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For our first class on September 6, we will be reading two picture books and three articles.
Where the Wild Things Are is a classic in the US now, but when it was first published in 1963, it was controversial. If you knew this book as a child, what did you notice this time that you might not have picked up before? Why might it have been problematic for adults, particularly in the early 60s?
Mirror is a wordless book constructed in a way I've never seen before (or since). Is there a right way to read wordless books? How might you share this one-on-one with a child? What would you do differently if you read it with an entire class? Is it even possible to read it with an entire class?
Edited later to add that students will be posting comments about people and topics relevant to each week's readings. Carli Spina has posted two here as exemplars for students. One is about Maurice Sendak and the other is about Jeannie Baker.
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