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      Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure
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      Book

      Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure

      DOI link for Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure

      Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure book

      Using Literature to Inspire Literacy learning for Ages 8-12

      Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure

      DOI link for Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure

      Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure book

      Using Literature to Inspire Literacy learning for Ages 8-12
      ByFred Sedgwick
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2010
      eBook Published 23 September 2010
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203845325
      Pages 224
      eBook ISBN 9780203845325
      Subjects Education
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      Sedgwick, F. (2010). Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure: Using Literature to Inspire Literacy learning for Ages 8-12 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203845325

      ABSTRACT

      "A marvellous book of great practical value" – James Carter

      The lack of interest in reading for pleasure amongst large numbers of primary age pupils, put off by ‘mechanical’ worksheet-driven approaches, is a cause for major concern amongst education professionals and parents. However, Inspiring Children to Read and Write for Pleasure from writer, journalist and education commentator Fred Sedgwick uses the context of literature to illuminate and inform the teaching of literacy in the primary classroom and inspire children to a love of books.

      Aimed at Year 4, 5 and 6 primary pupils, but also significant as a transitions text to teaching secondary school pupils, this book shows how children’s fluency in language - their thinking, their talking, their reading, their listening and their writing – can be greatly improved and enriched through contact with literature placed in an understandable context. With both focus on prose and poetry, primary pupils will be introduced to using grammar, syntax and sentence construction skills in meaningful contexts. Through the use of inspiring case studies, schedules of work and practical classroom applications as well as literary figures like Dickens, Coleridge, Carroll, Rossetti and Shakespeare, primary school children can enjoy reading and writing again.

      With a number of sample passages to use, teaching guidelines and examples of children’s work, this book will be of great interest to literacy coordinators, practicing Primary PGCE and Key Stage 2 teachers and those on BA Primary/B’Ed courses.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |10 pages

      Introduction

      part |2 pages

      Part I: Prose

      chapter |8 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|3 pages

      Absolute nonsense!

      chapter 2|5 pages

      Getting rid of common sense

      chapter 3|4 pages

      Characters

      chapter 4|18 pages

      Characters: Charles Dickens

      chapter 5|4 pages

      Action: Robert Louis Stevenson Treasure Island

      chapter 6|7 pages

      Biography: John Aubrey Brief Lives

      chapter 7|2 pages

      Journals

      chapter 8|3 pages

      Beginnings

      chapter 9|2 pages

      Finally . . .

      part |2 pages

      Part II: Poetry

      chapter |10 pages

      Introduction

      part |2 pages

      The voice of anonymous: poems from the oral tradition

      chapter 1|14 pages

      How many blackberries grow in the sea? Nonsense verse, and children writing it

      chapter 2|13 pages

      Anonymous speaks again: nursery rhymes and other folk poetry

      chapter 3|3 pages

      A spiritual: ‘Motherless child’

      chapter 4|4 pages

      More from the voice of anonymous: ballads

      chapter 5|4 pages

      An anonymous alphabet

      chapter 6|5 pages

      Anonymous speaks from the grave: epitaphs

      chapter 7|7 pages

      And more from anonymous: riddles

      chapter 8|4 pages

      Anonymous at Christmas

      chapter 9|6 pages

      How many miles to Babylon? A short anthology of anonymous poems

      part |2 pages

      Writing to explore: poems from the written tradition

      chapter |2 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|9 pages

      Small explorations: some short poems

      chapter 2|5 pages

      Hymn: exploring where the rhyme takes you

      chapter 3|3 pages

      Exploring nonsense: Lewis Carroll

      chapter 4|3 pages

      Exploring the past: Thomas Hood

      chapter 5|5 pages

      John Clare: ‘Meet me in the green glen’

      chapter 6|6 pages

      Thomas Hardy: ‘To the Moon’

      chapter 7|3 pages

      Too wonderful for me: something from the Bible

      chapter 8|4 pages

      Exploring Geo rey Chaucer: a start

      chapter 9|2 pages

      Rupert Brooke’s favourite things

      chapter 10|4 pages

      A voice from the United States of America: Walt Whitman

      chapter 11|3 pages

      Gerard Hopkins

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