Críticas:
This book confirms the positive value of literature in children's lives and the value of parental involvement in the literacy process. -- Mary Ann Dzama "Childhood Education" One of the most creative--and readable--pieces of research to emerge recently in the field of children's literacy...The writing is graceful, even at times lyrical. -- Betsy Hearne "American Journal of Education" "This is a book for those who care about the miracle of literature that life imitates. It is a sensitive and learned account of two young girls growing up with parents who are both professionally and personally involved in that miracle. It recounts how the girls learned to recognize and to construe, as Faulkner once put it, the human heart in conflict with itself, first in fables and stories, and then in life itself. In a season when we mostly are supplied with books on learning to read, ' here is a first-class one on reading to learn.'" --Jerome Bruner "One of the most creative--and readable--pieces of research to emerge recently in the field of children's literacy...The writing is graceful, even at times lyrical." --Betsy Hearne, "American Journal of Education" "This book confirms the positive value of literature in children's lives and the value of parental involvement in the literacy process." --Mary Ann Dzama, "Childhood Education"
Reseña del editor:
Three-year-old Lindsey approached her mother wearing a stocking as a cap, its long leg dangling over her shoulder. "I'm Rapunzel", she announced, "and this is my braid". As parent, reading partner, and social science observer, Shelby Wolf documented countless moments like this one during the preshcool and early grade-school years of her daughters, Lindsey and Ashley. Over nine years, she taped their book-reading times together and kept detailed field notes, collected the girls' drawings and similar artifacts, and transcribed spontaneous incidents of talk and dramatic play. In "The Braid of Literature", her observations and analysis interweave with Shirley Brice Heath's commentary to present these materials within the context of current research in anthropology, linguistics, and cognitive psychology. Together, they have produced a study of two young children who are learning to negotiate between the multiple texts of their everyday lives and their make-believe story worlds. This record of the literary experiences and responses of Lindsey and her sister is in itself a fascinating case study of one family. Growing up in an environment with parents who value books and reading, the girls absorb and recycle stories, play acting their plots and speaking the language of their characters. In the events around them they begin to recognize the rules that govern the story world and to puzzle out how these rules work in life and literature. For researchers, this book should serve as a rich resource on a range of interdisciplinary topics - inner speech, transferred learning, oral and written language acquisition, children's facility with figurative language, and aesthetic and imaginative development. For parents and teachers, it is a dramatic confirmation of the important role that literary language can play in children's literacy and socialization. By choosing to spend time with children and finding ways to talk about books - or television or videos - adults confirm the importance of stories and of what they teach us about enduring human values.
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