Newly proficient readers in the longer form are always delighted to be in on the jokes. Here are 13 titles to get them started.
The redesigned database with a focus on elementary students, Gale in Context: Elementary, aims to provide individualized instruction for kids in the classroom and at home.
Whether kids are eager to read about friendship woes, holidays, or new pets, they’ll find something to satisfy them in this list of realistic chapter books. Looking for more summer reading recommendations? SLJ is publishing lists all summer long—from family stories to mysteries to teen reads.
With school athletics seasons canceled and professional leagues shuttered, students can find comfort in these sports books, movies, and streaming shows.
2020 is turning out to be a bumper year for cat stories of all kinds. Here’s a look at some of this year’s cat tales.
For school librarians planning for a return to in-school programming, peers share their AR/VR programming, mistakes made along the way, and the best way to incorporate the mixed reality edtech into the library and classroom.
Launching today: A wizarding respite for the coronavirus-weary. Through Harry Potter at Home, readers can access HP-related activities and downloads, including free audiobook and ebook versions of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, available through April.
The at-home program offers downloadable superhero-themed activities, previews of graphic novels, and how-to videos from DC's roster of middle grade authors and illustrators, including Minh Lê, Gene Luen Yang, Shannon and Dean Hale, Meg Cabot, and Amanda Deibert.
First make a schedule for your little one including choice time, quiet time, and screen time for when you need to work or rest. Then use these resources.
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