Friday, December 5, 2014

Module 3: So You Want To Be President

Book Summary:

Did you ever really know how our president becomes president? you are in luck, in this book you get an easy simplified explanation of what it takes to become president. Not only that but it explains how electoral votes work.
Book Citation:
George, J. S. (2005). So you want to be president?. (updated and rev. ed. ed.). New York: Putnam Juvenile.
Impressions:
I thought finally a book about presidents that isn't boring. I really liked how this book presented it's information. It was easy to follow and simply put. I was able to then further simplify what the book was talking about to my kindergartners with no problem. 


Reviews:

From Publishers Weekly

HThis lighthearted, often humorous roundup of anecdotes and trivia is cast as a handbook of helpful hints to aspiring presidential candidates. St. George (Sacagawea; Crazy Horse) points out that it might boost your odds of being elected if your name is James (the moniker of six former presidents) or if your place of birth was a humble dwelling ("You probably weren't born in a log cabin. That's too bad. People are crazy about log-cabin Presidents. They elected eight"). She serves up diverse, occasionally tongue-in-cheek tidbits and spices the narrative with colorful quotes from her subjects. For instance, she notes that "Warren Harding was a handsome man, but he was one of our worst Presidents" due to his corrupt administration, and backs it up with one of his own quotes, "I am not fit for this office and never should have been here." Meanwhile, Small (The Gardener) shows Harding crowned king of a "Presidential Beauty Contest"; all the other presidents applaud him (except for a grimacing Nixon). The comical, caricatured artwork emphasizes some of the presidents' best known qualities and amplifies the playful tone of the text. For an illustration of family histories, Small depicts eight diminutive siblings crawling over a patient young George Washington; for another featuring pre-presidential occupations, Harry Truman stands at the cash register of his men's shop while Andrew Johnson (a former tailor) makes alterations on movie star Ronald Reagan's suit. The many clever, quirky asides may well send readers off on a presidential fact-finding mission and spark many a discussion of additional anecdotes. A clever and engrossing approach to the men who have led America. Ages 7-up. (Aug.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Library Uses:

  • I would use this book as an intro to kick off school elections. This book can also be used to introduce Presidents' Day. This book can also be used for reasearch on presidents done by younger students. 


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