jim and meesie
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2004
- Messages
- 335
Wish I lived in Fl said:I also agree for more practice on critical reading. And one way to start is reading a hard book and the cliff notes at the same time.
Ouch!!! This OP is giving me so much to love!!!! Cliff notes, no, nay, nay, never especially in 7th grade. The crutch of so many stressed out college students. Yes, Cliff Notes give an opinion just not your own opinion!!!
The point of this all is to learn to think and also to learn to write. Once you've read and read again and have matured enough to know what to look for (maybe graduate school) you can peak at Cliff Notes. At that point you have thought about your own opinions about a particular literary work and can take someone elses opinion for what it's worth. Glad the OP is having Lasik surgery today so she can't read my rant!!!
Now I confess to checking out "Spark Notes" (an online version of Cliff Notes) last year when my daughter's summer reading entering 7th grade was "The House on Mango Street". After reading the book (short but kindof heavy themes for just 12 years old) I just had no idea what she was supposed to be getting out of the book. Between English teacher friends and "Spark Notes" I educated myself a bit, but I'm 47 and learned to "read" and "write" long ago.
I still felt like I was cheating!
disykat said:I've decided my kids must be really brilliant. They read a lot and they just keep a seperate book at school for SSR. Sometimes they have 3 to 5 books going at once - one for literature circle (what we used to call reading group!), one for SSR, the ones they go through at home for fun, plus read alouds by their teacher or that we are reading as a family. One son loves to read and the other not so much, but they both figured out how to keep a SSR book at school pretty early in grade school - and they did it on their own!
My kids too, I am amazed how they keep the books straight reading 3 at a time but it seems to work.

