Childlit Reviewer
Childlit Reviewer
Childlit Reviewer
Literature is thought, experience and imagination shaped into oral or written language that may include visual images.
There are different forms of literature, such as stories, ballads, family narratives, jokes, jump-rope jingles, street rhymes,
videos, paintings, drawings, film, recorded books, and computer programs, Literature entertains listeners and readers, at
the same time giving them access to the accumulated experience and wisdom of the ages.
Children’s Literature
Children’s literature is a part of the mainstream of all literature. It explores, orders, evaluates and illuminates the human
experience—its heights and depths, its pains and pleasures.
Like adults, children learn about the breadth and depth of life from literature. Memorable children’s authors skilfully
engage readers with the information, language, unique plots, and many-faceted characters create. “By allowing your
readers into the soul of a character we are letting them know more than life will ever divulge about another
human being”
Children’s literature is a literature to which children respond; it relates to their range of experience and is told in
language they understand. The primary contrast between children’s literature and adult literature takes into account the
more limited life experience of the audience, which is significant since readers use experience to understand text.
Fine children’s literature has the qualities of the clear true notes of a flute solo; its beauty and truth are not complicated by
experiences that go beyond the reader’s ability to understand.
Response to Literature
Readers make books come alive. What they bring to literature is as important as the literary work itself. Readers relate the
text they read to life as they know it in order to construct meaning within the text, using the author’s as meaning cues and
constructing meaning for the words based on their personal knowledge, associations and feelings.
Because the meaning of a text depends on the reader’s experience, the same reader may construct different meanings
for the same text in separate readings of that text. “Each time we talk about a book we discover our sense of it, our
ideas about it, our understanding of what it is and means, even the details we remember have changed and
shifted and come to us in different arrangements, different patterns” (Chambers, 1983).
Literary Response Continuum: BOOK READER
INTERESTED, DOES NOT FINISH THE BOOK >> SOMEWHAT INTERESTED >> ENJOYS THE BOOK, FINDS IT
INTERESTING >> EXCITED, WANT TO SHARE THE FEELING ABT THE BOOK >> FINDS THE BOOK TOTALLY
ABSORBING
The Importance of Literature in Early Grades Classroom
Books enrich, broaden, and bring joy to children’s lives
Literature motivates readers to think, enhances language and cognitive development, and stimulates thinking.
It takes children beyond everyday experiences, broadening their background, developing their imagination and sense of
humor, and enabling them to grow in humanity and understanding.
Literature can provide pleasure, relaxation, and opportunities for aesthetic responses
Providing Enjoyment: Good books give readers pleasure. Some readers respond to an enjoyable book through total immersion,
concentrating to the exclusion of all else, laughing or crying as the mood of the story shifts.
Perceiving Aesthetics: Aesthetics pertain to the beauty readers perceive in a literary work. Literature is verbal art that leads readers
to appreciate the beauty of language. It adds aesthetic dimensions to readers’ lives, leading them to view their personal experiences,
events and people.
Providing Enjoyment: Good books give readers pleasure. Some readers respond to an enjoyable book through total
immersion, concentrating to the exclusion of all else, laughing or crying as the mood of the story shifts. Others find literary
enjoyment form acquiring new, fascinating information from nonfiction.
Enhancing Understanding (Understanding Self and Others): Books stimulate readers’ emotional responses. Readers
chuckle over the antics of characters in stories, gain insights into different roles in life and learn about the feelings
associated with various experiences.
Enhancing Understanding (Understanding Cultures): Through identifying with children in other cultures, readers learn
about the ties that unite people everywhere. Children who come to understand and appreciate various cultures are more
likely to realize that people throughout the world share the same emotions, experiences, and problems.
Developing Imagination: Imagination is a creative constructive power. Every aspect of a daily life involves imagination. Creative
thought and imagination are intimately related to higher-order thinking skills. Creative thinkers strive to develop or invent novel,
aesthetic, constructive ideas.
Increasing Information and Knowledge: Reading enables children to participate in experiences that go far beyond mere facts.
Stimulating Cognition: Literature is a way of thinking. It serves as a source of knowledge and sounding board for children’s
reasoning.
Providing Language Model: Literature assumes greater importance when considered as a model of language and the interactive
language process.
4. An exemplary children’s literature comes with big or readable text and captivating illustrations.
1. Characters - In children’s literature, character is used to mean a person or personified animal or object.
Characters could be categorized as: round (a character who has a variety of traits); flat (less well developed and has usually a
single trait); static (does not change in the course of the story); and dynamic (a well-developed character who changes).
Characters may be analyzed through the following: Physical traits Inner qualities Revelation of the character Relationship to
other characters Types of character
2. Setting - The setting is the time and place in which the story occurs.
Backdrop Setting: setting is of secondary importance; story focus is likely to be on characters, character confrontation, dialogue,
action and the development of conflict
Time and place influence action, character and/or theme. Characters behave in a given way because of time and place
3. Plot - The plot of a story is the sequence of events showing characters in action.
Narrative Order – the way or the order in which the writer chooses to unfold the story to the reader
o Flashbacks: Writer disrupts normal time sequence to recount some past event
o Person vs. Self o Person vs. Person o Person vs. Society o Person vs, Nature
Pattern of Action – the pattern that the action of the story takes place
4. Point of View - is the side of the story the reader sees as revealed by the author through the characters.
First Person o Story told through first-person narrator “I” whose actions and feelings influence story
Theme Theme is the idea that holds the story together or the author’s message to the reader. It is the main idea or the central
meaning of the story.
5. Theme - is the idea that holds the story together or the author’s message to the reader. It is the main idea or the central meaning
of the story.
Primary – the central theme which is of more importance than the rest
Secondary – themes which seem of lesser importance than the primary one
Implicit – a theme not stated openly but derived from the characters and action of story
6. Style - is the author’s choice and arrangement of words in order to create plot, characterizations, setting, and theme.
Connotation – associative or emotional meaning of a word; usually used to describe a character or situation
Imagery – the appeal of the senses; helps to create setting, establish mood and character
Figurative Language – words used in a non-literal way, giving meaning beyond the usual sense. Ex) personification, simile, or
metaphor
Allusion – tends to have more meaning for mature readers; relies on a reference to something in our common understanding, our
past, or our literature
Symbol – something that operates on two levels of meaning, the literal and the figurative levels
Consonance – close repetition of a consonant sound within a phrase but not in the initial position
7. Tone - tells us how the author feels about their subject. It cannot be isolated from the words of a story and it also influences
meaning.
Condescension – when someone looks down upon us, treating us as though we are unintelligent or immature
Humor – usually comes from a situation or happenings that make children laugh
Parody – usually a device for older readers since it relies on the reader’s memory of a known piece of writing or of a way of talking
Fewer full-length novels and more short, high-interest, low-reading-level novels begins written for 10- to 12
An increase in the publication of bilingual books to accommodate the rapid increase in second language learner students.
Reading Along - In the read along strategy, teachers provide needed word prompts and cues, as well as fluency in the reading act. As
learners follow along, their pacing is propelled by the fluency of the reader.
of puppets.
Reader’s Theatre - is a particular type of dramatic pedagogy, which uses scripts and performance to enhance the comprehension of
a text. text. Students work in groups to practice the performance of a script, which has been given to the group or written by the
group. Multiple readings of the text, through rehearsal, offer opportunities to address fluency, phrasing, intonation and voice
production. Reader’s Theatre does not constitute an activity of memorizing but it entails a dramatic oral expression, through reading
aloud. Kindergarten children develop their language and social emotional skills through script reading and expressing emotions.
Children are able to develop their social skills by rehearsing and performing Reader’s Theater in groups.
Chamber Theatre - Its use in the classroom is aimed at helping students to become more aware of the controlling intelligence and
the dynamic relationship between them and the characters in a short story or novel.
Chamber theatre develops various skills among children: Creativity, variety, creation of mood, and vocal interpretation, Use of
sense memory, Use of movement, gesture, posture, and facial expression, Overall clarity and entertainment value of performance
A good plot. A clearly defined characterization. Enough dialogue. Scenes easy to portray on stage.
Choral Recitation - is the interpretation of poetry by several voices speaking as one. It is the group interpretation of poetry for the
purpose of sharing enjoyment and increasing enjoyment of it. Choral recitation involves the use of a book or script.