suggested titles for students in their later years (by which I mean high school), I have gotten the, “Oh, I read that in fifth grade,” comment. It is frequently accompanied by the vaguely superior attitude that tends to distinguish a precocious reader.

In response, I have this to say: Reading something as a child is not the same as reading it in high school (or later). Yes, the words are the same, the characters are the same, and the plot is the same, but you, dear reader, are not.

The Chronicles of Narnia series, by C.S. Lewis, is a classic example of this. Easily digested as a fairy tale in one’s early years, in the hands of a teenager, it can boggle the mind with its innuendo and double meaning. So can The Hobbit. And Watership Down. And practically every other book not exclusively intended for the younger crowd.

Even when perfectly capable of understanding the words and following a complex plot, the preadolescent reader (even a gifted one) just doesn’t have the maturity to recognize the nuance and subtlety embedded in most literature.

Think I’m wrong? Dust one off and read it again.

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Best of the Blog V: Post Face Off

Product Details

For this last installment of The Best of the Blog (next week I will start writing new posts again), I was torn between one that had a large number of visitors the first time around, and one that I wrote when the blog was young and not many people saw it. Then I thought, “Why not both?”

• It Was the Worst of Times

• Scrabbling for Success: 10 Helpful Hints for the Querying Process

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Best of the Blog II: Considering Asynchronous Development in Book Selection

Here’s another installment of Best of the Blog. I’ll be back on June sixth with something new. See you then…

Considering Asynchronous Development in Book Selection

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Age Appropriate

Author friend and library denizen Ty Roth (So Shelly, February 2011) and I have exchanged several blog comments back and forth about censorship vs. rating books. Yesterday, he posted a wonderful summary of the issue on his blog, and I can’t say it any better than he did. Go take a look. 🙂

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Oldies but Goodies: Great Books for Kindergarteners

Today’s “Oldies but Goodies” is a selection of timeless books for kindergarteners and early readers. Some of these titles can still be found at the local library, most are available through Amazon.com and the rest are obtainable at reasonably priced used-book websites like AbeBooks.com and alibras.com. All of them have great illustrations. 🙂

Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel

by Virginia Lee Burton

Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel

The Friendly Book

by Margaret Wise Brown

The Friendly Book (Big Little Golden Book)

Wait Till the Moon is Full

by Margaret Wise Brown

Wait Till the Moon Is Full

The Cat in the Hat

by Dr. Seuss

The Cat in the Hat

Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse

by Kevin Henkes

Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse

The Velveteen Rabbit

by Margey Williams Bianco

The Velveteen Rabbit

Anatole

by Eve Titus

Anatole

I Can’t, Said the Ant

by Polly Cameron

"I Can't" Said the Ant

Anything by Beatrix Potter

Beatrix Potter The Complete Tales

The Story of Ferdinand

by Munro Leaf

The Story of Ferdinand (Puffin Storytime)

Millions of Cats

by Wanda Gag

Millions of Cats (Gift Edition) (Picture Puffin Books)

The Dragon Who Liked to Spit Fire

by Judy Varga

The Dragon Who Liked To Spit Fire

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Oldies but Goodies: Great Books for Sixth Graders

My oldest is soon off to Middle School, so today’s focus is on classic titles that are appropriate for eleven- and twelve-year-olds. The links below will take you to Amazon.com, where you can see the descriptions and reviews, but please support your local library if possible.

The Witch of Blackbird Pond
by Elizabeth George Speare

The Witch of Blackbird Pond

A Little Princess,
by Frances Hodgson Burnett

A Little Princess (Unabridged Classics)

The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet
by Eleanor Cameron

The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet

The Mysterious Island
by Jules Verne

The Mysterious Island (Modern Library Classics)

The Secret Garden
by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Secret Garden: Centennial Edition

The Swiss Family Robinson
by Johann David Wyss
The Swiss Family Robinson (Signet Classics)

Island of the Blue Dolphins
by Scott O’Dell
Island of the Blue Dolphins

The Cay
by Theodore Taylor
The Cay

Anne of Green Gables
by Lucy Maud Montgomery
Anne of Green Gables, 100th Anniversary Edition

The Book of Three
by Lloyd Alexander
The Book of Three (The Chronicles of Prydain Book 1)

Eight Cousins
by Louisa May Alcott
Eight Cousins [8 COUSINS]

Around the World in Eighty Days
by Jules Verne

Around the World in 80 Days

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Considering Asynchronous Development in Book Selection

Asynchronous Development: Mental and physical maturation that occurs at different rates, the mental capacity (in the case of Gifted/Talented children) distinctly outpacing the chronological/emotional age. An example of this would be a fifth grader doing tenth grade reading. 

When I was in second grade, my family was packing everything we owned into boxes because we were moving to a different state. One morning, wearing my yellow pajamas with the feet, I went into my father’s study to ask him a question. He wasn’t there, but I knew he’d be back and sat down to wait. Although most of his books had already been packed, there were still a few stacked up on the table next to me. Bored, I picked one up. It was interestingly small, with a blue linen cover. I opened it and proceeded to read a story about a man who stayed overnight in a haunted house to prove that ghosts were a myth. After watching a child’s footprint form in the dust and enduring other equally terrifying incidents, he realized that ghosts weren’t a myth at all.

So did I! I understood every word perfectly, but was it appropriate for a second grader to be reading Edgar Allen Poe?

Similarly, should a nine-year-old be required to read a disturbing story involving a boy who bleeds to death after falling on an axe? Many gifted/talented teachers commonly select books for the classroom that were never intended to be read by children of the ages they teach, in an effort to provide a challenging read with appropriately complex vocabulary. Emotional age is rarely considered in the selection process. As a result, students are regularly exposed to content that is developmentally inappropriate and/or psychologically disturbing. 

Where the Red Fern Grows is a classic, and if an eighth grader picks it up, he’ll have a thought provoking read. A gifted fourth grader, however, is more likely to have nightmares and develop a mysterious aversion to axes.

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