100% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views2 pages

Criteria For Selecting Childrens Literature

The document outlines criteria for selecting children's literature for grades 4-6. The selections should provide engaging and developmentally appropriate experiences, elicit thoughtful responses, represent various styles and structures, have literary merit, use language effectively, broaden cultural understanding, and develop sensitivity to individual differences. Teachers should carefully review materials according to these standards and choose texts relevant to their students and communities. The literature includes works that support reading, writing, and intertextual learning and represents various genres, traditions, voices, and connections to students' lives.

Uploaded by

Dalynai
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views2 pages

Criteria For Selecting Childrens Literature

The document outlines criteria for selecting children's literature for grades 4-6. The selections should provide engaging and developmentally appropriate experiences, elicit thoughtful responses, represent various styles and structures, have literary merit, use language effectively, broaden cultural understanding, and develop sensitivity to individual differences. Teachers should carefully review materials according to these standards and choose texts relevant to their students and communities. The literature includes works that support reading, writing, and intertextual learning and represents various genres, traditions, voices, and connections to students' lives.

Uploaded by

Dalynai
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

CRITERIA FOR SELECTING CHILDREN’S LITERATURE

Criteria for Selecting Children’s Literature


The titles listed in this document have been carefully selected to adhere to the criteria as set forth on page 54
of Foundation for the Atlantic Canada English Language Arts Curriculum (1996). The selections
• provide motivating and challenging experiences suitable for the learner’s age, ability and social maturity
• elicit personal, thoughtful critical responses
• represent a range of styles and literary structures
• have literary merit
• use language effectively and responsibly, and use language that is essential to the work
• broaden students’ understanding of social, historical, geographical and cultural diversity
• develop sensitivity to and an understanding that reflects individual differences such as age, gender,
ethnicity, religion, disability, class and political/social values

While every book listed in this document has received a careful review according to the criteria listed above,
teachers should always exercise particular care in selecting or recommending texts for classroom study and
discussion. Teachers are in the best positions to know both their students and the communities in which
they live. The section entitled Resources in Foundation for the Atlantic Canada English Language Arts
Curriculum (pp. 54-56) provides further guidance to teachers in the selection and presentation of learning
resources.

The broad selection of literature listed in this document


• includes prose and poetry that deal with issues and ideas related to children’s experiences and their
evolving understanding of themselves and the world, texts that they perceive as relevant to their own
lives
• balances traditional works with more contemporary ones, including works which bring new or
previously neglected voices into the classroom
• allows students to explore their own and others’ cultural and literary heritage
• includes works that can be paired or linked to provide for intertextual connections
• provides support to each of the four main components of the grades 4 -6 reading program — guided
reading, shared reading, independent reading (at home and at school), and read aloud
• provides support to both the independent and the collaborative writing components of the grades 4-6
curriculum

Teachers and administrators may continue to refer to An Annotated Bibliography of Children’s Literature for
additional assistance when selecting learning resources for their classrooms and school resource centres.

Selecting children’s literature: An Annotated Bibliography, grades 4-6--Draft, nOVEMBER 2008 


CRITERIA FOR SELECTING CHILDREN’S LITERATURE

 Selecting children’s literature: An Annotated Bibliography, grades 4-6--Draft, nOVEMBER 2008

You might also like