Sarah,
  My goodness, I suppose you ARE overwhelmed! It was overwhelming for me to 
move from second to fourth grade. I can't imagine moving from 6th and 7th to K!
   
  I'd suggest you take a look at the books on these lists:
   
   
  The Mosaic Listserve Database: 
http://www.u46teachers.org/mosaic/database/schema.cfm
   
  Database of Award Winning Children's Literature: searchable by many criterea 
http://www.dawcl.com/introduction.html
   
  Although Carol Hurst died Jan. 21, her daughter is carrying on with her work: 
http://www.carolhurst.com/index.html
   
  There are others, but they must be on my computer at school.
  
Sarah Jane Taylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  Hi everyone,
My Name is Sarah Taylor and I am new to this whole listserv process, 
but I am really excited to hear what people have to say about the 
different problems and situations we encounter in our classrooms. I 
am a graduate student at Syracuse University in the Literacy program 
from birth to sixth grade. I have my degree in Elementary Ed from the 
University of Scranton and I am currently working in a special 
education school mainly for students with severe emotional and 
behavioral disorders. Needless to say, work can get pretty stressful 
and there are days that I feel no teaching gets done. One problem I 
am now facing is that I have been switched from a sixth and seventh 
grade level classroom, to a kindergarten level. My strategies for 
teaching reading with the older boys was to try and make reading as 
authentic for them as possible. As many of them had ADHD, along with 
other problems, I used Jack Gantos books(Joey Pigza) to help them 
learn to relate to, and understand characters. This worked fairly 
well and the majority of them responded quite positively, and 
excitedly. However, my new students are at a level I have less 
experience with. I am curious if anybody knows of any books(picture, 
etc.) that can help my new young ones get interested in reading and 
enthusiastic about it? They are at a low reading level, and basic 
phonics instruction dictates my curriculum, but I want to be able to 
read aloud or have the students use trade books to teach for meaning. 
Making reading and learning as authentic as possible is my goal. If 
they see a purpose for reading, or gain an appreciation for it, my 
hope is that they will be even more successful in our program, and 
eventually make it back to their district with gusto!


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                Joy/NC/4
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  How children learn is as important as what they learn: process and content go 
hand in hand. http://www.responsiveclassroom.org
   









  
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