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    Secondary School Literature

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Secondary Schools - Academic Support
    700 Posts 243 Posters 397.1k Views 1 Watching
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    • A Offline
      autumnbronze
      last edited by

      lotus123:
      Hi

      Looking for \"Sharpening your senses : unseen poetry and prose for GCE O Level\" by Suzanne Choo. It's out of print according to popular bookshop and there's only one reference copy at National Library. However, one can only xerox 10% of the book according to the copyright law. Does anyone have a copy that you don't need anymore and willing to sell? thanks
      Hi!

      You can try the second hand bookstores at Bras Basah Complex.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DreamgearD Offline
        Dreamgear
        last edited by

        alidia:
        Is chinese literature compulsory in sap schools at lower secondary. Pls reply asap.Thanks

        Not all

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        • B Offline
          buds
          last edited by

          http://i41.tinypic.com/20psoav.jpg\">



          Anna's little brother, Ben, was born with hydrocephalus. He is profoundly disabled. But from the moment she sees him, Anna loves him, far more than she could ever have imagined she would love anyone. She spends every moment possible with Ben, cuddling him, comforting him, even teaching him to kiss. However, at school, Anna keeps Ben's disability a secret. It fills her with shame and she is too afraid of prejudice and mockery to face up to the reactions of her classmates. Until, inevitably, it is forced upon her.

          My friend Magda says she can't remember what it was like to be an adolescent. I can remember what it was like with perfect clarity. I remember the passion of it all. I remember making the most crashingly inappropriate statements in a fruitless quest to demonstrate my maturity. I remember how the tiniest setback felt like the most abject - and public - humiliation. During adolescence, our world view changes, is forced to change. We are required to accept that we are not at the centre of everything that happens, that other people have motives and desires irrelevant to ours. Becoming independent is a huge leap of faith. It's no surprise teenagers have such nuclear overreactions. They want independence, but they feel so, well, needy and dependent. In Anna, Laird captures this wonderfully well. Anna is a \"good\" person, and her mistakes and misdeeds aren't made from malice, but rather from an inability to cope with the pressures thrust upon her. Her struggles are all tremendously sympathetic.

          In fact, everything about Red Sky In The Morning is tremendously sympathetic. All the characters are flawed, all at times are unable to cope, all do things that are, at best, unwise. However, you don't lose sympathy with any of them. Even the most spiteful of Anna's classmates - and the book doesn't gloss over the immense capacity for psychological torture contained within a group of adolescent girls - are given stresses of their own to which they are reacting. As Anna begins to see this, she begins to find the independence she craves. It's the learning curve we've all followed.

          First published almost twenty years ago, Red Sky In The Morning isn't dated at all. Anna seems as fresh as my children do, and as any of their contemporaries do. It's absolutely and unrelentingly honest - over the course of the book Anna feels sick at the thought of adult sex, excited at the thought of having sex herself and fantasises about her parents dying and the ways in which she could heroically step into the breach. And yet, it's also subtle and finely observed.

          Children will love Red Sky In The Morning because of the many chords it will strike. Its powerful statement calling for the inclusion of the disabled will appeal to their fledgling sense of justice and its candour will win them over. Young people can spot a fake from a mile away. I think adults should read it too - any parent struggling with an \"impossible\" adolescent might gain some insight, might even remember how it was for them. Laird has a way of sifting through the compromises and alighting upon simple truths that many adults will find incredibly refreshing and even comforting. For everyone, it's a sensitive study of family stresses and responsibilities.

          Those under ten may find the emotional landscape unfamiliar unless they have some specific experience of disability, in which case they will recognise it all too well. All those aged ten and over will take something very valuable from reading this book.

          http://www.thebookbag.co.uk/reviews/ind ... beth_Laird

          :peekaboo: Hi! Anyone's DS/DD doing this in school?

          I'd really like to hear how your children worked through this in their Lit class. :please:

          Thanks in advance. šŸ˜„

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          • C Offline
            clay569
            last edited by

            Hi buds, I like this book for its raw and honest expressions of a young girl. It doesn't have flowery language but written so simply that it reaches deep in.


            DS isn't doing this for Lit. I only picked segments out to do with my kids to help them read with a thinking mind, to ask questions. That's quite a while ago. Thereafter they read the book then we reviewed the main themes. A very informal discussion, unlike Sch Lit class. Just sharing šŸ™‚

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            • B Offline
              buds
              last edited by

              Thank you, clay569. Yes, you are right. This book is written as is. I suspect though, that the literature in it is to delve deep into the scenarios in the book. To task upon a child/student to look beyond the words. To reach/dig deep, as you have mentioned earlier. For a start, I suppose is to find meaning of some of the difficult words that they come across as they read on. Only then, can the deeper meaning be aroused in the reader.


              Ok, I will bear in mind about asking questions and reviewing the main theme and the roles that each character brings to the story. Thank you for your sharing, appreciate it. šŸ˜„

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              • P Offline
                Poonie
                last edited by

                Hi

                Anyone wants to sell the Lit study guide for Bridge to Terabithia?

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                • A Offline
                  autumnbronze
                  last edited by

                  Dear parents of sec 1 kiddos,


                  Fret not if you cannot find the guide book for your kid's Lit text.

                  Just do a google \"study guide for xxx\" and you will be amazed at the array of links. Most of them can be accessed for free.

                  Secondly, you can go down to the second hand book stores at Bras Basah Complex. They contain a treasure trove of guide books. Some with hand written notes too!

                  Hope this helps!

                  šŸ˜„

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                  • P Offline
                    Porky Pig
                    last edited by

                    autumnbronze:
                    Dear parents of sec 1 kiddos,


                    Fret not if you cannot find the guide book for your kid's Lit text.

                    Just do a google \"study guide for xxx\" and you will be amazed at the array of links. Most of them can be accessed for free.

                    Secondly, you can go down to the second hand book stores at Bras Basah Complex. They contain a treasure trove of guide books. Some with hand written notes too!

                    Hope this helps!

                    šŸ˜„
                    Good information for lazy mummy like Porky. Thank you, AB!

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • A Offline
                      autumnbronze
                      last edited by

                      Porky Pig:
                      autumnbronze:

                      Dear parents of sec 1 kiddos,


                      Fret not if you cannot find the guide book for your kid's Lit text.

                      Just do a google \"study guide for xxx\" and you will be amazed at the array of links. Most of them can be accessed for free.

                      Secondly, you can go down to the second hand book stores at Bras Basah Complex. They contain a treasure trove of guide books. Some with hand written notes too!

                      Hope this helps!

                      šŸ˜„

                      Good information for lazy mummy like Porky. Thank you, AB!

                      Good things must share share ... :imcool:

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • F Offline
                        fightingmom
                        last edited by

                        autumnbronze:
                        Dear parents of sec 1 kiddos,


                        Fret not if you cannot find the guide book for your kid's Lit text.

                        Just do a google \"study guide for xxx\" and you will be amazed at the array of links. Most of them can be accessed for free.

                        Secondly, you can go down to the second hand book stores at Bras Basah Complex. They contain a treasure trove of guide books. Some with hand written notes too!

                        Hope this helps!

                        šŸ˜„
                        :thankyou: AB ! :snuggles:

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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