Sergeant Reckless: The True Story of the Little Horse Who Became a Hero by Patricia McCormick (original) (raw)

Emily's Story

The purpose of this essay is to analyse the case study of Emily, and demonstrate our understanding of the processes and relevant theories of human development. Emily is a 15-year-old girl who was referred to me for evaluation. Emily's parents are immigrants and her mother speaks minimal English. Recently Emily has stopped participating in class and is on the verge of expulsion. She has been caught stealing, has been violent towards her mother and ended up in the hospital after taking too many sleeping tablets. Emily has watched her father physically abuse her mother on several occasions.

Lisa Moore. Flannery. Toronto: Groundwood Books, 2016. ISBN 978-1-55498-076-5

Newfoundland and Labrador Studies, 2016

Lisa Moore's young adult novel, Flannery, takes me back to one of those childhood events shared by many who came of age in eastern Canada during the 1980s: a bus trip to Quebec City during which my friends and I passed around a dog-eared copy of Judy Blume's Forever. Ensconced inside the dust jacket of a safer, more sanctioned book, the novel became our rite of passage as we read it in the liminal space of the moving bus. Forever told us everything we were hungry to know about the adult world we were about to enter; truths about love and sex and female desire we knew we needed, but that grown-ups were keeping from us. Flannery is that kind of novel. It tells the kinds of truths that make me want to plant the book where the things that really matter reside in the teenage world: under my daughters' beds. Flannery is a coming-of-age novel that artfully employs the conventions of the young adult "problem novel" to beautifully and empathetically render the culture of youth in contemporary St. John's, Newfoundland. Like most protagonists of young adult fiction, 16-year-old Flannery has her share of challenges. The daughter of a single mother whose passion for creating art and writing her parenting blog doesn't pay the electricity bill, Flannery knows too well the shame that comes from trying to cash a welfare cheque at the supermarket. She's the kid who didn't get to go on the Quebec trip because her family couldn't afford it. She is also the kind of kid you might say has had to grow up "too fast," often forced to take on the role of the responsible parent. As well, Flannery is authentically capable and she is aware of the inequities that structure the adult world: "We used to be what's called the working poor, but now we're just plain old poor," she observes. Flannery is a good student, but she can't afford to buy her biology textbook, and it doesn't help that her mother Miranda blows the rent money on a toy helicopter drone for her 10-year old brother, Felix. Miranda seems impulsive and flighty at times-she wears a tiara as brought to you by CORE View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk

Little Women, Strong Personalities (Diary)

History has been written in myriad ways. This will be so in future as well. But one thing is certain: in the years to follow the most popular piece of writing will be the one which will account for the ordinary people’s concerns and their personal struggles to meet those, and shape their destinies by their own hands. A writing that instead of glorifying the works of a handful of charismatic political personalities, high profile socialites, noted academicians, and celebrated achievers in different walks of life brings out non-dramatic yet moving tales of fight of ordinary women and men against injustices will increasingly be sought after. Such writings will not only focus on nation’s extraordinary and unusual incidences but also those that will convey common people’s saga of their lives.

Representations of sibling relationships in young children’s literature

Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 1999

Children's conceptions of what sibling relationships can be like may be influenced, in part, by the literature they read. This study examined the degree to which positive and negative dimensions of sibling relationships were portrayed in a sample of children's books (n ϭ 261). We also investigated how mothers and fathers were depicted when responding to sibling conflict. Results indicated that although children's books often represent warmth and involvement between siblings, they rarely described children engaging in conflict management or relational maintenance activities. Parents were predominantly portrayed as responding to children's conflict using controlling methods rather than techniques that might foster negotiation and problem solving. Characters who were middle children are under-represented in children's literature. Results are discussed in terms of how educators can select, use, and adapt books in their efforts to help strengthen children's sibling relationships.

Adolescent Transformation In the Short Stories of

2010

many theories of adolescent psychology. Each of these stories depicts what happens when something goes horribly wrong in the course of an already difficult stage of life. through different psychological adjustments. The two boys discover the difficulties of adolescent romance, hero-worship, peer group formation and exclusion, and power reversal. The narrator in-Pan complex as she witnesses her sister go through an adolescent romance. She despises and fears-the changes that adolescence and adulthood bring issues of adult imitation, lack of a strong male role model, peer loyalty, and emotional repression.