When I was a kid, I was free to roam the library and read just about anything that caught my interest. I devoured books—everything from fairy tales to historical fiction to big, complicated novels I ...
Get free printable axolotl bookmarks for coloring! These fun, customizable designs make reading more exciting. Download, ...
Sometimes a good scare is just the thing. These horror stories are deliciously spooky without being too terrifying -- perfect for a fall night by the fire! But it doesn't need to be Halloween time for ...
Sporting a blue duffle coat, a floppy red hat, and a battered suitcase, Paddington has become a global icon. And you can ...
In Linda Joan Smith’s “The Peach Thief,” an orphaned girl posing as a boy raids an English Eden. By Jennifer Howard Leonard S. Marcus brings the wonder of a 1968 snapshot to a new ...
Students, parents and educators can choose appropriate reading material for each Challenger. Books are added to the list regularly by an expert panel that includes teachers and librarians. Not all ...
John’s Child Development Center on March 7, serving as the center’s Read ... children to this fun play, especially for Literacy Week, is fun and is something that can also be done with a book ...
By transitioning to digital teaching resources, LitWits is making its creative, literature-based learning approach available to more educators and families than ever before. The company's growing ...
First released in 2007, the 40-page children’s book tells the story of a little red-haired girl with freckles, who learns that the best way to embrace her differences is by accepting them.
High-quality parental involvement in shared book reading can further amplify these benefits by deepening children's reading comprehension with appropriate questions and comments. This study explores ...
Most millennial parents didn’t grow up with graphic novels and they now have questions about how these books will shape their child’s lifelong relationship to reading. Will kids ever make the ...
When your kids see demonstrations in the street or on the news as a response to racially charged incidents, you can help them understand what's going on by giving them some historical context.