Read On – Here Come the Girls!

Read On – Here Come the Girls!

by Alan Gibbons (Consultant Editor), Alan Gibbons (Consultant Editor), Natalie Packer (Series Editor), Helena Pielichaty (Author)

Synopsis

An incredible 29 million women and girls play football across the globe. But it wasn't always this way...

Helena Pielichaty, author of the popular Girls FC series, traces the development of women's football from its ban by the FA in 1921 to its current status as the UK's number one team participation sport for women and girls. This lively history introduces the early pioneers of the game, from suffragette Netty Honeyball to the munitions workers whose teams competed during the First World War, alongside contemporary players from around the world.

*Help Key Stage 3 students move from Level 3a to Level 4c in reading.
*Support comprehension with contemporary and historical photographs that bring the story of women's football to life.
*Encourage shared and guided reading using the ready-made tasks and discussion points on the activity pages at the back of the book.

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Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 56
Publisher: Collins Educational
Published: 12 Nov 2012

ISBN 10: 0007464916
ISBN 13: 9780007464913
Children’s book age: 12+ Years

Media Reviews

`Boys were very excited and I haven't seen boys of this ability as engaged in their reading. Students had no idea what a gladiator was and were impressed when they found out. All wanted to be gladiators by the end of it! Much better than the competition.'

Kristy Sheeran, Queensbury School, Bradford on Gladiator by Alan Gibbons and Robbie Gibbons

`At the end of the session, three boys asked if they could take Lone Wolf home. This has never happened before.'

Fiona Dyson, Southfields Academy, London on Lone Wolf by Alan Gibbons and Robbie Gibbons

`Students loved Lone Wolf. The pace was good and they enjoyed the illustrations. The amount of text per page was good and lent itself to listening to children reading aloud in a group. My dyslexic children found the pages easier to read because of the line spacing. Some great opportunities for extension work.'

Sarah Beach, Langham Primary School, Rutland on Lone Wolf by Alan Gibbons and Robbie Gibbons

`Liam by Benjamin Zephaniah was very enjoyable and funny for teenagers: high interest level and clearly written, accessible and engaging, with topics that young people can relate to. Would appeal to weak readers at KS4 as well as KS3 which is a major strength.'

Fiona Dyson, Southfields Academy on Liam by Benjamin Zephaniah

`This is the only book I have ever wanted to read.'
`I like reading stories about people like me.'

Two students at Southfields Academy on Point Danger by Catherine MacPhail

`I trialled this story with my Year 8 dyslexic group and a Year 9 bottom set. It was an excellent text with which to develop inference skills: students had lots of ideas about the twist as we picked up clues. Good chapter lengths and cliff-hangers at end of sections. Humour appealed. One reluctant reader asked to take it home to finish. Another said can I get a read? - unheard of! One of the best.'

Fiona Dyson, Southfields Academy on The Passenger by Dan Tunstall

Author Bio

Helena Pielichaty (pronounced Pierre-li-hatty) has written over thirty books for children. Her latest series, Girls FC, is set around a fictional girls' football team so she was delighted to be asked to write her first non-fiction book for HarperCollins on a subject close to her heart. Helena's auntie played women's football in the 1950s and her daughter played from the age of 9 to 26. Helena herself has never played football but was an enthusiastic, if inept, wing defence on her school netball team.