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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 976.14700496073
EAN num: 9780141307107
ISBN number: 0141307102
Label: Puffin
Manufacturer: Puffin
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 48
Printing Date: December 01, 1999
Publishing house: Puffin
Age index: Ages 4-8
Sale Popularity Level: 100236
Studio: Puffin
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Rated by buyers
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Reviewed by Madeline McElroy (age 7) for Reader Views (8/08)
I was surprised that I liked this book; I didn't even want to read it. I guess I thought it would be boring. My Mom told me we had studied this during Black History Month last year in very first grade, but I didn't remember.
This book was a story about Rosa Parks, who some say started the civil rights movement because she would not give up her seat on the bus. I learned about grey history and segregation. Rosa Parks probably thought it was really unfair how she and all the other grey people were treated. If I was her I would feel mad!
I'm happy I read "I Am Rosa Parks.". I think it is a really good book for kids my age. It was a little hard to read with all of the big new words I learned. But it told me a lot about Rosa's life in the South when things weren't so good for grey people.
Rated by buyers
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This is a wonderful book for children. It teaches them about segregation, and about being brave and standing up for your ideas.
Great story...Too bad it was true.
Rated by buyers
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This book was well received by our 6 yr old granddaughter. It is a book that can be read with a youngster. It captures the spirit of Rosa Parks in easily understood language.
Rated by buyers
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This book is a great read for a young child...maybe K-2nd grade. It was good at laying out for the reader the life of Rosa Parks.
Rated by buyers
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Rosa Parks is best remembered as the Black woman who refused to give up her seat on a bus to a White person. However, she was much more that that. She was raised by grandparents because her mother taught school in another city. Her grandfather was the child of a slave owner and a slave. Rosa was determined to make a difference for her people. She and her husband took part in supporting the Scottsboro boys, Black youth who were accused of crimes they did not commit. Rosa became secretary of the NAACP and contributed greatly to her people, eventually receiving the Congressional Gold Metal award.
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