Speech Pathology Australia Book of the Year Awards results
Posted on October 21, 2009 by by Valeri
The Speech Pathology Australia Book of the Year Awards  2009 ceremony was held yesterday Tuesday 20 October in Canberra, ACT.
Three simple reasons why the awards are so important:
- Enhance peopleâs awareness of the role speech pathologists play in literacy development.
- Gradually develop a nationally recognised pool of books that speech pathologists can recommend for the development of oral language and speech and/or sound awareness.
- Promote the Association with the Book of the Year award ceremony.
It also provides parents with information on what books are available to help with their kid’s speech development.
Best Book for Language Development:
Young Children 2-5 years
The Terrible Plop -Â By Ursula Dubosarsky
Based on a Tibetan myth, a sound in the forest sets all the animals running for their lives from the Terrible Plop.The language used is wonderfully repetitive and playfully rhythmic, with a wide variety of interesting words used â from striking âdescribingâ and âactionâ words, to a plethora of animal names.
The story lends itself to great character voices and different tones. The repetition of âthe terrible plop!â allows children to participate and chorus along with an adult reader, which assists engagement.
The lexical choices support vocabulary development, rhyme and sight-word recognition.
The âheroâ of the story being the youngest, smallest, most frightened creature helps young children realise the potential of themselves as brave, clever characters in their own lives.
Best Book for Language Development:
Lower Primary 5-8 years
The Gobbling Tree -Â By Mark Carthew
The Gobbling Tree fires the imagination of children as they search for numerous items and problem solve with innovative solutions.
The elements of suspense throughout the book, keep the reader hooked and wondering what the tree could possibly gobble up next!
The Gobbling Tree provides some great examples of the âmagicâ of words. Witty rhyme, repetition and onomatopoeia (eg swish which imitates the sound associated) are used in such a way that the story is bound to engage readers and expand their vocabulary.
Higher-order thinking is promoted through mystery, ridiculous concepts and prediction, while bright colourful illustrations engage children in this great read-aloud book.
There is a strong narrative format, and the circular ending lends itself to oral language extension and text innovation tasks. The characters are readily identifiable and from a range of ages and genders.
(New Frontier Publishing)
Best Book for Language Development:
Upper Primary 8-12 years
Noodle Pie -Â By Ruth Starke
âAndyâ is trying to maintain his Aussie identity in an unfamiliar place.
This humorous perspective on differing ways of life lifts Noodle Pie above other more sombre stories tackling the big issues of refugees, cultural differences, poverty and familial obligations.
Pages turn faster with a smile as the everyday language used conjures up comical images.
The author has captured the essence of Vietnam using vivid language to describe the people, their communication styles, and their lives.
âŚat home he talked to his parents in âVietlishâ â although it was more English than Vietnamese. He was suddenly nervousâŚyou might think you were asking someone to pass the salt, but what you were actually saying was âpass me the noseâ, or âpass me tenâ, or âpass me the smell.â The same word meant all four things.
The content aligns to the upper primary curriculum promoting educational conversations to explore new ideas and concepts resulting in expanded personal and cultural knowledge. It is gripping and engaging with its problem-solving themes, while also embracing a sense of the ridiculous by the language used.
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