This is a chapter book for young girls age 6-8. Posey is in first grade and the boys in her class are annoying and immature to her. Posey makes up a song that is mean to one of the boys and her and her friends are being bullies. The teacher catches them and At first, Posey is just angry that she got in trouble but she changes her thoughts once she sees her baby brother bullied. Posey apologizes and then becomes friends with the boy she was mean to.
I enjoyed that this is a early chapter book and that Posey truly reflects a 1st grade girl in her thoughts and behaviors. This book displayed and explained bullying for young children, but I was disappointed with Posey's actions when she automatically listened to a 4th grader and was unkind to another kid without questioning it. This allowed me to have a good conversation with my daughter but had we not been reading the book together, my daughter may have believed this was an acceptable action.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Posey doesn't like it when all the seats are changed in her classroom and she has to sit with one of the boys. Unfortunately she takes out her mood on her seatmate when she teaches her friends how to bully the poor kid using some of the same techniques she sees the boys next door use on each other. Suddenly Posey is being called a bully and she doesn't understand what she did wrong...mostly.
This is probably one of the best books I've seen which handles the topic of just how easy it is to take out your mood on others, and worse, how you can wind up bullying someone without really meaning to at all.
Words hurt, Posey. It's a lesson we all need to be reminded of once in a while.
Great story, with a lot to think about it. This is a good one to use to start a conversation with your first grader. Really loving this series after all!
This book is a great alternative to other early readers that may include misspellings and incorrect grammar. It follows a realistic arc of Posey realizing she is angry, but not knowing what to do about it for a while. She finally realizes that she feels angry/upset/sad because she did something wrong and needs to apologize.
I would love to introduce this series to a classroom by reading one aloud and then adding a basket of them to the classroom library. They are accessible to young independent readers who can relate to Posey and her friends and family.
The boys in Posey's class are "so annoying," especially Henry, a know-it-all that Posey has to share a table with. But when Posey and her friends get in trouble for making fun of Henry at recess, Posey must learn a hard lesson: admitting when you're wrong and you've hurt someone. A good lesson for all people.
I just discovered this delightful early chapter book series for young girls. Truly a delight! A very realistic little girl - not the usual smart alecky child with quips for all occasions but a very real (and nice) little girl. Great for those looking for an alternative to Junie B Jones! Thanks to Renee for recommending it!
I should have known better than to judge Stephanie Greene's book by its title. She's the master of writing little kids' feelings using very simple words. Not as powerful as the Lily books by Henkes, but similar, and deserving of the "sure to appeal" label.