1. Since all of you are reading different books, the idea is to share the many reads students can
experience from reading YA literature. For each list you, will get
reviews on approximately 20 or more books.
2. What must be included in your posts are:
a. A short summary
b. A connection to YA Lit criteria
c. A link to a resource for further information about the book/novel(
these may include author information, reviews, insight or information
about issues the text references.
d. Your opinion/recommendations of the book/novel relating back to
criteria. A key
question to consider is whether the book is
classroom appropriate, and, if so, what reading
level/grade/studentswouldbenefit from reading the text. If it is not
suited for the classroom, if students are reading the book, what is the
appeal?
3. Lastly, you must respond to at least 2 other posts in detail.
Again have fun...after the class is done you can still keep those reviews coming on the NING and talk to each other about what your are reading for the year!
Pam
PamTags:
That movie came to mind immediately for me too!
This sounds like it'd be a really good book for the fans of forbidden love stories. It's not my favorite genre, but I think it's good that it seems to be more realistic than some novels turn out. I don't know if I would pick this one out, but on the off-chance that I did, I'd probably be more interested in reading about their social comparisons and their family issues. That's right, I choose issues over love...I'm obviously not the romantic type.
That is what we try to do, which is create another list for kids to have, so they read. We should always have recs for them.
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