Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Scholastic instruction consisted of several elements. The first was the lectio : a teacher would read an authoritative text followed by a commentary, but no questions were permitted. This was followed by the meditatio ( meditation or reflection) in which students reflected on and appropriated the text.
Inch by Inch is a 1960 picture book written and illustrated by Leo Lionni.The book tells the story of an inchworm who likes to measure everything. The book was a recipient of a 1961 Caldecott Honor for its illustrations.
Somewhere in the Darkness was first published in 1992 through Scholastic. [2] An audiobook adaptation was released in 1999, also via Scholastic. [ 3 ] The novel has gone through several subsequent reprints, including an e-book release.
A librarian at the University of New Brunswick, Lesley Beckett Balcom, recommends the book with reservations, stating, “the sensational illustrations, bold and surreal, are the strength in a book that tries rather too hard to teach a lesson.” [18] An English teacher at Indiana University Northwest believes that A Bad Case of Stripes is “a ...
Rules is the debut novel by author Cynthia Lord.Released by Scholastic, Inc. in 2006, it was a Newbery Honor book in 2007. [1] It is a Sunshine State Young Readers book for 2008–2009 and won A 2007 Schneider Family Book Award. [2]
Scholastic (NAS: SCHL) reported earnings on Dec. 20. Here are the numbers you need to know. The 10-second takeaway For the quarter ended Nov. 30 (Q2), Scholastic missed estimates on revenues and ...
Studia Neoaristotelica - A Journal of Analytical Scholasticism is a peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to the study of Aristotelian philosophy in the scholastic tradition. It was established in 2004 by the University of South Bohemia Faculty of Theology, Czech Republic and is now published by Philosophy Documentation Center.
Scholastic was founded in 1920 by Maurice R. Robinson near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to be a publisher of youth magazines. The first publication was The Western Pennsylvania Scholastic. It covered high school sports and social activities; the four-page magazine debuted on October 22, 1920, and was distributed in 50 high schools. [3]