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  • We Love Our School!
  • Written by Judy Sierra
    Illustrated by Linda Davick
  • Format: Hardcover | ISBN: 9780375867286
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  • We Love Our School!
  • Written by Judy Sierra
    Illustrated by Linda Davick
  • Format: Hardcover Library Binding | ISBN: 9780375967283
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  • We Love Our School!
  • Written by Judy Sierra
    Illustrated by Linda Davick
  • Format: eBook | ISBN: 9780375989032
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We Love Our School!

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A Read-Together Rebus Story

Written by Judy SierraAuthor Alerts:  Random House will alert you to new works by Judy Sierra
Illustrated by Linda DavickAuthor Alerts:  Random House will alert you to new works by Linda Davick

eBook

List Price: $7.99

eBook

On Sale: June 28, 2011
Pages: 24 | ISBN: 978-0-375-98903-2
Published by : Knopf Books for Young Readers RH Childrens Books
We Love Our School! Cover

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ABOUT THE BOOK ABOUT THE BOOK
ABOUT THE AUTHOR ABOUT THE AUTHOR
PRAISE PRAISE
Synopsis

Synopsis

This picture book about the first day of school, featuring a frog, a duck, a mouse, and a snail, combines a story in rhyme with colorful graphic rebuses, making it a fun book for parent and child to share in the reading. Children about to enter kindergarten or first grade who long to be able to read will get a sense of accomplishment by "reading" the little rebus pictures in the story. Judy Sierra, author of Wild About Books, uses bouncy rhyme and rhythm as cues for the child to name the pictogram rebuses. Preschoolers will enjoy following the animals and their teacher, Tom Burkey (who is a turkey), through a happy first day of school.
Judy Sierra

About Judy Sierra

Judy Sierra - We Love Our School!

Photo © Christopher Briscoe

Poetry and folklore have enchanted me since childhood. My parents began reading poems to me when I was two years old, and they encouraged me to learn my favorite verses by heart. By the time I was in second grade, I was writing my school reports in rhyme. I also loved putting on plays with my friends. I wrote scripts and sewed costumes. Robin Hood and the Greek myths were my favorite dramatic inspirations.

After college, I wrote plays and adapted stories for children’s theater. With my husband, Bob Kaminski, I performed as a puppeteer and storyteller at schools, libraries and theaters. We were best known for our shadow puppet performances, and our shadow production of the Chinese story of Monkey King was featured at the Smithsonian Institution’s Discovery Theater.

In 1986, I heard a speech by children’s author and illustrator Uri Shulevitz. He remarked that a picture book is a small theater piece that an adult to presents to a child. I thought to myself, “I know a lot about small theaters and entertaining children. I should write a picture book.” Two years later, The Elephant’s Wrestling Match was accepted for publication. Like many of my subsequent children’s books, it was my retelling of a folktale.

I had long been fascinated by folktales. Why, I wondered, was the same story told in far distant regions, with so many variations? Why were folktales so much fun to dramatize and improvise upon? Why do children love them so much? In my search for answers to these questions, I enrolled in the Folklore and Mythology Program at UCLA, and received a Ph.D. in 1993. Today, I draw upon my academic studies to make my folklore books as authentic as possible. When I retell a folktale, I study the entire storytelling tradition of the culture as thoroughly as I can, and whenever possible I contact people from that culture to help me understand the meaning and importance of a tale. I attempt to translate not only the words of the story, but also to recreate the storytelling experience. In most cultures, storytelling is a participatory event, and so I endeavor to create texts that invite audience participation.

In my newest book, Schoolyard Rhymes, I celebrate another folk tradition, children’s rhymes. These poems, which have been enjoyed by generations of children, are laugh-out-loud funny. I hope the book will inspire parents, teachers, and grandparents to recall and share even more favorite schoolyard rhymes from their own childhoods. Meanwhile, I’m busy teaching handclapping rhymes to my 5-year-old granddaughter, Maxine, and helping her 6-month-old Alden learn Pat-a-Cake.
Praise

Praise

"This is a simple but thoroughly charming little gem of a book. While the story line covers no new ground–four animals enjoy typical school activities–the presentation raises it to the next level. For one thing, Sierra has told the tale in effortless rhyme. For another, the rebus format makes it a perfect lap-sit choice with a parent or caregiver reading the words and a child “reading” the easily decipherable pictures. The illustrations . . . are bright and cheerful and should have considerable appeal for the new-to-school set."
- School Library Journal

"Just right for new kindergartners and preschoolers who cannot yet read words, this is one school story that they will be able to help in reading. The draw of Sierra’s latest is the rhyming verse that is interspersed with rebus pictures, allowing children to chime in and participate in the telling . . . Davick’s brightly colored digital illustrations show all the quintessential elements of school—from the playground and bus outside to the decorations and supplies inside. Throughout, kindness, sharing and being helpful are modeled by the anthropomorphized cartoon animals in both the artwork and the nursery-rhyme cadences. A comforting and empowering build-up to the big day—kindergarten (or preschool), here we come!
- Kirkus Reviews

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