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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Frank Remkiewicz, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Set Aside Back-to-School Fears with Froggy!

Froggy Goes to School

By Jonathan London; illustrated by Frank Remkiewicz

 

 

For those of the Baby Boomer generation, there was a jingle on the radio that signaled the end of all things summer. It presaged school, schedules, earlier bedtimes and butterflies in the tummy time, as all manner of imaginings emerged before the first day of school. The jingle was sponsored by a clothing store long since defunct, having gone the way of chain stores such as E.J. Korvettes and Alexanders. It’s still on YouTube.  The popular, but ominous jingle went:

 

School bells ring and children sing,

IT’S BACK TO ROBERT HALL AGAIN!

Mother knows for better clothes,

IT’S BACK TO ROBERT HALL AGAIN!

You’ll save more on clothes for school,

SHOP AT ROBERT HALL!

 

To quote the anvil salesman from “The Music Man”, “Not on your life, girly, girl!” We did not shop at Robert Hall because as do many public and private school students of today, we wore a UNIFORM – that great leveler of individuality and competition in school attire. Come to think of it, does the antsy amphibian, Froggy, wear a uniform to school?

Find out from that famous frog, as he is a GREAT go to read aloud for parents and kids facing their very first day of school or their 3rd!

Can you parents remember sometimes having had dreams preceding the first day of school about being late via missed buses because of alarm clocks that don’t ring? Froggy’s nightmare is a bit more extreme. Though awakening late, he does make the bus, BUT forgets to don school clothes of ANY KIND save undies!! Thank goodness, he wakes up to his father’s bright “Rise and shine,” (my dear mom used the SAME line), to discover his worst fears were a DREAM.

Young readers can fully identify with the green goggle-eyed young frog that is an easy stand in for them and their concerns. Froggy shares them and lives them – first.

Kids will feel a calm settling over their pre-school nervousness as Froggy joins in the school days activities with relish, getting some things right, like his name printed on the desk, while other skills need a bit more work such as paying attention, speaking softly and not falling out of his seat!

Young back-to-schoolers who find themselves drawing comparisons to Froggy, will find similarities and a few relieved, “Hey, I never did that!”

The youngsters are having a fine time with their teacher, Miss Witherspoon, sharing their summer adventures, when Mr. Mugwort, the Croc enters with a glare on his face just as Froggy is singing the song he learned when he was taught to swim. Is Froggy in trouble on his very FIRST day? No way! Mr. Mugwort is a singer of songs too!

Please join Froggy and your young reader in allaying all fears about the first day of school. If Froggy and family can happily navigate the return to school, so can you and your young scholars!

                                    

 

                                                     

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2. Review: Gus Makes a Friend by Frank Remkiewicz

By Bianca Schulze, The Children’s Book Review
Published: February 9, 2012

Scholastic Reader Pre-Level 1: Gus Makes a Friend

By Frank Remkiewicz

Reading level: Ages 3 and up

Paperback: 24 pages

Publisher: Cartwheel Books (November 1, 2011)

Source: Publisher

What to expect: Friendship, Snow

Recognizable to many as the illustrator of Jack London’s Froggy series, Frank Remkiewicz has developed a new early reader series staring a sweet natured rhinoceros named Gus.

Gus wants to go outside and play when he peers out the window and sees snow. His parents are both busy, so Gus uses initiative and builds himself a snowman named Snow Boy. The happy colored cartoon illustrations really help to bring the story to life—Gus is almost always smiling and all of the characters ooze a joy that subliminally encourages new readers to read on. The sentence structures are simple and short —the longest sentence is comprised of five  words—yet, in Gus Makes a Friend, Remkiewicz still manages to pack entertainment into the large and easy-to-read text. Published by Scholastic as a level Pre 1 “First Reader,” “Gus” books are a great choice for preschoolers and kindergartners.

Add this book to your collection: Scholastic Reader Pre-Level 1: Gus Makes a Friend

Also recommended: Scholastic Reader Pre-Level 1: Gus Gets Scared

Visit: www.remki.com

©2012 The Childrens Book Review. All Rights Reserved.

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3.

Frank Remkiewicz and Jonathan London, the men behind the frog.

0 Comments on as of 11/9/2008 2:10:00 PM
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