Story Events and Student Questions: Pairing Books Aren’t for Bears with a Strategy for Literature Circle Talk

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56887/galiteracy.208

Keywords:

picturebooks, literature circles, response to literature, instructional strategy, interdisciplinary teaching

Abstract

Elementary students often struggle to launch and sustain genuine conversation in literature circles. This teaching tip pairs a recent picturebook, Books Aren't for Bears (Barry, 2023), with Story Events and Student Questions, a low-prep strategy in which students record a key event and a discussion question at each episodic pause during a read-aloud. Those captured events and questions then anchor peer talk in the literature circle. We describe the procedure, explain why this picturebook works well as an entry text, and offer companion titles for extending the conversation.

Author Biographies

  • Dr. William P. Bintz, Kent State University

    Dr. William P. Bintz, Professor, School of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum Studies, Kent State University, Kent, OH; [email protected] (https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3844-1461).

  • Shabnam Moini Chaghervand, Kent State University

    Shabnam Moini Chaghervand, Doctoral Candidate in the School of Teaching, Learning, and Curriculum, Kent State University, Kent, OH; [email protected].

08 208 Books Aren't For Bears (Bintz & Chaghervand, 2026)

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Published

05/15/2026

Issue

Section

Teaching Tips

How to Cite

Bintz, W. P., & Moini Chaghervand, S. (2026). Story Events and Student Questions: Pairing Books Aren’t for Bears with a Strategy for Literature Circle Talk. Georgia Journal of Literacy, 48(1), 95–98. https://doi.org/10.56887/galiteracy.208

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