This week marks the ! It’s true that many educators assign reading to their students over the summer. We also know that educators themselves have some books they want to read this summer. The following resources from provide some suggestions for summer reading for educators.
The author of “” recounts her family’s summer reading which gave her a chance to talk with her children about books and, ultimately, about life.
This Teacher to Teacher column invited teachers to respond to the question, “”
“” includes three teachers’ reflections on their personal reading lives and the reading instruction they provide to students.
For several years the editor of “TYCA to You” compiled . The editor states that the reading suggestions “span time and content in ways only voracious readers can.”
A study investigated the relationships between five junior high school teachers’ personal approaches to literature and their teaching of literature in ““.
When adults and teens read the same book, that shared experience can spark important conversations that might not happen otherwise. to hear about that all focus in some way on teens and their complicated relationships with family members, peers, and the larger world.
We here at pose these questions to you: What is on YOUR reading list this summer? Why? What titles are you recommending to others?