Showing 1 - 5 results of 5 for search '"board book"', query time: 0.33s Refine Results
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    Effects of Early Literacy Promotion on Child Language Development and Home Reading Environment: A Randomized Controlled Trial by James P. Guevara, MD, MPH, Danielle Erkoboni, MD, Marsha Gerdes, PhD, Sherry Winston, MS, Danielle Sands, MPH, Kirsten Rogers, BS, Trude Haecker, MD, Manuel E. Jimenez, MD, MSHP, Alan L. Mendelsohn, MD

    Published 2020-01-01
    “…Objective: To determine if early literacy promotion, which consisted of board books and reading promotion beginning with newborns, is more effective than standard literacy promotion beginning at 6 months. …”
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    But Not the Hippopotamus/ by Boynton, Sandra, author 565909

    Published 1995
    “…Artist Sandra Boynton is back and better than ever with completely redrawn versions of her multi-million selling board books. These whimsical and hilarious books, featuring nontraditional texts and her famous animal characters, have been printed on thick board pages, and are sure to educate and entertain children of all ages.…”
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    Horns to toes and in between / by Boynton, Sandra, author 565909

    Published 1995
    “…Artist Sandra Boynton is back and better than ever with completely redrawn versions of her multi-million selling board books. These whimsical and hilarious books, featuring nontraditional texts and her famous animal characters, have been printed on thick board pages, and are sure to educate and entertain children of all ages.…”
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    Radical Children’s Literature for Adults and The Inner City Mother Goose by Julia L. Mickenberg

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…As one of the most frequently banned books of the 1970s, a period in which children’s literature and childhood itself saw dramatic changes, The Inner City Mother Goose is a good representative of the children’s book for adults, suggesting the ways in which parody, satire, and formal conventions of genres typically associated with children’s reading (nursery rhymes, abecedaries, board books, picture books, etc.) can function as aesthetic and formal cues that call the boundaries of adulthood and childhood into question to humorous but also, at times, politically radical effect. …”
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