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Reviews

Your guide to recently released books and other teaching resources.

For additional reviews of French-language resources, visit pourparlerprofession.oeeo.ca. With the exception of some classroom sets, items reviewed are available on loan from the Margaret Wilson Library at the College. Contact us at 416-961-8800 (toll-free in Ontario 1-888-534-2222), ext. 679 or email library@oct.ca.

An image of the book cover for "Time Out." The cover image is an empty student desk.

Time Out

By Liane Shaw

Anyone who has ever worked with children with behavioural challenges in a self-contained or regular classroom will appreciate Liane Shaw’s frank and raw portrayal of her experiences as a young teacher working with special needs students in an Ontario school. In addition to being cathartic, Shaw’s purpose in recording the emotional, professional and personal challenges she encountered as a Special Education resource teacher is to draw attention to what she argues are woefully inadequate support systems for students at risk, inside and outside of schools: “Ten years after saying good-bye to my last group of ‘behaviour kids’ … there were still far too many students in need and far too few practical resources to provide long-term sustainable support.”

Like the students themselves, the solutions to the myriad mental health problems these children face are complicated and, yes, expensive. Coming from broken, group, abusive and/or foster homes, Shaw suggests these children require a level of support that goes well beyond what most schools currently offer. In some ways, the focus of Ontario’s new Health and Physical Education curriculum attempts to address the mental health needs of a growing number of students in Ontario classrooms, but ultimately it is up to the teachers to carry out these initiatives.

Despite the daunting nature of her daily work with students, Shaw clearly understands that the influence of a caring adult is the primary means through which her students learn both social skills and, possibly, even a little bit of math and reading. “Sometimes all we have to offer are moments in time when life is a little less difficult than it was a moment before … it’s not enough — nowhere close — but it might plant in them a tiny seed of hope that they are worth something to someone.”

Shaw’s book leaves readers with the knowledge that good teachers continue to do good things for the challenged children with whom they work.

Michael Bellrose, OCT, is the principal of A.B. Ellis Public School with the Rainbow District School Board in Espanola.

Time Out: A teacher’s year of reading, fighting, and four-letter words, Second Story Press, Toronto, 2014, softcover, ISBN 978-1-9277583-32-6, 272 pages, $19.95, distributed in Canada by UTP, secondstorypress.ca

An image of the book cover for "Ready, Set, Learn." The cover image is an apple with a bullseye on it, at the center of the bullseye is a pencil.

Ready, Set, Learn

By Brenda Stein Dzaldov

This practical book transcends the often vague descriptors for assessing learning skills and delves into explicit instruction about how to actually teach those skills so that students can learn how to expand their knowledge.

Learning skills transfer between all subject areas and are essential components and indicators of student success. Organization, collaboration and initiative are among some of the basic skill sets explored in this treasury of high-interest lessons and activities for elementary-level students. As the book progresses, communication and memory skills are also considered. The book includes rubrics, organizers and models designed to meet the needs of both individual students and whole classes. Students’ learning styles, preferences and interests are acknowledged throughout the book, and closure for each activity includes a self-reflection piece and suggestions for descriptive, ongoing feedback to both students and their parents about learning skills.

Teachers recognize the valuable role next steps play in assessment. This book shows them how to create opportunities for discussion and for modelling strategies so that students can learn how to set specific goals and success criteria for measuring their own development. Open the pages of this book to identify what learning skills your students need. Then learn how to collect the evidence and take the next steps to support their continued growth as part of your daily instruction.

Anne Marie Landon, OCT, is acting principal at George Vanier Catholic School in Combermere, Ont., with the Renfrew County Catholic District School Board.

Ready, Set, Learn: Integrating powerful learning skills and strategies into daily instruction, Pembroke Publishers, Markham, 2015, softcover, ISBN 978-1-55138-302-6, 144 pages, $24.95, pembrokepublishers.com

An image of the book cover for "Substitute Teaching?" The cover image is a teacher peeking through a silhouette.

Substitute Teaching?

By Amanda Yuill

Called in at very short notice to primary/junior classrooms, substitute teachers are often at a loss for how and where to begin teaching a classroom of sometimes unruly and certainly unknown students. In this enthusiastic combination tool kit/ instruction manual, Yuill explores how substitute teachers can re-engage their original passion for making a difference in students’ lives and actually teach.

To help set the stage, this highly readable guide for new or experienced teachers begins with relationship-building activities. It moves on to ready-to-use ideas for lessons (with companion reproducibles), along with a collection of strategies for managing your attitude and expectations, and dealing with typical problems. Solid classroom management techniques are examined as are practical curriculum plans. A unique component of the book is a brief description of typical student development, which takes a quick look at physical, social, emotional and academic characteristics at every primary grade level. Organized by grade, it is a helpful snapshot for teachers who are parachuted into teaching students with whom they have little or no experience and few reference points.

Yuill outlines proactive job-finding techniques for the substitute teacher seeking a full-time position, the career-substitute teacher looking for the next assignment, or the retired teacher who may be seeking a different perspective on the classroom experience.

Nadira Baksh, OCT, has recently completed a combined honours specialist in English and history and is a classroom volunteer with the Peel District School Board.

Substitute Teaching? Everything you need to get the students on your side and teach them too! Ready-to-use tools, tips, and lesson ideas for every grade from K-8, Pembroke Publishers, Markham, 2016, softcover, ISBN 978-1-55138-312-5, 160 pages, $24.95, pembrokepublishers.com

An image of the book cover for "This is a Great Book.” The cover image is a hand holding a red book.

“This is a Great Book!”

By Larry Swartz and Shelley Stagg Peterson

This is a Great Book! is rooted in the belief that offering your students great books to read and showing them how to dig deeper into their own responses to them is the foundation of turning them into real readers. This all-in-one guide, which starts with the underpinning educational research and ends at assessment profiles, blackline masters and appendices, represents a continuum of reading in many genres from chapter books to young adult novels.

Novels are a great way to stimulate students’ critical abilities and to engage with a wide range of responses that can transcend words and open possibilities and concepts in the wider world. The 101 literacy events outlined in the book invite students to delve into a text not only with written responses but with discussion, through the arts and using online media. Attention is given to exploring reading that is based on the preferences and tastes of students as they develop a lifelong love of reading.

Mary Veronica Moloney, OCT, teaches Grade 4 at D’Arcy McGee Catholic School with the Toronto Catholic District School Board.

“This is a Great Book!”: 101 events for building enthusiastic readers inside and outside the classroom — from chapter books to young adult novels, Pembroke Publishers, Markham, 2015, softcover, ISBN 978-1-55138-308-8, 136 pages, $24.95, pembrokepublishers.com

An image of the book cover for "The Way to School.” The cover image is a group of young people on a boat.

The Way to School

By Rosemary Mccarney With Plan International

Stunning colour photographs fill this picture book illustrating how students around the world get to school. Children are shown traversing long distances on treacherous water, cliffs, valleys, tunnels, mountain paths, bridges and roads. Various modes of transportation are depicted including carts, dogsleds, rafts, boats, zip lines, and animals such as donkeys and water buffalo. Some pictures are shocking — such as the one where a child is crossing a river on a tightrope in the Philippines. The pictures are from all over the world including China, Indonesia, Cambodia, Nepal, Brazil, Canada, United States and Africa. The photographs are generous, taking up most of the space on the pages. The minimal text is large and easy to read.

This book could be used in association with many topics including diversity, cultural studies, transportation, landforms and the effects of natural disasters. The main message of the book is that it is a great privilege to be able to attend school.

Margaret Grift is a librarian at John Knox Christian School in Brampton, Ont.

The Way to School, Second Story Press, Toronto, 2015, hardcover, ISBN 978-1- 927583-78-4, 32 pages, $18.95, secondstorypress.ca

An image of the book cover for "Susanna Moodie.” The cover image is an illustration of three people running in a field.

Susanna Moodie

By Carol Shields and Patrick Crowe

Susanna Moodie became one of Canada’s first literary icons with the publication of Roughing It in the Bush, her memoir of life in the Canadian wilderness. She was born into the English gentry, and after her father died she and her sisters turned to writing to assist with the family finances. Shortly after marrying Captain Dunbar Moodie, the young couple immigrated to Canada with hopes of finding prosperity in a new land. Instead, they faced innumerable hardships and setbacks, including a house fire, sickness and the death of a child. Susanna was angry and felt that the land agent’s promise of a new and easy life was false and misleading. While her husband was away on active military duty, she began writing and selling short pieces detailing their struggles. These stories would eventually become Roughing It in the Bush, published in 1852.

This graphic novel adaptation of her memoir is a perfect conduit for introducing Moodie’s book to readers in Grade 8 and above. The text is based on Carol Shields’s original screenplay for a movie. Selena Goulding’s clear and captivating illustrations make the material very accessible by bringing the story to visual life.

Moodie’s work has influenced a number of Canadian authors, including Shields and Margaret Atwood, who wrote the introduction. Budding writers will no doubt find inspiration in this tale of a pioneer woman and author. With the publication of this graphic novel, a new generation can be introduced to this classic tale of one woman’s determination and courage.

Bev Bellrose is a library technician at Sudbury Secondary School.

Susanna Moodie: Roughing It in the Bush, Second Story Press, 2016, Toronto, softcover, ISBN 978-1-77260-003-2, 152 pages, $22.95, secondstorypress.ca

Photos: Stephen Ferrie