12 Must Read Moral stories for kids + Tips to improve Story time

12 Must Read Moral stories for kids + Tips to improve Story time

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SEPTEMBER 27, 2021

12 MUST READ MORAL STORIES IN ENGLISH

12 Must Read Moral stories for kids + Tips to improve Story time:

A story is a great way to get your kids engaged. Probably one of the clearest memories of your childhood is that of the stories you read as a child.

Most of the stories of your childhood were probably stories with morals. These are not the kind of stories we see very often these days. Wouldn’t it be amazing to share these stories with your child? Why not start with this list that we have put together for you.

This post covers a list of 12 moral stories for kids in English and we also cover why these stories help your child inculcate moral values. 

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Author: A True Story" -- Of Frustration and Triumph!
BOOK IT LogoHelen Lester -- best known as the author of children's books such as Tacky the Penguin, A Porcupine Named Fluffy, Me First, and It Wasn't My Fault -- turns her attention to the trials and tribulations of authorship in her latest book, Author: A True Story, published by Houghton Mifflin. Lester offers her own writing experiences, not always joyful, in a book that encourages children everywhere not to give up in the face of writer's block! The story opens with Lester's early writing triumphs: "A long time ago there lived a three-year-old author. Me. I was the best grocery-list writer in the worldWhen I wrote a word I knew exactly what it said. And the best part was that I could turn each list upside down and the words said the same thing." But Lester's writings didn't always win such rave reviews as those bestowed on her grocery lists by her mother! In Author, Lester profiles her writing frustrations, from an early bout with a form of dyslexia to a time in her elementary years when "Often I couldn't come up with a single idea and my stories got stuck in the middle, and I couldn't think of a title, and I had trouble making the changes my teacher wanted me to make, and I lost my pencils, and I wondered why I was doing this, and I got very, very, VERY frustrated." Most youngsters will recognize Lester's feelings of frustration over early misfires. Indeed, Lester offers children her story as a tale of encouragement. Her words are carefully chosen to model the importance of not giving up when things seem to be worst. Lester even illustrates this book on her own. Throughout the book she wears the same playful expressions, the same spiky blonde hair, and the same clothing -- which grows with her as she grows from childhood to teacher-hood (when writing was her favorite subject to teach to second graders) to author-hood. We trail Lester as she submits her first manuscript -- "the best book I had ever written" -- to a publisher. The book was "rejected." Six rejections later, Lester finally became a published author. And therein lies one of the many lessons for writers of all ages everywhere. Even today, as a well-known published author, Lester has to work at her craft. She writes and rewrites, each time improving on her story. She keeps a Fizzle Box of ideas that don't quite work. But still -- "Sometimes writing is so HARD for me. I can't come up with a single idea, and my stories get stuck in the middle, and I can't think of a title, and... I get very, very, VERY frustrated." Today, Lester's storybook ideas come to her anywhere and at anytime. She scrawls illegible notes on paper at her bedside in the dark. She scrawls ideas on scrap paper. She's even scrawls ideas on old grocery lists! Kids will enjoy Lester's story of frustration and triumph. They'll enjoy a little glimpse into the life of a real author! Indeed, it'd be fun to share Lester's latest book with your students some Monday morning as a preview to reading a few of her popular storybooks. Read a different Lester book each day that week. Invite students to look for connections in those stories to ideas explored in Author: A True Story. Talk about where Lester's ideas for each story might have come from and what other titles she might have considered for each story. Then, on Friday, reread Author. It's the perfect "bookends" to an author study. Author: A True Story will entertain while reinforcing a message that teachers are always trying to convey to their students. It's a message that -- even today -- Lester has to remind herself of: Writing is hard work! Author: A True Story is available at bookstores nationwide. If you can't find a copy, ask your local bookseller to order one for you. The book was published this year (1997) by Houghton Mifflin Company.

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