Author picture

Frank Serafini

Author of Looking Closely in the Rain Forest

21 Works 669 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Frank Serafini is professor of literacy education and children's literature in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, Arizona State University. His books include Reading the Visual: An Introduction to Teaching Multimodal Literacy and Remixing Multiliteracies: Theory and Practice from New London to show more New Times. show less

Works by Frank Serafini

Looking Closely in the Rain Forest (2010) 106 copies, 2 reviews
Looking Closely along the Shore (2008) 84 copies, 3 reviews
Looking Closely across the Desert (2008) 34 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

There is no Common Knowledge data for this author yet. You can help.

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
The first time I read this book I didn't like it. Why? Well, on the first spread there's a rhyming riddle "Look very closely/what do you see?/Sand dunes?/Pussy willow?/What could it be?" and the facing page shows a section of a photograph. You turn the page and the bold heading identifies the photograph, "It's a squirrel monkey" and then gives several paragraphs of information about the subject and the facing page shows a detailed photograph.

The first thing that went through my head was that show more this book was too old and too young. Toddlers who would enjoy the simple riddle rhymes wouldn't sit still for the lengthy informational paragraphs. Elementary-age children who would sit still for the paragraph were going to roll their eyes at the "baby rhymes."

Then I realized I was being inflexible and silly, not realizing how very, very useful this book could be with a little adaptation! Toddlers - read the rhymes and let them guess, then turn the page and help them identify the photograph. End of story, everyone has fun! Older kids, don't read the rhymes and just ask them to identify the circled section - then turn the page and read the information. They'll love it! First and second graders love guessing games, if they're not too babyish.

Now that I've wrapped my mind around it, this is a gorgeously photographed book that will work equally well for toddler storytime, school visits, and educational use by teachers. I am off to check out the other books in this series!

Source: Review copy provided by Kids Can Press through Raab Associates.
Verdict: Highly recommended, especially if you work with a range of ages.
show less
This book would be excellent for introducing the rainforest to third through fifth grade. The vivid pictures throughout the book and descriptions give students an insight on what the rainforest is and what it contains.
This book uses detailed and close up images of nature in the forest, shore, desert and garden to help promote discovery of nature around different types of environments. Recommended for second and third grade readers.
Great book. ..... Story of Afro Americans who left the South after WW1 to migrate to the North. This is a story of triumph over adversity.

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
21
Members
669
Popularity
#37,727
Rating
4.0
Reviews
8
ISBNs
38
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs