What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(tagged with 'Kevin Crossley-Holland')

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Kevin Crossley-Holland, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. The Children’s Bookshow – take your class to see amazing authors, poets and illustrators!

childrensbookshow

The Children’s Bookshow is an organisation that arranges an annual tour across England of children’s authors, poets and illustrators. It’s a fantastic opportunity to take entire classes to see an author, poet or illustrator live, with the added bonus that if you buy tickets to one of the Children’s Bookshow events, you will have the opportunity to book a free school workshop with an author/poet/illustrator. If you are successful in bidding for a free school workshop the Children’s Bookshow will gift the attending children a book to keep.

This year Bernardo Atxaga, Patrick Benson, Kevin Crossley-Holland, Benji Davies, Daniel Morden, Marie-Aude Murail, Catherine Rayner, Rachel Rooney, Michael Rosen, Jessica Souhami and Kit Wright are taking to the stage, everywhere from London to Leicester and Stafford to Snape Maltings. Events take place from September to November, but if you want to be sure of places for the kids you teach and in with a chance of winning a free author/poet/illustrator workshop, early booking is strongly advised.

Booking is now open and you can find full details at The Children’s Bookshow website: http://www.thechildrensbookshow.com/arts-award.html

One of this year’s participants in the The Children’s Bookshow is Rachel Rooney, shortlisted for the CLPE Poetry Award. In conjunction with The Children’s Bookshow Rachel is running a super poetry competition for kids (9 and under, and 9-11). You can find out full details here:
http://www.thechildrensbookshow.com/competition.html

0 Comments on The Children’s Bookshow – take your class to see amazing authors, poets and illustrators! as of 5/18/2015 12:25:00 PM
Add a Comment
2. Accelerated Reader - What's it all about? Cecilia Busby

Those of you who have children at secondary school, or are teachers or librarians, may have come across a new(ish) scheme called Accelerated Reader.

Administered in the UK by Rennaissance Learning, Accelerated Reader is a system that grades books, suggests appropriate reading levels and then monitors pupils' reading by giving them a multiple choice quiz on the book they've just read. The system analyses the quiz responses to show teachers whether the pupil has read the book, and what aspects of it they found difficult (e.g., vocabulary, or higher level comprehension).


If they fly through a couple of quizes, they are rewarded with a higher reading band. They can also collect points according to how long the book was that they read - leading to a total score of words read, and the accolade of 'word millionaire' when they get to the magic 1,000,000 words. They are however expected to stay within their bands - books read outside them, although allowed, do not count for rewards and incentives. For a slower reader, expected to progress at a certain number of books per term, or for a competitive reader, determined to get to the millionaire mark first, this more or less prohibits reading outside the given bands.

According to the National Literacy Trust, the use of Accelerated Reader in schools does actually get more pupils reading, and increases the proportion of pupils in the difficult teenage years who say they enjoy reading, will admit to a favourite book, and read widely across genres.

My daughter's school has just started using the scheme and the number of pupils taking books out of the school library has tripled compared with the same time last year. It's hard to argue with that kind of boost to pupils' interest in books and there really does seem to be a noticeable encouragement to read through the motivation of online quizes and rewards, particularly for boys.

What interests me, though, is the banding structure and the rationale behind it. AR uses a computer programme which scans the books and then analyses them for vocabulary and syntax (proportion of complex sentences). The range of banding for the books in a secondary school library is roughly from about 3 to about 11 or 12 for the very hardest books (for a rough idea of what these mean - R.L. Stine's Goosebumps books are about 3; Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov has an AR level of 11.1 )
AR level 3.0
AR level 11.1
More complex sentences and more advanced vocabulary result in a higher banding: and this more or less seems to work in terms of what one thinks of as appropriate progression - nobody is capable of reading Karamazov before they're capable of reading Goosebumps.

But there are two things I think are seriously problematic with the underlying assumptions of this scheme.

The first is a prescription that I think is wrong-headed: that we progress in reading in a straight line - that when we are capable of reading Dostoevsky, we are 'beyond' R.L. Stine. In fact, I think there are plenty of people who might go back and forth between the two and get different pleasures out of each. AR schemes do talk about letting pupils read 'below' their level as occasional 'comfort reads' - but this is presented as a kind of reversion. It's a bit like the idea that we all sometimes need to watch crap telly and eat donuts. It won't enrich our lives but it will give us some 'down-time'. For me, the idea that you are 'slumming it' by reading the 'easier' book is a pernicious one. The lower-level books are not just donuts, they may have all sorts of fabulous and enriching things to say to us as readers - they just do it in a different, though not necessarily less crafted or effective, way.

The second assumption is that the 'straight line' of reading progression is entirely about syntax and vocabulary. And this is where the truly jaw-dropping anomalies of AR banding become apparent. Using the AR website to check the relative banding of books for her, I was amazed to discover that Alan Garner's Owl Service is banded at 3.7. By contrast, Dav Pilkey's Captain Underpants is 4.3. And Captain Underpants and the Revolting Radioacive Robo-Boxers (presumably because of the number of multi-syllable words) is a whopping 5.3.

AR level 4.3
AR level 3.7
Bear in mind that the AR scheme suggests pupils are given relatively narrow bands to choose from - my daughter was started on 4.5–4.9. She was too high for The Owl Service, although she couldn't yet read The Weirdstone of Brisingamen, at 6.3. If she waited to be able to read the Weirdstone, however, she would be too high to read its sequel, The Moon of Gomrath, which is 5.4.

Philip Reeve's Here Lies Arthur (a fabulous retelling of the Arthur legend from the point of view of a young girl co-opted into helping the bard Merlin, who is presented as a kind of early 'spin-doctor') is 5.6, so she'd reach that well before she was able to read Reeves' knockabout books for younger readers, the Buster Bayliss series (Custardfinger is rated 6.3).

Meanwhile, she is lucky that her favourite author, Marcus Sedgwick, uses relatively simple sentences, as that means that many of his books are in her range (My Swordhand is Singing, a complex tale of vampires set in medieval Eastern Europe, is 4.9). However, she's missed out on his Floodland, which is 3.9, and it won't be long before she's progressed to the point where all of Sedgwick's novels will have to be 'comfort reads', as Kevin-Crossley Holland's magnificent Arthur books already are (4.2–4.3). Never mind - because she can always stretch herself with Daisy Meadows; Kate the Royal Wedding Fairy is 5.4.

AR level 5.4
AR level 5.0
I could go on - but here is one final one to ponder. Debi Gliori's Pure Dead Brilliant is a whopping 7.5. This means you won't be able to progress to it till you are too high for The Lord of The Rings (6.1), and in fact you'd be in the same ball-park band as The Silmarillion at 7.9.

The computer analysis used to grade AR books clearly doesn't read them - it processes them as strings of words. The more important aspects of books - the ideas, the plot twists, the characters, the emotions, the metaphorical language - all of this is entirely missed. Yet this is most of what makes a book enjoyable, memorable, heart-breaking, what touches or thrills you as a reader. I am immensely saddened by the idea that whole swathes of teenagers are going to flick past The Owl Service and fail to pick it off the shelf of the school library because it has a black sticker on it (easy) rather than green or purple (harder, higher, more worthy).

Accelerated Reader is beloved of Ofsted, because it produces quantifiable results and signs of 'progress'. It certainly seems to be getting more pupils reading, and excited about getting their rewards and stickers - but it's encouraging at the same time a very quantitative approach to what reading is, and how we should do it. According to the National Literacy Trust survey, an extra 7% of pupils using the scheme are prepared to say they enjoy reading compared with those that don't use it. I wonder if that's an achievement worth celebrating if 100% of those pupils now think of reading as a goal-oriented activity with 'difficult' vocabulary being the measure of value?



Cecilia Busby writes fantasy adventures for children aged 7-12 as C.J. Busby. Her latest book, Dragon Amber, was published in September by Templar.



www.cjbusby.co.uk

@ceciliabusby

"Great fun - made me chortle!" (Diana Wynne Jones on Frogspell)

"A rift-hoping romp with great wit, charm and pace" (Frances Hardinge on Deep Amber)


0 Comments on Accelerated Reader - What's it all about? Cecilia Busby as of 1/9/2015 2:49:00 PM
Add a Comment
3. Arthur The Seeing Stone by Kevin Crossley-Holland


Arthur The Seeing Stone was written by Kevin Crossley-Holland and published by Arthur A Levine Books in 2000. It has won several awards, including the Guardian Children’s Fiction Award. It is historical fiction with a healthy dose of magic, divided into 100 short chapters (but only 338 pages in large easy print).

The Seeing Stone is the story of a 13 year old boy in 1199 who lives on his father’s manor in the Marches (the borderland between England and Wales). Arthur is the second son of Sir John de Caldicot and his older brother Serle has already served as a squire. Arthur desperately desires to be sent away in service as a squire, but is still a page - he needs to work on his Yard-skills. Serle is the typical domineering, bullying big brother, but Arthur is excellent with words. He squirrels away in his writing-room and records everything he sees and does; hence, the story of Arthur as we read it in the book.

Merlin, the famous wizard of Arthurian legend, also lives on Sir John’s manor, protected from certain death for his blasphemous ways so Oliver the priest claims and he gifts young Arthur with an obsidian stone. Arthur learns to look into the stone and see what the stone wishes to teach him. Visions of his namesake, the famous King Arthur and visions of himself. And it is through the stone’s stories that the reader along with Arthur learn how magical deception created King Arthur’s conception. There is enough mystery to the stories as they parallel what is happening in Arthur de Caldicot’s life that the reader is held in suspense to the end of the book, eagerly turning each page to find out what will happen to both of the Arthurs.

I highly recommend this book as a supplement to any fourth-grader and above studying medieval history. Through a fascinating and delightful tale, the reader will come away with an accurate picture of life in a medieval manor. There is a too short glossary of words in the back of the book and a cast of characters list in the beginning. The reader, unfortunately, will need to refer to the characters list frequently in the first third of the book as Holland does not introduce characters consistently when we meet them in the text of the story. He counts on the reader referring to the list. I would have preferred he wrote the text as if there’d been no list.

There is also a couple of potentially problematic scenes in the book. One is a graphic scene of the slaughter of the pig for the Hallowe’en feast (Chapter titled ‘Poor Stupid’). But Holland is careful to write the scene matter-of-factly so the reader intrinsically understands that the slaughter was a part of the children’s daily lives in this period of time. A sensitive animal lover could easily skip over this scene and not miss anything pertinent to the plot. There is also the re-telling of an incident in which a girl is fondled (p. 221 of ‘The Manor Court’ chapter), but it is brief and necessary to understanding the characters involved. This too could easily be skipped if deemed inappropriate to the reader.

On the other hand, the entire Hallowe’en scene was my absolute favorite. Holland makes it absolutely fascinating to learn the rituals of 1199 on a holiday still celebrated by many. Guisers wear costumes to ward off evil spirits, “the walkers are out and about”, carved turnips by the door are lighted and a wonderful ghost story is told by the Welsh grandmother, Nain (said nine). Arthur’s mother looks into a mirror and sees things and we completely understand that this is what they thought was true and right at the time. Whether you celebrate Halloween or not, this book is worth reading just to have an educated understanding of the holiday in medieval times.

Of course, we also get a healthy dose of learning about the Crusades and King Richard and his brother King John and the turmoil England found itself in at that time. On a personal note, King John (yes, the bad guy) is one of my ancestors and so it made for especially good reading for me.

I am looking forward to reading the next two books in Holland’s Arthur Trilogy. Good fun!

 

0 Comments on Arthur The Seeing Stone by Kevin Crossley-Holland as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment