The short (or long or tall) of it: A concept book is a picture book that teaches a broad concept to young readers. Examples? Alphabet books, number books, books about c o l o r s , opposites, feelings and emotions. A concept is an idea, an abstract notion. Here's the rub. Very young readers are concrete thinkers, very "here and now." Luckily concept books do not have to teach the alphabetic principle, or algebra, or color theory. They teach what toddlers and young preschoolers can see, hear, touch, and feel - the upper and lowercase, quiet and loud, and happy and sad face of things. Three concept books by DENISE FLEMING: LUNCH (1998) from Henry Holt and Co. Concept: Colors. A toothsome mouse called Mouse eats his way through the primary and secondary colors and then some. The pictures are deliciously big. Bon appetit! The emergent literacy bent: The text is sparse and the letters large, fostering print awareness. Point out a few words as you read. Clever...
Linda, the New Look is great. I sent the site to my Nephew, good luck with it, Sonnie
ReplyDeleteI love your blog's new look too, Linda. Very colorful and eye-catching.
ReplyDeleteGotta love that Sandra Boynton too!
Thanks guys!
ReplyDeleteWe love all of Sandra Boynton's books, but this one is our all-time favorite! I bought it for my daughter when she was just a baby. She is now almost 4. It'll be well worn by the time her baby brother is finished with it.
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