Category Archives: Reading

Summer Reading: Holes

Summer Reading: Holes

Upper elementary and middle school students will enjoy the novel Holes by Louis Sachar. With a reading level of 5.2, the book is accessible to upper elementary students and interesting to middle schoolers.  It’s a Newberry Award winner and has been made into a popular movie.

Holes is the story of a boy named Stanley who seems to have everything go wrong in his life.  He blames it on a family curse from four generations back, but the results seem very real to him.  He’s a social outcast, overweight, and now accused of a crime he didn’t commit and sent to a juvenile detention camp with a twist- the warden believes that boys’ characters can be changed by having them dig holes in the desert in the hot sun.  Is he secretly searching for buried treasure?

The book touches on themes of friendship, destiny, and even literacy.  The characters demonstrate determination and strong will.  It will appeal to girls as well as to boys, and is an outstanding choice for summer reading fun.

Online resources to use with Holes include:

SparkNotes: Holes

Free Holes Online Trivia Game

Activity Suggestions for Holes

Scholastic.com Activities for Holes

Don’t forget that you can help your child learn to write an outstanding book report in the Book Report Workshop!

Ready, Set, SUMMARIZE!

Ready, Set, SUMMARIZE!

Book reports, critiques and other responses to literature are fixtures in most language arts curricula. Teachers use them to assess a student’s understanding and analysis of their reading.  One key element in most of these assignments is the summary of the text, so it’s important that your student learn to summarize.  Here’s one method that can help.

Start by having your student summarize smaller pieces of writing.  Try a paragraph or even a single long sentence.  Challenge your student to find key words in sentences, or distill the paragraph into one or two sentences that contain the most important ideas.  This takes practice, so don’t be discouraged if the first attempts are off-base.

Once your student has the knack of summarizing paragraphs, you’re ready to work on a book.  Read a section.  This could be a paragraph, a page, or a chapter.  Have your student write down a specific number of important events or bits of information learned from that assigned section.  Check his or her work to see if you agree.  With practice, your student will learn to restate entire books in one or two paragraphs, and summaries will almost seem to write themselves!