Available Formats
Reaching Reluctant Young Readers
By (Author) Rob Reid
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
9th March 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Teaching of a specific subject
Educational: First / native language
Educational: First / native language: Reading and writing skills
Primary and middle schools
372.42
Paperback
262
Width 150mm, Height 229mm, Spine 12mm
249g
Reaching Reluctant Young Readers features 150 middle-grade books. Each profiled title has the potential to hook the reluctant reader and lure them to read the entire book. To specifically encourage elementary and middle-school-age reluctant children to read, there is first a pitch to get the readers attention. That is followed by a short reading passage to set the hook and encourage the young person to read the rest of the book on their own. Further, the book contains several hundred additional recommended titles.
The books selected for this collection were chosen following the criteria of reluctant reader books created by the Quick Picks committee sponsored by the Young Adult Library Services Association. While these guidelines were designed for young adult books, they also work well for middle-grade books. The criteria include:
clear writing (no convoluted long sentences with sophisticated vocabulary),high interest hook in the first few pages, well-defined characters, interesting plot, andfamiliar themes.
[Reid] offers a wonderful resource for anyone working with reluctant (or not so reluctant) middle grade readers. The introduction describes the characteristics of reluctant readers, along with a list of book features that will appeal to these kids (for example, clear writing, a straightforward plot, relatable characters). Reid then presents 150 selections, grouped by genre. Each entry includes the books recommended grade range, its attention-grabbing opening sentence, a succinct booktalking script, a suggested excerpt to read aloud to a group, and several similar titles. Chapters on science fiction, fantasy, and animal fiction are typical for volumes on readers advisory, but the sections on Humor Hybrid Chapter Books (e.g., Jeff Kinneys Diary of a Wimpy Kid; Ursula Vernons Dragonbreath; Tom Watsons Stick Dog), novels in verse (Margarita Engles Mountain Dog; K.A. Holts Rhyme Schemer), and mildly frightening horror (for instance, David Lubars The Gloomy Ghost; Dr. Roachs Night of the Zombie Goldfish) add significant value.
Verdict: A definite purchase for youth services professional collections.
As K-12 school librarians can attest, it is no easy task to connect elementary and middle grade students to pleasurable reading material. Indeed, convincing these discerning customers to accept one's recommendations can be an effort fraught with stubborn resistance. A happy book match, however, can induce a librarian adrenaline-rush akin to bagging prized game; and so it is easy to understand why librarians continually strive to help their most reluctant readers. In Reaching Reluctant Young Readers, author Reid provides a valuable resource to librarians. Using the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) selection criteria, Reid has created an annotated bibliography of 150 high-interest books. The predominantly fiction titles are organized by 15 genres such as fantasy, superheroes, graphic novels, and even the germane Books about kids who hate to read. Although reluctant readers are often stereotyped as being adolescent males, Reid's selections are not bound by gender lines but rather will appeal to all children in grades 3 to 8. Annotations give recommended passages to read in pitching the books, as well as pertinent reader recommendations for similar works. Of value to teachers, librarians, and anyone studying children's literature and its reception.
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students through professionals/practitioners.
Rob Reid teaches childrens and young adult literature courses at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire (UWEC). He is a former junior high school English teacher, a youth services librarian for both the Pueblo, Colorado Library District and the L.E. Phillips Memorial Public Library in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and a youth services/special needs consultant for the Indianhead Federated Library System. He is the author of two picture books and 18 literature resource books, including Reids Read-Alouds: Selections for Children and Teens, Reids Read-Alouds 2: Modern-Day Classics from C.S. Lewis to Lemony Snicket, Biographies to Read Aloud with Kids, and Silly Books to Read Aloud. Rob has written over 100 journal articles for American Libraries, School Library Journal, LibrarySparks magazine, and has an ongoing column in Book Links magazine titled the Reid-Aloud Alert.