By Mary Bigelow
Posted on 2008-07-22
I’m getting ready for a two-week camping trip to upstate New York for a family reunion, sightseeing, and hiking/birdwatching. I’m also looking forward to propping up my feet and reading in the fresh air. As I add to my bag of reading materials, I’m referring to the summer issues of all three NSTA journals for ideas.
The Science Teacher article Take a Voyage of Discovery has suggestions for reading that will take us to special places on Earth, take us through time, and help us reflect on our own classrooms. Keep Up With a Good Book in this month’s Science Scope has even more suggestions, ranging from physical and evolutionary science to biographies of scientists. And Science and Children’s Science Books for Professional Pleasure Reading has lists organized by subjects (biology, earth and space, etc.). I like this list because of the suggested titles are all content-related. Regardless of the grade level you teach, be sure to check out all three articles!
In all three articles, the titles are annotated with a brief description. I downloaded the articles and highlighted the books that look interesting and checked off the ones I’ve already read. I’ll keep the lists in my briefcase all year to refer to. Reading professional and content-related books is an excellent form of professional development. One summer, my district bought several copies of books and gave them to interested teachers. We read the books over the summer, and during the August inservice time, we met and shared what we had read. We fixed up the library to look like a coffee shop, including pastries, and spent a wonderful morning sharing and recommending these professional resources.
Although I have downloaded articles to my laptop (legally of course!) or listened to books on tape on long drives, I’m an old-fashioned dinosaur (or Readasaurus as a student once said). I prefer the real thing when it come to books. I like the feel of the pages and being able to stop and reflect and to page back and forth. My local library is small, but it belongs to a statewide network of libraries so that I can get materials from anywhere! Of course, there’s always the online book sellers, the big book stores, and the NSTA bookstore for getting personal copies!