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Jen Barton

Auteur de If Chocolate Were Purple

6 oeuvres 49 utilisateurs 9 critiques

Œuvres de Jen Barton

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Critiques

While taking a glance at the life and work of Bernice Sandler surrounding Title IX and the fight against discrimination, this book goes beyond that and offers ideas to stimulate more thought.

he style is informative and, yet, causal enough to keep 'heavy' reading at bay. It begins where Bernice Sandler's problems with discrimination truly began (or when she really noticed what was happening) and builds from there with only light touches on her childhood and earlier years as needed. Only those important moments are visited, which really mattered in her fight or realizations, and that also kept this from bogging down with facts, which break away from the main theme. It's easy to read, simple to understand, and pointed to make sure the reader doesn't grow bored.

And this is so much more than the history of Bernice Sandler and Title IX. There are sections, which give deeper explanations to help the reader understand the background or effect on modern situations. There are suggestions on how the reader can conduct their own interviews, research, social observations, writing Congress, and so on...all of which are encouraged to hit whatever topic or direction the reader sees fit. It simply tries to teach the process and encourage thought. There are also definitions, examples to help understand historical settings, and so much more. The history of Bernice Sandler doesn't really take up even half of the pages.

The author makes it clear how broad reaching Title IX is and explains how it is still a very modern topic, influencing many aspects of society today...which addresses current events as well. This does expand into the areas of sexual harassment and the LGBTQ community, explaining how they influence and are influenced by Title IX.

While this works well as a book, for those wanting to discover more about the topic, it also invites to be used in groups or as an extra addition to discussions. I received an ARC and was surprised how much more this book is than just a biography.
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Signalé
tdrecker | Apr 29, 2022 |
The book was very nice to read and learn more about Amelia Earhart but I get as though it could have used more involvement. Like maybe a illustration of her and text bubbles.
This book was about Amelia Earhart and her life as a female pilot. It talked about how she worked in order to pay for lessons with a female instructor. Earhart flew trips from Hawaii to Los Angeles and across the Atlantic.
½
 
Signalé
MakenzieOpat | Feb 26, 2022 |
This book carries a theme of love, as it create imaginary situations for the reader to live out. Through rhymes and cute illustrations, the plot of the book is that love never changes.
 
Signalé
Madelynnvallejo | 6 autres critiques | Jan 28, 2018 |
This book is about imagination and how that can turn ordinary objects into magical, exciting fun! This is a good example of fantasy because lollipop soldiers don't exist and they don't protect kids from the dark.
 
Signalé
Khegge15 | 6 autres critiques | Feb 5, 2017 |

Prix et récompenses

Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
49
Popularité
#320,875
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
9
ISBN
14