ABSTRACT

What 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.

Written by leading and emerging scholars in the field of picturebook studies and literacy research, the book discusses the impact of challenging picturebooks in a comprehensive manner and combines theoretical considerations, picturebook analyses, and empirical studies with children and students. It introduces stimulating picturebooks from all continents and how they are used or may be used in educational settings and contexts. The chapters touch on subjects like reading promotion, second-language acquisition, art education, interdisciplinary learning, empathy development, minority issues, and intercultural competence. Moreover, they consider relevant aspects of the educational environments, such as the inclusion of picturebooks in the curriculum, the significance of school libraries, and the impact of publishers.

Exploring Challenging Picturebooks in Education sheds new light on the multiple dimensions relevant to investigating the impact of picturebooks on learning processes and the development of multimodal literacy competencies. It thus makes a significant contribution to the growing area of picturebook research and will be key reading for educators, researchers, and post-graduate students in the field of literacy studies, children’s literature, and education research.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Exploring challenging picturebooks in education

part I|36 pages

Theoretical perspectives on challenging picturebooks in education

part II|104 pages

Challenging picturebooks in early childhood and primary education

part III|85 pages

Challenging picturebooks in secondary and tertiary education

chapter 8|20 pages

Intercultural learning through Peter Sís' The Wall

Teenagers reading a challenging picturebook

chapter 9|20 pages

Challenging picturebooks in the school library

An untapped resource?

chapter 11|17 pages

The challenge of creativity

Using picturebook sequencing for creative writing

part IV|70 pages

Global perspectives pertaining to challenging picturebooks in education

chapter 13|16 pages

Confronting the trauma of the child evacuee

Picturebooks as entrances to visual literacy

chapter 14|15 pages

Challenging the status quo with picturebook and app

A Canadian case study

chapter 15|18 pages

Publishing challenging picturebooks