Guides Collections News. See below for key information about each edition and format published by Penguin Random House. Tags: literature , Writing , History , anne frank , diary of a young girl , reading , spanish-language edition , graphic adaptation. Related articles. Comics Education in Conversation: Jenny Robb.
December 17 General Graphic Novels. Tales from the Secret Annex. The Diary of a Young Girl. The Final Journey. Editions: X , , Home Groups Talk Explore Zeitgeist. I Agree This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and if not signed in for advertising.
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At last, in a new translation, this definitive edition contains entries about Anne's burgeoning sexuality and confrontations with her mother that were cut from previous editions. Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl is among the most enduring documents of the twentieth century. Favorite Childhood Books Non-Fiction Worth Reading Top Five Books of Books Read in 1, KayStJ's to-read list Satori Smiles Children's Book List Books Read By artturnerjr - Books About Girls No current Talk conversations about this book.
English 90 Portuguese Portugal 3 Swedish 1 All languages I read this book as secular Judaica, as opposed to Judaism, in the sense that it speaks to a group history that all Jews share, the Holocaust, regardless of their beliefs on religion. JuliaMay Dec 10, This book captures the attention of some many readers , allowing you enter in a world where things are negatively changing and tomorrow is not promise.
Reading The Diary of a Young Girl after so many years was a marvel. KatherineGregg Aug 13, I recently visited the Anne Frank house while I was vacationing in Amsterdam. Eleanor Roosevelt Introduction ,.
Barbara Mooyaart-Doubleday Translator. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Otto H. Frank Editor ,. Mirjam Pressler Editor ,. Susan Massotty Translator. Lessons are presented to the student in a checklist-type format. All assignments, including reading, timeline, writing, and others are listed for each lesson with a box to check when the task is complete.
In Level 1, lessons are structured a bit differently, in that there is some parent preparation highlighted in gray , a "main lesson" of assignments, and then several "additional activities" listed. Exceptions may be lessons which ask the student to begin reading a required book. In this case, a recommended time frame is given in which the book should be read, and follow-up writing assignments may be listed.
Occasionally websites may be listed to check out more information, but these are not absolutely necessary to the course if you are not able to visit them. Following the lessons, you'll find worksheets referred to in the lessons, outline maps used in map activities, and several appendices.
Although the guide is not reproducible, the author does give permission to copy the maps and worksheets for your family's use only. There are several important aspects of this course. First of all, with the exception of Level 1, there is little parent preparation. A "Letter to Parents" at the beginning of the guide explains the course, while the "How to Use This Guide" lists required resources and other necessary supplies, describes the organization of the student's binder, and briefly discusses several aspects of the program.
For the upper two levels, parents will be primarily making sure the necessary books and resources are on hand and ensuring that each lesson's work has been done and is complete. This leads to my next point, which is that at the end of this course, the student will not have "completed a workbook," but will have compiled their own meaty notebook with all their work from the course.
Instruction is given at the very beginning of the course on how to organize the student's notebook, and from that point on, the student will be putting all of their work into the binder. The binder will be not only a tremendous keepsake but a collection of all work done in the course. Finally, the timeline is a very important tool used in Levels 2 and 3 of History Odyssey.
This can be made by you, or you may choose to purchase Pandia Press's very attractive Classical History Timeline , which is described below. Events and people studied are added to the timeline throughout the course, and when they're finished with the guide, the timeline can be folded up and included in the student's binder. One bonus to the course is that they use well-known resources and literature that you may already own!
Check out the lists of resources beneath each History Odyssey Guide below - I'm sure you'll see many familiar Category Description for Novel Units Literature Guides : If you're looking for a study guide for a specific book, Novel Units probably has it covered! They produce hundreds of literature guides - only a sampling of them are listed here. Teacher Guides are pages - not voluminous, but enough for good coverage of the book.
Format of the guides vary somewhat by grade level, but have some common elements. They begin with a synopsis of the book and its author and some pre-reading activities that serve both to provide background for the novel study and initiate student involvement and thinking about the story. Chapter by chapter in some guides, multiple chapters lesson plans contain vocabulary words, discussion questions with answers , and suggested activities.
Some guides also include writing ideas. Some guides contain reproducible graphic organizers to aid student analysis. All include some culminating questions and activities. Again, these vary in scope and type by guide. There are no objective or essay tests, but each guide ends with a student assessment page that provides a list of projects or exercises to be completed to help evaluate student understanding. Student Packets although not available for every book vary somewhat by grade level and book.
Answers are included in the back, along with an essay evaluation form i. Student packets are not reproducible. Really, each of these components can function as a stand-alone product and can be used without the other, but for a more comprehensive study, they are best used in concert.
There is very little overlap between the two, even in the chapter-by-chapter questions - but completing the questions in the Student Packet will help prepare your child for the more in-depth questions found in the Teacher Guide.
If your child is working independently on a novel, the Student Packet can be used alone if available. If you want to do little written work and put more emphasis on discussion, the Teacher Guide can be used by itself. Please note that some guides have been written to correlate with a specific edition of a book.
Some of these editions are now out of print, and we do not carry all versions mentioned. Where multiple editions are available, such as Adventures of Tom Sawyer , the page numbers given in the guide may not correlate exactly. Literature guides abound, and each of them are slightly different from the rest, but if I may assert, these upper-level literature guides take a completely different angle altogether to literature.
These guides attempt not only to give the reader a deeper look at the novel, but also to instill in them a deeper understanding of the time that the literary work was written in, and the connection this has to the piece. They do this by including statistics from the time, pictures, and most importantly, primary sources of related writings published at the time.
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