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Sierra Eisen; Jessica Taggart; Angeline S. Lillard – Grantee Submission, 2022
Children's storybooks often contain fantasy elements, from dragons and wizards to anthropomorphic animals that wear clothes, talk, and behave like humans. These elements can impact children's learning from storybooks both positively and negatively, perhaps due in part to their ability to capture children's interest and attention. Prior research…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Young Children, Preferences, Animals
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Armstrong, Judith – Children's Literature in Education, 1982
Relates how the series adventure story retains its hold over young readers and concludes its qualities may be both misunderstood and undervalued. (HOD)
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Literary Genres, Reading Interests
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Blishen, Edward – Children's Literature in Education, 1981
Examines a classic school story that influenced the genre for several generations. (HOD)
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres
Espey, David – 1995
If children are not present in most travel literature--precisely because the genre has most typically been the domain of solitary male travelers who are escaping domestic obligation, routine, the familiar, and the family--they nevertheless are an integral part of the genre. The traveler is in many ways a child, an innocent abroad. Traveler writers…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Language Arts, 1979
Discusses the four major concentrations that can form the framework for a childrens literature program: children's interests, literary types, literary elements, and creators of children's literature. (DD)
Descriptors: Authors, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education
Johnson, Kathleen R. – 1995
In children's realistic stories about animals a number of wholly and unambiguously anthropocentric assumptions are at work. For instance, in a study most of the books (81%) in one sampling of 50 stories involve a pet or the process of domesticating a wild animal. In most cases the primary animal character is a dog or horse. The predominance of…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Cultural Context, Elementary Education
Iskander, Sylvia Patterson, Ed. – 1991
This volume of a 1991 conference proceedings contains the conference's addresses and awards, a listing of the panels and workshops, and abstracts of those papers which were withdrawn from the proceedings to be published elsewhere. Among the papers in this document are: "Reading and Literacy: a Lifetime Work" (N. Bagnall); "The Image…
Descriptors: Authors, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education
Klingberg, Gote – 1970
The literary genre explored in this study is The Fantastic Tale for Children, which combines magic and reality. Two examples of the "pure" fantastic tale are "The Return of the Twelves" by Pauline Clarke and "Tom's Midnight Garden" by Philippa Pearce. The motifs of the fantastic tale are methods which connect the world of the principal characters…
Descriptors: Books, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Creative Writing
Wilson, Roy Russel, Jr. – 1975
The four major purposes of this study were: to examine and describe the in-depth discussions by selected sixth graders of specific books in an attempt to characterize the nature of the responses; to compare four strategies which were employed for initiating the different discussions; to discover the range of personal involvement which sixth…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Doctoral Dissertations
Mallan, Kerry – 1993
Exploring the range and diversity of humorous literature for children, this book attempts to remedy the past neglect of children's humorous books by taking humor seriously. The first five chapters of the book discuss what children find funny and at what age, different kinds of humor found in children's literature, passages of humorous tone in…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Class Activities, Elementary Secondary Education
Goss, Gail – 2001
This paper discusses and demonstrates how to use children's interests combined with children's literature to make learning easier. According to the paper, the concept is to choose an area that excites children, one where they already have a developed schemata or knowledge base, then to use children's trade books about that topic to teach the…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Class Activities
Leonhardt, Mary – 1996
This book aims to show parents how to instill the love of reading in their children and how to nurture that love throughout their lives, even in the face of television, video, and computer entertainment. The book is based on the concept of "reading pathways," developed after more than 20 years of classroom observation and interviews. It…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Child Rearing, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature
Scholastic Inc., New York, NY. – 1997
This resource book contains reviews, written by children, of 375 "can't put down" children's books. Reviews were selected from over 10,000 submissions, the results of a national survey in which children reviewed their favorite books. The book makes it easy to locate books by listing: (1) title; (2) author; (3) number of pages; (4) genre…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Childhood Interests, Childrens Literature, Childrens Writing