I received an e-mail last week from a student I taught this past year. She needed help selecting summer reading books from the required summer reading list. The students at my school receive really good summer reading lists, but the lists are big. It can be difficult to select a book when a child has too many choices. How do you narrow down and make good selections when you have many titles from which to choose?
Look for authors on the list that you recognize and see if there are new or different book titles by that same author.
Locate a title on the list that you have already read and really liked. Search that book title on a website like Amazon or Goodreads. These sites offer suggestions or “read-alike” book titles. Check the suggestions against your required list to see if there are any matches.
Often the lists are organized by style or genre. Look for books within the same genre. If your child loves survival books or mysteries or humorous realistic fiction select other books in that same category from the summer reading list.
Bring the reading list to your library or bookstore and ask people there for ideas. E-mail the teacher like my student did and ask if he/she has favorite book recommendations. Ask classmates what they are reading from the list.
Look up titles and check the page count. Start with a shorter book that can be completed quickly. I don’t recommend choosing a book simply because it is the shortest, but if the summer reading list is a little daunting, start with a quick read to get in the groove.
Look at the reading range of the book. Narrow down choices by choosing books at the lower end of a child’s reading range. If you are unsure of your child’s reading range, make a guess based on his or her upcoming grade level. If your child is about to be a 4th grader and was an average reader the previous year, look for books that are intended for 3rd graders or roughly 8 to 10 years old. There are websites that help with book reading ranges if it is not listed on the back cover of the book. Scholastic Book Wizard is easy to use.
Once your child has selected a book, stay involved. Read the first few chapters together. Ask questions about what is happening in the story. Many kids need some monitoring when reading independently to make sure they are grasping key events in the story.
Don’t have a list from your school? You can use some suggestions from the books TheRoomMom’s family is reading this summer.
Mr Star Wars’ Summer Reading Choices (age 12/13)
Maximum Ride series by James Patterson
Blood on the River by Elisa Carbone
The Crossover by Kwame Alexander
The Bad Books by Pseudonymous Bosch
Conspiracy 365 series by Gabrielle Lord
Among the Hidden series by Margaret Peterson Haddix
I am an educator. I am a little crafty; I like to make cupcakes, and I love projects. As my husband will tell you, these interests can quickly grow out of control when working on teacher gifts and class activities.
I'm diligently working my way through the recommended AP literature list (still). Some of it is enlightening and some encumbering. I need to change up classic TBR with a cozy mystery series.
Yes-- definitely take a break from AP lit books and read something fluffy! AP books require too much real thinking. It's summer. :-)
I got Counting By 7s from our library today. Excited to read it! :D
I hope you like it. I love the way the main character, Willow, fixes problems for people around her even though you start out thinking she is the one who needs help.
Thank you so much for this! I found you on Manic Monday. I get parents who ask me all the time for a Reading List...after 13 years of teaching you think I would have put one together!! Lol! Thank you!!
I make book suggestion lists all the time. Send those parents my way. :-) Thanks for the comment. Caitlin
Love your tips for picking a good book! Great list!
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I'm diligently working my way through the recommended AP literature list (still). Some of it is enlightening and some encumbering. I need to change up classic TBR with a cozy mystery series.
Yes-- definitely take a break from AP lit books and read something fluffy! AP books require too much real thinking. It's summer. :-)
I got Counting By 7s from our library today. Excited to read it! :D
I hope you like it. I love the way the main character, Willow, fixes problems for people around her even though you start out thinking she is the one who needs help.
Thank you so much for this! I found you on Manic Monday. I get parents who ask me all the time for a Reading List...after 13 years of teaching you think I would have put one together!! Lol! Thank you!!
I make book suggestion lists all the time. Send those parents my way. :-) Thanks for the comment. Caitlin
Love your tips for picking a good book! Great list!
Great ideas. Thank you for sharing.
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