The Boy with His Head Stuck in a Book: A Digital Pop-Up Book

Publisher:   Newcastle Libraries & Information Service
ISBN:  

9780993195624


Pages:   28
Publication Date:   28 April 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Boy with His Head Stuck in a Book: A Digital Pop-Up Book


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Overview

A book to inspire a love of books! An ordinary boy is dragged to the library one mundane Saturday afternoon, much to his dismay; there are a million other things he'd rather be doing! Glumly traipsing up and down the aisles, he comes across an ancient, mysterious book with a mind of its own, and when his head becomes trapped within the pages, he is catapulted into a magical world filled with dinosaurs, dragons, pirates and ghosts...

Full Product Details

Publisher:   Newcastle Libraries & Information Service
Imprint:   Tyne Bridge Publishing
ISBN:  

9780993195624


ISBN 10:   0993195628
Pages:   28
Publication Date:   28 April 2017
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children's (6-12)
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

The possibilities for the classroom are endless: children could write an information text about their favourite dinosaur; investigate what life was like for children in Victorian times; design a pirate antagonist; write spells or create recipes for magic potions; research the habitat of animals in the jungle; or create author biographies. Better still, as the texts aren't referenced explicitly, children can work together to identify the books from which all the characters originate and could be tasked to find these books in their local library.The National Curriculum encourages teachers to make use of library services to support the teaching of reading and writing.English Curriculum Links:The National Curriculum for Key Stage 2 English clearly states that children should be taught to:* read books that are structured in different ways, read for pleasure and maintain positive attitudes to reading - augmented reality reading is key to inspire disengaged pupils to read for pleasure.* increase their familiarity with a wide range of books, including fairy stories, myths and legends, traditional stories, modern fiction, fiction from our literary heritage, and books from other cultures and traditions - 'Head in a Book' introduces fifteen famous texts in an interactive way which children can then go on to explore in more depth.* enjoy and understand language, especially vocabulary, to support their reading and writing. Pupils' knowledge of language, gained from stories, plays, poetry, non-fiction and textbooks, will support their increasing fluency as readers, their facility as writers, and their comprehension - 'Head in a Book' has the capacity to expand pupils' vocabulary.Children can investigate words unfamiliar to them and be encouraged to use dictionaries or deduce their meaning based on contextual clues. Just some of the vocabulary worthy of clarification may be: engulfed, commotion, emerged, listed, mutiny, vast, spectre, stealthily, beacons, vain, poised, underlings, tomes, dislodging, and underling.* make comparisons within and across books - 'Head in a Book' references a multitude of various texts which children can go on to compare and contrast.* read and discuss an increasingly wide range of fiction and poetry and recognise different forms of poetry...prepare poems to read aloud and perform --- 'Head in a Book' is a narrative poem and its rhythmic structure makes it an ideal text to perform or read aloud.* discuss and evaluate how authors use language, including figurative language, considering the impact on the reader - 'Head in a Book' facilitates the teaching of figurative language through usage of idioms, analogy, imagery, similes and metaphors.* 'Head in a Book' can also be used in the explicit teaching of grammar and punctuation: using commas to clarify meaning or avoid ambiguity in writing; using hyphens to avoid ambiguity; using brackets, dashes or commas to indicate parenthesis; and using semi-colons, colons or dashes to mark boundaries between independent clauses.


Author Information

'The Boy With His Head Stuck In A Book' is an augmented reality or 'digital pop-up' book for children age 7-11 (Key Stage Two) but can be used for shared reading with younger pupils. It is a narrative poem about a boy who is disinterested in reading and prefers watching films (a good character comparison can be drawn between the protagonist and Mike Teavee in Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory). The book was initially penned for reluctant readers; in particular boys, as there is still a reading attainment gender gap in both primary and secondary schools. The author, a primary English teacher, noticed that disengaged boys were more inclined to pick up a book with a technological element, a book which bridges literature and digital media. Picture books seem to have had a much quieter time lately and are, perhaps, awaiting a revival with some fresh creativity helped by new technologies and new interactions between readers and the page. - Barry Cunningham, OBE, 2016.

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