Stanley and the Wild Words

Author:   Mona Voelkel ,  Nancy Kincade
Publisher:   Arigna Press
ISBN:  

9781737695523


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   15 November 2022
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 12 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Stanley and the Wild Words


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Overview

"Do you have a child who asks, ""Why doesn't spelling make sense?"" A student whose bad spelling cuts short their creative expression? That was Stanley. ""I'm never writing again!"" Stanley vows. He crumples up his favorite dragon story and throws it into the trash. But a mysterious book hits him on the head and leads him into the Forest of Wild Words. There, Stanley learns that spelling is not all that hard. In this playful book, award-winning reading specialist Mona Voelkel shares the approach to spelling that has helped so many students gain confidence. Acclaimed artist Nancy Kincade's fanciful illustrations bring the Forest of Wild Words and its inhabitants vividly to life. Once you travel with Stanley on his adventure, spelling will never be the same."

Full Product Details

Author:   Mona Voelkel ,  Nancy Kincade
Publisher:   Arigna Press
Imprint:   Arigna Press
Dimensions:   Width: 21.60cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.313kg
ISBN:  

9781737695523


ISBN 10:   1737695529
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   15 November 2022
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 12 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Editorial Reviews In Stanley and the Wild Words, Mona Voelkel has embedded morphology in a most engaging story with charming illustrations. Enormous turns out to be a very interesting word. Lots of words could benefit from semantic-spelling analyses of their relatives. - Linnea Ehri, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor Emerita, Educational Psychology, CUNY Graduate Center Stories like this are certainly the way to go. It's the sort of thing kids are likely to remember. The problem, of course, is that there isn't an easy source to find these stories, and show the word families that match the reading level. We need more Stanleys. - David Crystal, Linguist and Author of several books, including Spell It Out: The Singular Story of English Spelling The way you talk about the Latin was masterful. Not too much - just enough. The prefixes and suffixes hanging from the tree was a nice touch too. Key to SWI is the word sum and you have highlighted it beautifully in this story. Then you continued on to include this base's bigger family. This book is great. - Mary Beth Steven, Mrs. Steven's Classroom Blog What a fun, whimsical way to introduce a valuable understanding of where words come from. It opens up a conversation about how words are formed, which would help a child understand the meaning of the word in a deeper sense. The illustrations make the whole story and concepts come alive. - Kathy Adams, Fifth-Grade Teacher Stanley and the Wild Words shows us that what we learn about the spelling system changes us. It's the learning itself that's transformative. This book doesn't offer the usual fare of making kids feel better about being dyslexic or struggling with spelling. Instead, they're given an inkling that they can actually understand spelling. - Gail Venable, Author of Backpocket Words: Sharing the Essence of English Spelling Stanley and the Wild Words offers a simple introduction to investigating English spelling beyond a word's letters and sounds. It will surely inspire students to follow their own quests and dig deeper into the reasons words are spelled the way they are. - Rebecca Loveless, Structured Word Inquiry Coach and Co-Author, The High Frequency Word Project


Editorial Reviews In Stanley and the Wild Words, Mona Voelkel has embedded morphology in a most engaging story with charming illustrations. Enormous turns out to be a very interesting word. Lots of words could benefit from semantic-spelling analyses of their relatives. - Linnea Ehri, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor Emerita, Educational Psychology, CUNY Graduate Center Stories like this are certainly the way to go. It's the sort of thing kids are likely to remember. The problem, of course, is that there isn't an easy source to find these stories, and show the word families that match the reading level. We need more Stanleys. - David Crystal, Linguist and Author of several books, including Spell It Out: The Singular Story of English Spelling The way you talk about the Latin was masterful. Not too much - just enough. The prefixes and suffixes hanging from the tree was a nice touch too. Key to SWI is the word sum and you have highlighted it beautifully in this story. Then you continued on to include this base's bigger family. This book is great. - Mary Beth Steven, Mrs. Steven's Classroom Blog What a fun, whimsical way to introduce a valuable understanding of where words come from. It opens up a conversation about how words are formed, which would help a child understand the meaning of the word in a deeper sense. The illustrations make the whole story and concepts come alive. - Kathy Adams, Fifth-Grade Teacher Stanley and the Wild Words shows us that what we learn about the spelling system changes us. It's the learning itself that's transformative. This book doesn't offer the usual fare of making kids feel better about being dyslexic or struggling with spelling. Instead, they're given an inkling that they can actually understand spelling. - Gail Venable, Author of Backpocket Words: Sharing the Essence of English Spelling Stanley and the Wild Words offers a simple introduction to investigating English spelling beyond a word's letters and sounds. It will surely inspire students to follow their own quests and dig deeper into the reasons words are spelled the way they are. - Rebecca Loveless, Structured Word Inquiry Coach and Co-Author, The High Frequency Word Project


Author Information

Mona Voelkel is an award-winning reading specialist with a passion for picture books. When she and her students discovered that spelling really does make sense, they were empowered beyond words. Visit www.monavoelkel.com, where you can investigate words from the story, sign up for a newsletter, or contact her for a school visit. Nancy Kincade won a Christopher Award for Even If I Did Something Awful, one of several books she illustrated for Atheneum Books. After a very enjoyable career in art education, she is delighted to be illustrating once again. Her most recent books include A God of Purpose: Fareena's Friendship and A God of Redemption: Hannah's Heartache. Nancy can be contacted at mckinne4j@gmail.com.

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