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Going to Day Care by Fred Rogers
Going to Day Care by Fred Rogers






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Going to Day Care by Fred Rogers

Nancy Doe Maday, Pikes Peak Library District, Colorado SpringsĬopyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. Two very fine titles about children's first experiences. Questions are included as discussion starters, in a manner similar to the way Mister Rogers speaks on his television program. The positive and negative aspects of a new baby in the house are presented in a manner easily understood by preschoolers, and are further clarified by the liberal use of color photographs. Although the text deals with feelings of jealousy and envy, they are not the major focus, as they are in Martha Alexander's Nobody Asked Me If I Wanted a Baby Sister (Dial, 1971). The second title serves as a starting point for parent and child discussions about The New Baby. The text discusses both family day care and day-care centers and deals with activities that concern children, such as eating, sleeping and going to the bathroom. Although there are numerous books about starting school, Going to Day Care is one of the few titles which deals with day care. PreSchool-Grade 1 Excellent color photographs of multiracial children illustrate these concept books, which update material originally presented in Mister Rogers Talks About (Platt & Munk, 1974 o.p.).








Going to Day Care by Fred Rogers