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James Howe for younger readers!!
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Author James Howe came to speak to a group of my students today and was so dazzling I wanted to suggest ..."
Thanks Damon--and this is a fine place for this!

Another positive to my students reading it? They stop using any language that may be offensive to gay students, and they will correct others caught using the same language. It's a win-win in my book!

That's great to hear - I'm a big believer in teaching with books.


They might be meant for a little younger, but they're fun reads. Totally Joe is written in an interesting way that my students enjoyed. The narrator starts each chapter with a letter of the alphabet and what it means for him (A is for Addie, his best friend) and the chapter relates to it. My students used that same format for reading projects and based it on their own lives instead. It was a fun way to not only get to know the character, but my students as well.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Misfits (other topics)Totally Joe (other topics)
Totally Joe (other topics)
Totally Joe (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
James Howe (other topics)James Howe (other topics)
Author James Howe came to speak to a group of my students today and was so dazzling I wanted to suggest some of his books to the group. They're really intended for Junior HIgh students (6th-8th grade in the USA) but they are entirely about identity and bullying and peer politics. His reading was SPECTACULAR.
Afterwards, we fell to chatting and discovered some cool similarities in our childhoods with supportive parents. I marched right out and bought and devoured the first two books in his "Misfits series": The Misfits and Totally Joe. That second book is about an out gay seventh grader and is a must read, but both books were sweet and piercing...and much beloved by young students apparently.
Highly highly recommended!! Especially for folks who know younger kids asking hard questions about not fitting into the boxes they're given by peers and parents.