Reading picture books with children How to shake up storytime and get kids talking about what they see

Megan Dowd Lambert

Book - 2015

"A new, interactive approach to storytime, The Whole Book Approach was developed in conjunction with the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art and expert author Megan Dowd Lambert's graduate work in children's literature at Simmons College, offering a practical guide for reshaping storytime and getting kids to think with their eyes,"--amazon.com.

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Subjects
Published
Watertown, MA : Charlesbridge [2015]
©2015
Language
English
Main Author
Megan Dowd Lambert (author)
Physical Description
xxiii, 152 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 134-142) and index.
ISBN
9781580897914
9781580896627
  • Foreword
  • Preface Reading to with Children
  • Introduction How I Learned to Think with My Eyes
  • Chapter 1. That's About the Size of It: Trim Size and Orientation
  • Chapter 2. Coming Attractions: Jackets and Covers
  • Chapter 3. Visual Overtures: Endpapers
  • Chapter 4. Slow Down and Look: Front Matter
  • Chapter 5. Knocked Out by Type: Typography
  • Chapter 6. Gutter Talk and More: Page Design
  • Chapter 7. "Children, Children, What Do You See?": Nurturing Visual Intelligence
  • Chapter 8. The Picture Book Playground: The Benefits (and Fun) of the Whole Book Approach
  • Conclusion The Story Continues
  • Acknowledgments
  • Resources
  • Leading Whole Book Approach Storytimes
  • Whole Book Approach Sample Questions
  • Glossary of Book and Storytime Terminology
  • Further Reading
  • Notes
  • Image Credits
  • Index
Review by School Library Journal Review

Lambert's Whole Book Approach challenges librarians to think differently about how they share a picture book in a group setting. It asks adult readers to value the opinions of young listeners and to engage them to become active participants as they try to make meaning of all they see and hear during a shared reading. This volume gives concrete examples and practical tips on how to do a shared reading based on the Whole Book Approach; through a conversational style and clear directions, Lambert offers support for librarians and teachers testing out new ways of engaging young listeners. The author developed this method during her graduate studies in children's literature at Simmons College and while working in the Education Department of the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art. As she points out, the Whole Book Approach method of sharing picture books starts right on the title page-adults share vocabulary information about the various parts of a physical book. Lambert goes on to dedicate individual chapters to "Jackets and Covers," "Endpapers," "Front Matter," "Typography," and "Page Design" and spends a good deal of time on how to foster a child's visual intelligence. The author's storytime anecdotes are funny, touching, and ultimately illuminating, highlighting how this approach can open new avenues to explore with children. VERDICT An essential purchase for any educator wanting to understand and apply the Whole Book Approach in their storytimes, or for those who would like to better understand the various parts and wonders of the picture book as a unique art form.-Renee McGrath, Nassau Library System, Uniondale, NY © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An in-depth exploration of the author's Whole Book Approach: a way to slow storytime down and consider children's responses to art, design, and other visual elements. Lambert honed her new storytime style while sharing picture books at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art. She began by using traditional methods but realized that she was representing a museum; she should focus on art and the notion of a book as an art form. Taking cues from the open-ended questions used by the Carle museum's docents, Lambert created a similar approach toward reading with children. With chapters devoted to trim size and orientation, jackets and covers, endpapers, typography, and more, there really is no better way to say it: Lambert delves into the "whole book." Librarians may quake at the thought of inviting so much discussion while reading stories to a large group, but Lambert calms fears with repeated (and adorablesuch as the "heightful tower" of Madeline) examples from her many years of practice. She also shares tips and tricks to regain focus if a group goes awry. Traditionalists' concerns that the integrity of the story might be compromised by many interruptions are unfounded; Lambert rightly stresses that reading both the words and the art are equally important and provides ample evidence of children's increased engagement with the books being shared. Welcome permission to shake things up, with an important acknowledgment of the art form at the core of modern storytimes. (FAQ, sample storytime questions, glossary, further reading, index) (Nonfiction. Adult) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

            Why do we love books so much? Why do some of us, when we're children, drag around picture books just like stuffed animals? I had a brown monkey--straw-filled--whose hands and feet were many times mended and finally completely re-sewn by my mother. And I had Die fröhlichen Steinzeitkinder ( The Stone Age Children ) and Die Steinzeit-kinder in Ägypten ( The Stone Age Children in Egypt ) by Bertil Almqvist (published originally in Swedish). All three objects were essential to my young well-being.             The monkey is gone--I don't remember when he was lost--but the two books by Mr. Almqvist still stand on my shelves in remarkably good shape. They are the most tangible connection to my childhood self that I have.             Books, like stuffed animals, are things. They're very thingy. They have a size and a shape. They are more or less shiny, soft or hard, smooth or rough. The paper within them is glossy or matte, brilliant or warm, exciting or comforting.             Megan Dowd Lambert shows us how valuable all this thinginess of books is for students, teachers, and parents. There is a fundamental joy in it. In the classroom and in our homes a picture book is one corner of the triangle completed by the teacher (or parent, or sibling, or friend) and the child. Each is essential. A horror (to my mind) of a modern classroom is the illuminated SMART board in a darkened room. The Very Hungry Caterpillar may look marvelous and big and glowing, but two necessary elements of good education are quite literally left in the dark: the teacher and the student. Learning is best when it comes with a personality, whether that personality is in the line of a brush, the smile of a teacher, or the question of a child.             One way to judge the merit of a work of art is to ask whether it grows more beautiful as it grows older. Reading Picture Books with Children begins by looking at Ludwig Bemelmans's Madeline . I remember my first reaction to this book: I was thrilled by that loose-painted line, by the simplicity and perfection of the drawing of Madeline herself, and by the wit of the poetry. The line, the drawing, and the poetry have only increased in beauty for me since then.             And this idea of beauty growing over time can be true of the book, the thing itself, too. As an author, to be handed one of my own books that has been torn and taped, smudged and erased, bent and smoothed, the four corners of the cardboard cover separating like little paper pussy willows, is one of my greatest satisfactions. There, in my hand, is the story around the story, the tale of a book that has traveled from hand to hand, mind to mind, heart to heart.             --Chris Raschka Excerpted from Reading Picture Books with Children: How to Shake up Storytime and Get Kids Talking about What They See by Megan Dowd Lambert All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.