Thursday, October 21, 2010

When Reading is Hard

I am gifted with two profoundly dyslexic children, and as a result am finding myself learning what books work for the reading challenged. So here are a few suggestions when you are faced with a child who is required to read something for school. These titles can also be strewn about the house to tempt the reluctant reader. I apologize for the girl bias but that is my reality.

Do not miss "The Cat on the Mat is Flat" and "The Big Fat Cow that Went Kapow" these look like regular young reader novels but are really Dr Seuss-esque rhymes with surprize endings, they even include some new vocabulary words, like shonky and wonky, By Andy Griffin of the "Butt Wars" fame

Babymouse by Jennifer Holm, a "graphic novel" series that is fun funny and lets kids read the bubbles. Babymouse is also a character who's imagination knows few bounds and is written by an award winning author.

Stink and Judy Moody are two series written by Megan McDonald, I don't like how the siblings treat each other but good lessons are usually learned in each story. A big plus for this one is the actual page layout, they got it right especially for the kids with the visual processing challenges, the font size is great, and they still have pictures. Stink is a little easier read than Judy so that would be the place to start.

Short books that are still thought provoking for the middle school student might be "Missing May" by Rylant, On My Honor" by Bauer, "Stone Fox" by Gardner, "Witness" by Hesse, "Love That Dog"and "Pleasing the Ghost" by Creech, "Skeleton Man" by Bruchac, "The Cay" by Taylor and "Skinny Bones" by Park. All of these offer things to talk about and could definitely be book report material.

Books in verse are another option for the reluctant reader, two of those above are also in this category. The poetry offers fewer words per page and insists on accurate word selection but all of these still tell a story that is easy to follow. "Out of Dust" by Hesse, I prefer "Witness" personally but it does fall into this verse category. "Dead on Town Line" by Conner, our mother/daughter group enjoyed this one but all felt it wasn't finished, a great start none the less. Ellen Hopkins has a series of books, these are teen/young adult novels that are filled with trauma, angst, suicide, drugs, and sex. Not for the faint of heart but they do pull you in and keep you reading. My favorite in this category is "Make Lemonade" by Wolfe, an amazing story that reads like elegant prose yet is all in verse. It is a trilogy so there is more if you like it.

Do I have to mention "Wimpy Kid?" The original was actually written for adults but no one would publish it for grown-ups, so they went with the kid option. The lexile is actually listed at 950 I believe for the first novel, which can be quite a stretch for the struggling reader, but if they ask to read it, hand it over. They will work though the hard bits just because they want to be like everyone else, and it is funny.

Action packed stories also pull these reluctant readers in and keep their interest high enough that plowing through the words is worth it. "Alex Rider" takes the cake in this category with a near death experience every 10 pages. Lots of explosions, death, mayhem, and violence put this in the teen category but my girls were just 9 when they started listening to these and they loved them, even my sensitive one was not bothered by all the blood and guts but seems to easily understand that it was all make believe. The current best selling "Percy Jackson" series by Riordan is another fast paced winner,

Books in journal, letter, diary or IM format also seem to appeal to those allergic to books. The Myracle series TTFN, TTYL, L8R G8R, and BFF is worth a look, I did get tired of all the whining and lack of action, they didn't do anything except chat and text, but it has some young girl teen appeal. For the much younger set the Dear America series is coming back, these are diaries or journals of historical characters that were very well done and I never understood why they quit publishing them. "Regarding the Sink" by Klise is a fun one and this author has several titles that fall into this category, her stories are told by not just letters but newspaper clippings, receipts, bills, post-its, and messages. Myers "Monster" is another with this visual appeal and don't miss "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian" by Alexi, it's a real gem. Older kids for both those last titles.

My brain is slowing so you will have to start with those and I will find others later.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Potty talk

I continue to be appalled at the crude behavior of people. This summer I attended a music event with my daughter, the venue was outside but bless the organizers there was no need to rely on the port-o-potties, but they actually have reasonably clean serviceable facilities. As the day progressed those nice bathrooms began to deteriorate. It was interesting that the stalls nearest the sinks and more heavily trafficed were the ones to survive the day. Those stalls around the wall away from too many eyes became hot beds of malicious activity. Throughout the day young women had managed to put out of commission at least 90% or the available toilets? WHY? I really don't get this one, eventually even the destroyer has to use this room, why is it funny to create unnecessary stentch and filth, plug drains and pipes, in a room that you will need. I truely was shocked at the destruction, it was going to take several hours of nauseating work to make all the facilitites serviceable.
This doesn't just happen at young peoples concerts, and youth have no monopoly on crude behavior in the bathroom. Visit any public toilet on a day when it has seen frequent activity and you will find a mess, unless there really is someone scheduled hourly to put on the gloves and take on the gruesome task of cleaning up after humanity. So can anyone explain to me why this happens? Is putting paper in a trash can, turning off water, peeing INTO the toilet instead of on it, flushing a comode all that difficult? By the looks of public washrooms these tasks must be insurmountable, we have failed out children once again in the transfer of the most basic of skills. Restroom attendants may be the only real solution, it's like having a mom in place to keep everyone on their best behavior, and I don't believe it would be much more expensive than the hours the clean up crew has to put in to repair damage.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Book Babble

Books again, maybe some sleepers, oft overlooked titles that are really good. A favorite for the younger kid needing a historical fiction title for school is Snow Treasure by McSwigan, based on an incident from WWII where a freighter showed up in New York harbor laden to the point of sinking, it's cargo gold. How the gold, belonging to Norway, is sneaked out of their country under the noses of Nazi's is the story premise, fun for boys and girls alike.
A Crooked Kind of Perfect, and Waiting for Normal are girl stories where day to day life for some preteen girls offers more than normal challenges and experiences that will make audiences grateful for uncomplicated lives. On My Honor an integrity story where lying has some awful consequences. Leap of Faith by Bradley, ' tis rare for religion to be treated so respectfully in a kid book, and this one goes way beyond respectful and gets it's Catholic facts right as well, great read on top of it all.
When the Whistle Blows by Slayton, I thought this one deserved a Newbery Honor at least last year. An amazing story told in vignettes that take place on All Hallow's Eve, through these snapshots of life you get to know a town, a man, a family, what life was like in simpler times, and that heros don't always look like heros. Harris and Me, everybody reads Hatchet but this one is Paulsen at his finest. Harris defines family and fun and is one of those few kid titles that make you laugh out loud often. Emma Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree, a quirky kid, Emma Jean must be on that ASD list somewhere but even quirky kids deserve and need friends, Emma learns this in her own special way.
Rash, a great boy read and discussion starter, is a sci-fi story years in the future where the USA is now the USSA, United Safety State of America. Football is illegal so are large dogs and most anything deemed unsafe, walking helmets keep you from hurting yourself, in even the most mundane of activity. But if you have an anger management problem and a bit of a rebellious streak you aren't long for life out of prison and prison is as unregulated, as the outside is constrained. Read at your own risk.
For the wee ones Three Tales of my Father's Dragon by Gannett, get this and read it out loud while they are young as your children will never pick this up on their own, and while at the library do the same with Homer Price by McCloskey of duckling fame, another romp through a small town that leaves you wistful for days gone by.

Those should keep you busy for this month, enjoy. In the meantime I am going to find out how to post photos, all this black needs some color.