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书名:美国学生文学读本(第4册)
作者:哈里·P·贾德森
排版:小贱
美编:流畅
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In the Fourth and Fifth Readers the selections are longer, the language more advanced, and the literature of a more mature and less imaginative character than in the earlier books.
The teacher should now place increased emphasis on the literary side of the reading, pointing out beauties of language and thought, and endeavoring to create an interest in the books from which the selections are taken. Pupils will be glad to know something about the lives of the authors whose works they are reading, and will welcome the biographical notes given at the head of the selections, and the longer biographical sketches throughout the book. These can be made the basis of further biographical study at the discretion of the teacher.
Exercises and word lists at the end of the selections contain all necessary explanations of the text, and also furnish suggestive material for language work. For convenience, the more difficult words, with definitions and complete diacritical markings, are grouped togetherin the vocabulary at the end of the book.
A basal series of readers can do little more than broadly outline a course in reading, relying on the teacher to carry it forward. If a public library is within reach, the children should be encouraged to use it; if not, the school should exert every effort to accumulate a library of standard works to which the pupils may have ready access.
The primary purpose of a reading book is to give pupils the mastery of the printed page, but through oral reading it also becomes a source of valuable training of the vocal organs. Almost every one finds pleasure inlistening to good reading. Many feel that the power to give this pleasure comes only as a natural gift, but an analysis of the art shows that with practice any normal child may acquire it. The qualities which are essential to good oral reading may be considered in three groups:
First—An agreeable voice and clear articulation, which, although possessed by many children naturally, may also be cultivated.
Second—Correct inflection and emphasis, with that due regard for rhetorical pauses which will appear whenever a child fully understands what he is reading and is sufficiently interested in it tolose his self-consciousness.
Third—Proper pronunciation, which can be acquired only by association or by direct teaching.
Clear articulation implies accurate utterance of each syllable and a distinct termination of one syllable before another is begun.
Frequent drill on pronunciation and articulation before or after the reading lesson will be found profitable in teaching the proper pronunciation of new words and in overcoming faulty habits of speech.
Attention should be called to the omission of unaccented syllables in such words asask.
The above hints are suggestive only. The experienced teacher will devise for herself exercises fitting special cases which arise in her own work. It will be found that the best results are secured when the interest of the class is sustained and when the pupil who is reading aloud is made to feel that it is his personal duty and privilege to arouse and hold this interest by conveying to his fellow pupils, in an acceptable manner, the thought presented on the printed page.
Stories
Travelers’ Wonders
Sifting Boys
What Alice Said to the Kitten The Story of Florinda
Tilly’s Christmas
Shun Delay
Little Charley
Classic and Fairy Tales
Th e Straw, the Coal, and the Bean
The Snow Image
Prince Ahmed
Tom Goes down to the Sea The Golden Fleece
Literary Biography
Robert Louis Stevenson Lewis Carroll
Charles Dickens
History, Biography, and Adventure
Our First Naval Hero
Sir Isaac Newton
The Spartan Three Hundred Hunting the Grizzly
Nature Study
Ants
The House I Live In
Poems
September
Travel
The Four Sunbeams
The Fountain
Th e Kitten and the Falling Leaves
Little by Little
The Pet Lamb
The Eagle
Under the Greenwood Tree Hiawatha’s Sailing
The Walrus and the Carpenter Th e Planting of the Apple
Tree
Lucy
To a Skylark
A Good Samaritan The Fairy Life
Tray
The Star-Spangled Banner My Native Land
Miscellaneous
Jefferson’s Ten Rules Psalm xxiii
Psalm xxiv