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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
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Zhang, Rong; Wessel-Powell, Christy – Journal of Children's Literature, 2023
Diversity, equity, and inclusion has long been the focus of educational scholarship. This study explores the potential of wordless books with protagonists of color for children to access portraits of diverse characters and engage with various stories. To expand the existing body of literature on diversity in picturebooks, this study offers two…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Picture Books, Childrens Literature, Inclusion
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Hill, Joshua – Journal of Children's Literature, 2023
The existence of transgender children is not new. However, for over 100 years, Western culture has worked to restrict the gender expressions and gender identities of children. This forces them into a binary model of gender understanding. This critical content analysis examined the ways that transgender children within picturebooks can both conform…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Picture Books, LGBTQ People, Sexual Identity
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Amy Burke; Melody Zoch – Journal of Children's Literature, 2023
In this article, the authors analyze four picturebooks about adoption that highlight these experiences of liminality. Children who have been adopted may feel torn between two families and cultures. Children who are adopted must make sense of their lives and identities, residing in a state of in-between-ness. Adoption presents a time of…
Descriptors: Disproportionate Representation, Picture Books, Adoption, Trauma Informed Approach
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Jackson, Sarah E.; Degener, Rebekah May; Sivashankar, Nithya – Journal of Children's Literature, 2022
In this article, we argue that picturebooks about food production, consumption, and distribution can provide rich opportunities for early childhood educators to facilitate critical conversations about culture, power, social action, and justice with their students.
Descriptors: Food, Picture Books, Childrens Literature, Social Action
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Coyne, Paige; Munroe-Chandler, Krista J.; Woodruff, Sarah J. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2022
Body image is a broad, multidimensional construct that encompasses an individual's perceptions, thoughts, and feelings about their own body, most often in relation to its physical appearance (Cash & Pruzinsky, 1990; Schilder, 2013; Thompson et al., 1999). Until relatively recently, the majority of body image and body-dissatisfaction research…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Childrens Literature, Picture Books, Human Body
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Wissman, Kelly K. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2022
In this article, the author considers the affordances of bringing theories of affect (e.g., Davies, 2014; Dutro, 2019; Leander & Boldt, 2013) to understandings of meaning-making with culturally sustaining picturebooks within an intervention setting. Culturally sustaining picturebooks are defined as books reflective of multiple languages and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Culturally Relevant Education, Teaching Methods, Picture Books
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Maton, Rhiannon M.; Dexter, Breeanna; McKeon, Nicolette; Urias-Velasquez, Emily; Washington, Breanna – Journal of Children's Literature, 2022
Nationally, one in 100 adults is currently incarcerated. Meanwhile, more than 2.7 million U.S. children--or one in 28 children (The Pew Charitable Trusts, 2010)--currently have a parent who is incarcerated, and many more U.S. children face the daily effects of familial incarceration due to past parental incarceration or the incarceration of other…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Picture Books, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions
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Stevenson, Alma D.; Beck, Scott – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
The educational needs of the children of migrant laborers have often been neglected by educators who have dismissed them as someone else's responsibility (Vocke, 2007). The migrants' complex transnational experiences have been largely overlooked in school curricula. This deficiency allows anti-migrant attitudes to fester among teachers and…
Descriptors: Migrants, Hispanic Americans, Educational Needs, Agricultural Laborers
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Yi, Joanne – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
More than just the movement across borders, transnationalism represents the entwining of past and present and the once discrete notions of the local, national, and global (Kivisto & Faist, 2010; Schiller, 1997). Transnationalism calls for a reconfiguration of identity and settlement that encompasses the realities of immutable linkages across…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Adoption, Picture Books, Global Approach
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Abas, Suriati; Bamanger, Ebrahim; Gashan, Amani K.; Guler, Aslihan – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
The rise in hate crimes toward immigrants across communities (Potok, 2017) has led to a focus on children's literature with immigration themes for opening up conversations in classrooms (Rodriguez & Braden, 2018). Because children's knowledge about people and the communities they live in is informed by the media, portrayals of immigrants'…
Descriptors: Muslims, Immigrants, Teaching Methods, Childrens Literature
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Teague, Latoya – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Educators and librarians have a responsibility to capture the transnational border-crossing experiences of all students, including children of the African diaspora. Narratives of African diaspora border crossings disrupt stories of linear migration. These stories feature histories of displacement, trauma, and unbelonging. And yet, they embrace…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Immigration, Immigrants, Trauma
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Doering, Katie L. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Recently, an awareness of the value of representation has demanded an expanded canon of texts that includes those concerning children with illnesses. Research shows that reading such texts to children with illnesses or disabilities has proven validating, comforting, and helpful in the development of a positive self-image (Goddard, 2011). This…
Descriptors: Cancer, Picture Books, Childrens Literature, Accuracy
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Wargo, Jon M.; Coleman, James Joshua – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Historically, early lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer-inclusive (LGBTQ+) picturebooks deployed representations of (in)human characters (i.e., birds, bunnies, shapeshifters, and more) to open readers to queer subjects (Young, 2019). While useful for expanding conceptions of queer life, such a move has had unintended consequences. The…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, LGBTQ People, Picture Books, Violence
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Wee, Su-Jeong; Kura, Kanae; Meacham, Sohyun – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
This study aims to understand how multiracial Asian American children are portrayed and illustrated in children's picturebooks, with a special focus on their racial identity development. Multiracial individuals are those whose parents are from two or more distinct racial groups (Reynolds, 2009; Viager, 2011). In this study, the descriptor…
Descriptors: Racial Identification, Multiracial Persons, Picture Books, Childrens Literature
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Shimek, Courtney – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Access to green space has always been a social inequity, but the recent global pandemic has exacerbated this injustice for lower-income families even more. Environmental access strengthens mental health, encourages exercise and healthy social habits, and reduces pollution. Many have argued that children not only need play, but they need play in…
Descriptors: Natural Resources, Play, Picture Books, Child Development
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