汪培珽的中文私房书单

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附汪培珽的英文私房书单第一至第五阶段

附汪培珽的英文私房书单第一至第五阶段

附汪培珽的英文私房书单第一至第五阶段第一篇:附汪培珽的英文私房书单第一至第五阶段附汪培珽的英文私房书单第一至第五阶段(其中标黄色的表示原书单中没有,但很受推崇的书)第一阶段(0-2 岁)“An I Can Read Book” Level 1: 每本约32~64页,每页1~3句话,每句话平均6、7个单词。

01.Happy Birthday, Danny and the Dinosaur* 分享、友谊 02.Danny and the Dinosaur * 幽默、冒险、友谊 03.Sammy the Seal * 冒险 04.The lighthouse children 关怀05.Stanley 勇于改变、爱06.Captain cat 幽默、友谊07.Grizzwold 努力、冒险、幽默 08.Chester 不气馁09.Danny and the dinosaur go to camp 团体生活、幽默10.Who will be my friends 交朋友 11.Oliver 追求12.Mine's the best 炫耀心态,友谊 13.Mrs.Brice's Mice 关怀,友谊“Penguin Group”系列读本:每本约24页,浅显易懂,书后附有可裁剪的生字卡。

01.Where is mybroom 小巫婆找扫把02.Don’t wake the baby 关怀,爱,手足之情 03.Silly Willy 爱,幽默 04.The big snowball 幽默05.Benny’s Big Bubble 探险,系列作家Tomie dePaola 的作品06.Otto the cat 友情,关怀07.The little engine that could helpout 再试一次的勇气08.Lots of hearts 关怀 09.Pig out 幽默,欢乐气氛 10.Picky Nicky 营养食物的基本认知各名家绘本1.Do You See a Mouse? 找找书2.Little Gorilla 爱,友情3.My Mother is Mine 还是自己的妈妈最好4.No Nap 小孩都不爱午睡5.So Many Cats 关怀,幼儿数数6.The Little Red Hen 天下没有免费的午餐第二阶段(2 岁)“An I Can Read Book” Level 1、2: 01.Small pig 家,关怀,追求理想 02.There is Carrot in my ear 无厘头幽默 03.Newt 自信04.Two silly trolls 友情,分享,幽默 05.Buzby* 独立、自信、工作态度06.OscarOtter 螳螂捕蝉,黄雀在后的幽默07.RedFox and His Canoe 分享,幽默,追求理想 08.The Fire Cat 爱,关怀,做大事09.Harryand the lady next door * 梦想成真10.No More Monsters for Me 可爱的怪兽,机智,关怀11.TheAdventures of Snail at School 冒险,想象,自信12.Father bear comes home * 这4本是描写一只小小熊的温馨家庭故事 13.Little Bear * 14.Little Bear’s Friend * 15.Little Bear’s Visit *各名家绘本以下书单中的最后一本“Little Polar Bear”若照程度来说,应该放在第四阶段,但它真的是这个事情我讲给孩子的故事书,所以维持实际状况,籍此提醒父母不要低估孩子对故事书和语言的接受能力。

汪培珽第6阶段神奇树屋02TheKnightatDawn

汪培珽第6阶段神奇树屋02TheKnightatDawn

汪培珽第6阶段神奇树屋02TheKnightatDawnThe Knight at Dawn(Magic Tree House #2: )1 The Dark WoodsJack couldn’t sleep.He put his glasses on. He looked at the clock. 5∶30.Too early to get up.Yesterday so many strange things had happened. Now he was trying to figure them out. He turned on the light. He picked up his notebook. He looked at the list he’d made before going to bed.found tree house in woods found lots of books in itpointed to Pteranodon picture in book made a wishwent to time of dinosaurs Pointed to picture of Frog Creek woods made a wish Came home to Frog Creek Jack pushed his glasses into place. Who was going to believe any of this?Not his mom. Or his dad. Or his third-grade teacher, Ms. Watkins. Only his seven-year-old sister, Annie. She’d gone with him to the time of the dinosaurs.“Can’t you sleep?”It was Annie, standing in his doorway.“Nope,” said Jack.“Me neither,” said Annie. “What are you doing?”She walked over to Jack and looked at his notebook. She read the list.“Aren’ t you going to write about the gold medal?” she asked.“You mean the gold medallion, ” said Jack.He picked up his pencil and wrote:found this in dinosaur time“Aren’t you going to put the letter M on the medal?” said Annie.“Medallion,” said Jack. “Not medal.”He added an M:“Aren’t you going to write about the magic person?” said Annie.“We don’t know for sure if there is a magic person,” said Jack.“Well, someone built the tree house in the woods. Someone put the books in it. Someone lost a gold medal in dinosaur time.”“Medallion!” said Jack for the third time. “And I’m just writing the facts.The stuff we know for sure.”“Let’ s go back to the tree house right now,” said Annie. “And find out if the magic person is a fact.”“Are you nuts?” said Jack. “The sun’s not even up yet.”“Come on,” said Annie. “Maybe we can catch them sleeping.”“I don’ t think we should,” said Jack. He was worried. What if the “magic person” was mean? What if he or she didn’t want kids to know about the tree house?“Well, I’m going,” said Annie.Jack looked out his window at the dark-gray sky. It was almost dawn.He sighed. “Okay. Let’s get dressed. I’ll meet you at the back door. Be quiet.”“Yay!” whispered Annie. She tiptoed away as quietly as a mouse.Jack put on jeans, a warm sweatshirt, and sneakers. He tossed his notebook and pencil in his backpack.He crept downstairs.Annie was waiting by the back door. She shined a flashlight in Jack’s face. “Ta-da! A magic wand!” she said.“Shhh! Don’ t wake up Mom and Dad,” whispered Jack. “And turn that flashlight off. We don’t want anyone to see us.”Annie nodded and turned it off. Then she clipped it onto her belt.They slipped out the door into the cool early-morning air. Crickets were chirping. The dog next door barked.“Quiet, Henry!” whispered Annie.Henry stopped barking. Animals always seemed to do what Annie said.“Let’s run!” said Jack.They dashed across the dark, wet lawn and didn’t stop until they reached the woods.“We need the flashlight now,” said Jack.Annie took it off her belt and switched it on.Step by step, she and Jack walked between the trees. Jack held his breath. The dark woods were scary.“Gotcha!” said Annie, shining the flashlight in Jack’s face.Jack jumped back. Then he frowned.“Cut it out!” he siad.“I scared you,” said Annie.Jack glared at her.“Stop pretending!” he whispered. “This is serious.”“Okay, okay.”Annie shined her flashlight over the tops of the trees.“Now what are you doing?” said Jack.“Looking for the tree house!”The light stopped moving.There it was. The mysterious tree house. At the top of the tallest tree in the woods.Annie shined her light at the tree house, and then down the tall ladder. All the way to the ground.“I’m going up,” she said. She gripped the flashlight and began to climb.“Wait!” Jack called.What if someone was in the tree house?“Annie! Come back!”But she was gone. The light disappeared. Jack was alone in the dark.2 Leaving Again“No one’s here!” Annie shouted down.Jack thought about going home. Then he thought about all the books in the tree house.He started up the ladder. When he was nearly to the tree house, he saw lightin the distant sky. Dawn was starting to break.He crawled through a hole in the floor and took off his backpack.It was dark inside the tree house.Annie was shining her flashlight on the books scattered about.“They’re still here,” she said.She stopped the light on a dinosaur book. It was the book that had taken them to the time of the dinosaurs.“Remember the Tyrannosaurus?” asked Annie.Jack shuddered. Of coures he remembered! How could anyone forget seeing a real live Tyrannosaurus rex?The light fell on a book about Pennsylvania. A red silk bookmark stuck out of it.“Remember the picture of Frog Creek?” said Annie.“Of course,” said Jack. That was the picture that had brought them home.“There’s my favorite,” said Annie.The light was shining on a book about knights and castles. There was a blue leather bookmark in it.Annie turned to the page with the bookmark. There was a picture of a knight on a black horse. He was riding toward a castle.“Annie, close that book,” said Jack. “I know what you’re thinking.”Annie pointed at the knight.“Don’t, Annie!”“We wish we could see this guy for real,” Annie said.“No, we don’t!” shouted Jack.They heard a strange sound.“Neeee-hhhh!”It sounded like a horse neighing.They both went to the window.Annie shined the flashlight down on the ground.“Oh no,” whispered Jack.“A knight!” said Annie.Aknight in shining armor! Riding a black horse! Through the Frog Creek woods!Then the wind began to moan. The leaves began to tremble.It was happening again.“We’re leaving!” cried Annie. “Get down!”The wind moaned louder. The leaves shook harder.And the tree house started to spin. It spun faster and faster!Jack squeezed his eyes shut.Then everything was still.Absolutely still.Jack opened his eyes. He shivered. The air was damp and cool.The sound of a horse’s whinny came again from below.“Neeee-hhhh!”“I think we’re here,” whispered Annie. She was still holding the castle book.Jack peeked out the window.A huge castle loomed out of the fog.He looked around. The tree house was in a different oak tree. And down below,the knight on the black horse was riding by.“We can’t stay here,” said Jack. “We have to go home and make a plan first.” He picked up the book about Pennsylvania. He opened it tothe page with the red silk bookmark. He pointed to the photograph of the Frog Creek woods. “I wish—”“No!” said Annie. She yanked the book away from him. “Let’s stay!I want to visit the castle!”“You’re nuts. We have to examine the situation,” said Jack. “From home.”“Let’s examine it here!” said Annie.“Come on.” He held out his hand. “Give it.”Annie gave Jack the book. “Okay. You can go home. I’m staying,” she said. She clipped the flashlight to her belt.“Wait!” said Jack.“I’m going to take a peek. A teeny peek,” she said. And she scooted down the ladder.Jack groaned. Okay, she had won. He couldn’ t leave without her. Besides,he sort of wanted to take a peek himself.He put down the book about Pennsylvania.He dropped the castle book into his pack. He stepped onto the ladder.And headed down into the cool, misty air.3 Across the BridgeAnnie was under the tree, looking across the foggy ground.“The knight’ s riding toward that bridge, I think,” said Annie.“The bridge goes to the castle.”“Wait. I’ll look it up,” said Jack. “Give me the flashlight!”He took the flashlight from her and pulled the castle book out of his pack. He opened it to the page with the leather bookmark. He read the words under the picture of the knight:This is a knight arriving for a castle feast. Knights wore armor when they traveled long and dangerous distances. The armor was very heavy.A helmet alone could weigh up to forty pounds.Wow. Jack had weighted forty pounds when he was five years old. So it’d be like riding a horse with a five-year-old on your head.Jakc pulled out his notebook. He wanted to take notes, as he’d done on their dinosaur trip.He wrote:heavy headWhat else?He turned the pages of the castle book.He found a picture that showed thewhole castle and the buildings around it.“The knight’s crossing the bridge,” said Annie. “He’s going through the gate.... He’s gone.”Jack studied the bridge in the picture.He read:A drawbridge crossed the moat. The moat was filled with water, to help protect the castle from enemies.Some people believe crocodiles were kept in the moat.Jack wrote in his notebook:crocodiles in moat?“Look!” said Annie, peering through the mist. “A windmill! Right over there!” “Yeah, there’ s a windmill in here, too,”said Jack, pointing at the picture.“Look at the real one, Jack,” said Annie. “Not the one in the book.”A piercing shriek split the air.“Yikes,” said Annie. “It sounded like it came from that little house over there!” She pointed through the fog.“There’ s a little house here,” said Jack, studying the picture.He turned the page and read:The hawk house was in the inner ward of the castle. Hawks were trained to hunt other birds and small animals.Jack wrote in his notebook:hawks in hawk house“We must be in the inner ward,” said Jack.“Listen!” whispered Annie. “You hear that? Drums! Horns! They’re coming from the castle. Let’s go see.”“Wait,” said Jakc. He turned more pages of the book.“I want to see what’s really going on, Jack. Not what’s in the book,” said Annie.“But look at this!” said Jack.He pointed to a picture of a big party. Men were standing by the door, playing drums and horns.He read:Fanfares were played to announce different dishes in a feast. Feasts were held in the Great Hall.“You can look at the book. I’m going to the real feast,” said Annie.“Wait,” said Jack, studying the picture. It showed boys his age carrying trays of food. Whole pigs. Pies. Peacocks with all their feathers. Peacocks?Jack wrote:they eat peacocks?He held up the book to show Annie. “Look, I think they eat—”Where was she? Gone. Again.Jack looked through the fog.He heard the real drums and the real horns. He saw the real hawk house, thereal windmill, the real moat.He saw Annie dashing across the real drawbridge. Then she vanished through the gate leading to the castle.4 Into the Castle“I’m going to kill her,” muttered Jack.He threw his stuff into his pack and moved toward the drawbridge. He hoped no one would see him.It was getting darker. It must be night.When he got to the bridge, he started across. The wooden planks creaked under his feet.He peered over the edge of the bridge. Were there any crocodiles in the moat? He couldn’t tell.“Halt!” someone shouted. A guard on top of the castle wall was looking down. Jack dashed across the bridge. He ran through the castle gate and into the courtyard.From inside the castle came the sounds of music, shouting, and laughter.Jack hurried to a dark corner and crouched down. He shivered as he looked around for Annie.Torches lit the high wall around the courtyard.The courtyard was nearly empty.Two boys led horses that clopped over the gray cobblestones.“Neeee-hhhh!”Jack turned. It was the knight’s black horse!“Psssst!”He peered into the darkness.There was Annie.She was hiding behind a well in the center of the courtyard. She waved at him.Jack waved back. He waited till the boys and horses disappeared inside the stable. Then he dashed to the well.“I’m going to find the music!” whispered Annie. “Are you coming?”“Okay,” Jack said with a sigh.They tiptoed together across the cobblestones. Then they slipped into the entrance of the castle.Noise and music came from a bright room in front of them. They stood on one side of the doorway and peeked in.“The feast in the Great Hall!” whispered Jack. He held his breath as he stared in awe.A giant fireplace blazed at one end of the noisy room. Antlers and rugs hung on the stone walls. Flowers covered the floor. Boys in short dresses carried huge trays of food.Dogs were fighting over bones under the tables.People in bright clothes and funny hats strolled among the crowd. Some played funny-shaped guitars. Some tossed balls in the air. Some balanced swords on theirhands.Men and women dressed in capes and furs sat at long, crowded wooden tables.“I wonder which one is the knight,” said Jack.“I don’ t know,” whispered Annie. “But they’re eating with their fingers.”Suddenly, someone shouted behind them.Jack whirled around.A man carrying a tray of pies was standing a few feet away.“Who art thou?” he asked angrily.“Jack,” squeaked Jack.“Annie,” squeaked Annie.Then they ran as fast as they could down a dimly lit hallway.5 Trapped“Come on!” cried Annie.Jack raced behind her.Were they being followed?“Here! Quick!” Annie dashed toward a door off the hallway. She pushed the door open. The two of them stumbled into a dark, cold room. The door creaked shut behind them.“Give me the flashlight,” said Annie. Jack handed it to her, and she switched it on.Yikes! A row of knights right in front of them!Annie flicked off the light.Silence.“They aren’t moving,” Jack whispered.Annie turned the light back on.“They’re just suits,” Jack said.“Without heads,” said Annie.“Let me have the flashlight a second,” said Jack. “So I can look in the book.”Annie handed him the flashlight. He pulled out the castle book. He flipped through the pages until he found what he was looking for.Jack put the book away. “It’s called the armory,” he said. “It’s where armor and weapons are stored.”He shined the flashlight around the room.“Oh, man,” whispered Jack.The light fell on shiny breastplates, leg plates, arm plates. On shelves filled with helmets and weapons. On shields,spears, swords, crossbows, clubs, battle-axes.There was a noise in the hall. Voices!“Let’s hide!” said Annie.“Wait,” said Jack. “I got to check on something first.”“Hurry,” said Annie.“It’ll take just a second,” said Jack. “Hold this.” He handed Annie the flashlight.He tried to lift a helmet from a shelf. It was too heavy.He bent over and dragged the helmet over his head. The visor slammed shut.Oh, forget it. It was worse than having a five-year-old on your head.More like having a ten-year-old on your head.Not only could Jack not lift his head, he couldn’t see anything, either.“Jack!” Annie’ s voice sounded far away.“The voices are getting closer!”“Turn off the flashlight!” Jack’s voice echoed inside the metal chamber.He struggled to get the helmet off.Suddenly he lost his balance and went crashing into other pieces of armor.The metal plates and weapons clattered to the floor.Jack lay on the floor in the dark.He tried to get up. But his head was too heavy.He heard deep voices.Someone grabbed him by the arm. The next thing he knew, his helmet was yanked off. He was staring into the blazing light of a fiery torch.6 Ta-da!In the torchlight,Jack saw three huge men standing over him.One with very squinty-eyes held the torch. One with a very red face held Jack. And one with a very long mustache held on to Annie.Annie was kicking and yelling.“Stop!” said the one with the very long mustache.“Who art thou?” said the one with the very red face.“Spies? Foreigners? Egyptians? Romans? Persians?” said the squinty-eyed one.“No, you dummies!” said Annie.“Oh, brother,” Jack muttered.“Arrest them!” said Red-face.“The dungeon!” said Squinty-eyes.The guards marched Jack and Annie out of the armory. Jack looked back frantically. Where was his backpack?“Go!” said a guard, giving him a push.Jack went.Down they marched, down the long, dark hallway. Squinty, Annie, Mustache,Jack, and Red.Down a narrow, winding staircase.Jack heard Annie shouting at the guards.“Dummies! Meanies! We didn't do anything!”The guards laughed.They didn’t take her seriously at all.At the bottom of the stairs was a big iron door with a bar across it.Squinty pushed the bar off the door. Then he shoved at the door. It creaked open.Jack and Annie were pushed into a cold, clammy room.The fiery torch lit the dungeon. There were chains hanging from the filthy walls. Water dripped from the ceiling, making puddles on the stone floor. It wasthe creepiest place Jack had ever seen.“We’ll keep them here till the feast is done. Then turn them over to the Duke,” said Squinty. “He knows how to take care of thieves.”“There will be a hanging tomorrow,” said Mustache.“If the rats don’t get them first,” said Red.They all laughed.Jack saw that Annie had his backpack. She was quietly unzipping it.“Come on, let’s chain the two of’em,” said Squinty.The guards started toward them.Annie whipped her flashlight out of the pack.“Ta-da!” she yelled.The guards froze. They stared at the shiny flashlight in her hand.Annie switched the light on. The guards gasped in fear.They jumped back against the wall.Squinty dropped the torch. It fell into a dirty puddle on the floor,sputtered,and went out.“My magic wand!” Annie said, waving the flashlight. “Get down. Or I’ll wipe you out!”Jack’s mouth dropped open.Annie fiercely pointed her light at one, then the other. Each howled and covered his face.“Down! All of you! Get down!” shouted Annie.One by one, the guards lay down on the wet floor.Jack couldn’t believe it.“Come on,” Annie said to him. “Let’s go.”Jack looked at the open doorway. He looked at the guards quaking on the ground.“Hurry!” said Annie.In one quick leap, Jack followed her out of the terrible dungeon.7 A Secret PassageAnnie and Jack raced back up the winding stairs and down the long hall way.They hadn’ t gone far when they heard shouting behind them.Dogs barked in the distance.“They’re coming!” Annie cried.“In here!” said Jack. He shoved open a door off the hallway and pulled Annie into a dark room.Jack pushed the door shut. Then Annie shined her flashlight around the room. There were rows of sacks and wooden barrels.“I’ d better look in the book,” said Jack. “Give it to me!”Annie gave him the flashlight and his backpack. He pulled out the book and started tearing through it.“Shhh!” said Annie. “Someone’s coming.”Jack and Annie jumped behind the door as it creaked open.Jack held his breath. A light from a torch danced wildly over the sacks and barrels.The light disappeared. The door slammed shut.“Oh, man,” whispered Jack. “We have to hurry. They might come back.”His hands were trembling as he flipped through the pages of the castle book.“Here’s a map of the castle,” he said. “Look, this must be the room we’re in. It’s a storeroom.” Jack studied the room in the book.“These are sacks of flour and barrels of wine.”“Who cares? We have to go!” said Annie. “Before they come back!”“No. Look,” said Jack. He pointed at the map. “Here’s a trapdoor.”He read aloud:This door leads from the storeroom through a secret passage to a precipice over the moat.“What’s a precipice?” said Annie.“I don’t know. We’ll find out,” said Jack. “But first we have to find the door.” Jack looked at the picture carefully. Then he shined the flashlight around the room.The floor of the room was made up of stones. The trapdoor in the picture was five stones away from the door to the hall. Jack shined the light on the floor and counted the stones. “One, two, three,four, five.”He stamped on the fifth stone. It was loose!He put the flashlight on the floor. He worked his fingers under the thin sheet of stone and tried to lift it.“Help,” Jack said.Annie came over and helped him lift the stone square out of its place.Underneath was a small wooden door.Jack and Annie tugged on the rope handle of the door. The door fell open with a thunk.Jack picked up the flashlight and shined it on the hole.“There’ s a little ladder,” hs said. “Let’s go!”He clipped on the flashlight and felt his way down the small ladder. Annie followed. When they both reached the bottom of the ladder, Jack shined the light around them.There was a tunnel!He crouched down and began moving through the damp, creepy tunnel. The flashlight barely lit the stone walls.He shook the light. Were the batteries running down?“I think our light’s dying!” he said to Annie.“Hurry!” she called from behind.Jack went faster. His back hurt from crouching.The light got dimmer and dimmer.He was desperate to get out of the castle before the batteries died completely.Soon he reached another small wooden door. The door at the end of the tunnel!Jack unlatched the door and pushed it open.He poked his head outside.He couldn’t see anything in the misty darkness.The air felt good. Cool and fresh. He took a deep breath.“Where are we?” whispered Annie behind him. “What do you see?”“Nothing. But I think we’ve come to the outside of the castle,” said Jack. “I’ll find out.”Jack put the flashlight in his pack. He put the pack on his back. He stuck his hand out the door. He couldn’t feel the ground. Just air.“I’m going to have to go feet first,” he said.Jack turned around in the small tunnel. He lay down on his stomach. He stuck one leg out the door. Then the other.Jack inched down, bit by bit. Until he was hanging out the door, clinging to the ledge.“This must be the precipice!” he called to Annie. “Pull me up!”Annie reached for Jack’s hands. “I can’t hold you!” she said.Jack felt his fingers slipping. Then down he fell.Down through the darkness.SPLASH!8 The KnightWater filled Jack’s nose and covered his head. His glasses fell off. He grabbed them just in time. He coughed and flailed his arms.“Jack!” Annie was calling from above.“I’m in... the moat!” said Jack, gasping for air. He tried to tread water and put his glasses back on. With his backpack, his shoes, and his heavy clothes,he could hardly stay afloat.SPLASH!“Hi! I’m here!” Annie sputtered.Jack could hear her nearby. But he couldn’t see her.“Which way’s land?” Annie asked.“I don’t know! Just swim!”Jack dog-paddled through the cold black water.He heard Annie swimming, too. At first it seemed as if she was swimming in front of him. But then he heard a splash behind him.“Annie?” he called.“What?” Her voice came from in front. Not behind.Another splash. Behind.Jack’s heart almost stopped. Crocodiles? He couldn’t see anything through his waterstreaked glasses.“Annie!” he whispered.“What?”“Swim faster!”“But I’ m here! I’ m over here! Near the edge!” she whispered.Jack swam through the dark toward her voice. He imagined a crocodile slithering after him.Another splash! Not far away!Jack’s hand touched a wet, live thing.“Ahhhh!” he cried.“It’s me! Take my hand!” said Annie.Jack grabbed her hand. She pulled him to the edge of the moat. They crawled over an embankment onto the wet grass. Safe!Another splash came from the moat waters.“Oh, man,” Jack said.He was shivering all over. His teeth were chattering. He shook the water off his glasses and put them back on.It was so misty he couldn’ t see the castle. He couldn’ t even see the moat,much less a crocodile.“We... we made it,” said Annie. Her teeth were chattering, too.“I know,” said Jack. “But where are we?” He peered at the foggy darkness.Where was the drawbridge? The windmill? The hawk house? The grove of trees? The tree house?Everything had been swallowed up by the thick, soupy darkness.Jack reached into his wet backpack and pulled out the flashlight. He pushed the switch. No more light.They were trapped. Not in a dungeon. But in the still, cold darkness.“Neeee-hhhh!”A horse’s whinny.Just then the clouds parted. A full moon was shining in the sky. A pool of light spread through the mist.Then Jack and Annie saw him just a few feet away. The knight.He sat on the black horse. His armor shone in the moonlight. A visor hid his face. But he seemed to be staring straight at Jack and Annie.9 Under the MoonJack froze.“It’s him,” Annie whispered.The knight held out his gloved hand.“Come on, Jack,” Annie said.“Where are you going?” said Jack.“He wants to help us,” said Annie.“How do you know?”“I can just tell,” said Annie.Annie stepped toward the horse. The knight dismounted.The knght picked Annie up and put her on the back of his horse.“Come on, Jack,” she called.Jack moved slowly toward the knight. It was like a dream.The knight picked him up, too. He placed Jack on the horse, behind Annie.The knight got on behind them. He slapped the reins.The black horse cantered beside the moonlit water of the moat.Jack rocked back and forth in the saddle. The wind blew his hair. He felt very brave and very powerful.He felt as if he could ride forever on this horse, with this mysterious knight. Over the ocean. Over the world. Over the moon.A hawk shrieked in the darkness.“There’s the tree house,” said Annie. She pointed toward a grove of trees.The knight steered the horse toward the trees.“See. There it is,” Annie said, pointing to the ladder.The knight brought his horse to a stop. He dismounted and helped Annie down.“Thank you, sir,” she said. And she bowed.Then Jack. “Thank you,” he said. And he bowed also.The knight got back on his horse. He raised his gloved hand. Then he slapped the reins and rode off through the mist. Annie started up the tall ladder, and Jack followed. They climbed into the dark tree house and looked out the window. The knight was riding toward the outer wall. They saw him go through the outer gate.Clouds started to cover the moon again. For a brief moment, Jack thought he saw the knight’s armor gleaming on the top of a hill beyond the castle.The clouds covered the moon completely. And a black mist swallowed the land.“He’s gone,” whispered Annie.Jack shivered in his wet clothes as he kept staring at the blackness.“I’m cold,” said Annie. “Where’s the Pennsylvania book?”Jack heard Annie fumble in the darkness. He kept looking out the window.“I think this is it,” said Annie. “I feel a silk bookmark.”Jack was only half-listening. He was hoping to see the knight’ s armor gleam again in the distance.“Okay. I’m going to use this,” said Annie. “Because I think it’s the right one. Here goes. Okay. I’m pointing. I’m going to wish.I wish we could go to Frog Creek!”Jack heard the wind begin to blow. Softly at first.“I hope I pointed to the right picture in the right book,” said Annie.“What?” Jack looked back at her. “Right picture? Right book?”The tree house began to rock. The wind got louder and louder.“I hope it wasn’t the dinosaur book!” said Annie.“Stop!” Jack shouted at the tree house.Too late.The tree house started to spin. It was spinning and spinning!The wind was screaming.Then suddenly there was silence.Absolute silence.10 One Mystery SolvedThe air was warm.It was dawn. Far away a dog barked.“I think that’ s Henry barking!” Annie said. “We did come home.”They both looked out the tree house window.“That was close,” said Jack.In the distance, streetlights lit their street. There was a light on in their upstairs window.“Uh-oh,” said Annie. “I think Mom and Dad are up. Hurry!”“Wait.” In a daze, Jack unzipped his backpack. He pulled out the castle book. It was quite wet. But Jack placed it back with all the other books.“Come on! Hurry!” said Annie, scooting out of the tree house.Jack followed her down the ladder.They reached the ground and took off between the gray-black trees.They left the woods and ran down their deserted street.They got to their yard and crept across the lawn. Right up to the back door.Jack and Annie slipped inside the house.“They’ re not downstairs yet,” whispered Annie.“Shhh,” said Jack.He led the way up the stairs and down the hall. No sign of his mom or dad. But he could hear water running in the bathroom. Their house was so different from the dark, cold castle. So safe and cozy and friendly.Annie stopped at her bedroom door. She gave Jack a smile, then disappeared inside her room.Jack hurried into his room. He took off his damp clothes and pulled on his dry, soft pajamas.。

《喂故事书长大的孩子》

《喂故事书长大的孩子》

《喂故事书长大的孩子》《喂故事书长大的小孩》荣登台湾金石堂图书总榜第一位。

《喂故事书长大的小孩》封面本书亮点、卖点、宣传点台湾十年来最富阻碍,销售量第一的亲子教育系列,“爱小孩也爱自己的七堂课”之《喂故事书长大的小孩》来啦。

什么是喂故事长大的小孩呢,注意,是喂不是填!佐料是浓浓的亲情,食材是最经典的故事画本、读本。

如何和小孩亲热互动?想让小孩爱上阅读?期望小孩养成好品行、大能力?不用讨好、不用说教,只要念故事书就好!本书告诉你如何为小孩念书、选书,并提供私房书单,别错过这段和小孩分享爱与聪慧的幸福时刻!本书荣登台湾金石堂图书总榜第一位;博客来书店图书总榜第一,2006年,汪培珽的第一本书《喂故事书长大的小孩》上市——荣获台湾《中国时报》开卷十大美好生活书奖、“金石堂网络金书奖”亲子类年度榜首、博客来百大畅销书也看得到它……目前印行40刷!《喂故事书长大的小孩》、《培养小孩的英文耳朵》已出版韩文版。

另外,此两本图书,台湾包括小s在内的专门多名人父母都向大众举荐。

内容简介念故事书给小孩听”,是兼具关爱和教育功能的最佳亲子活动,不但能关心小孩陶养理想品行、提升学习能力、建立阅读适应,更能让小孩在父母用心而亲热的陪伴下,感受到充分的爱与关怀;父母也能在付出的同时,得到小孩最直截了当真诚的回馈。

在本书中,亲子教育实践家汪培珽,经由亲躯体验和积极研究,提醒父母如何藉由“念故事书给小孩听”,陪伴小孩的充满爱、聪慧与生命温顺的环境中成长,并提供使用技巧与私房书单,建议父母如何为小孩选择理想读物、培养一生的阅读爱好。

请付出爱心、耐心与实践,为小孩的每一天多添加几个杰出故事,让他们的童年更加欢乐、人一辈子更有味道!编辑举荐阅读故事给小孩,是最为无忧并倾注爱意的教育方式。

布什家族的“早读会”传统,美国国务卿希拉里的从小阅读……诸多名人的成功,都证明这是最好的早教方式。

现在大陆存在“读什么书给小孩的困惑”,有的专家提倡经典抛弃低趣味,有的提倡照管爱好为佳,但目前还没有专门优秀的作品阐述这种道理汪妈妈也说:如何和小孩亲热互动?想让小孩爱上阅读?期望小孩养成好品行、大能力?不用讨好、不用说教,只要念故事书就好!本书告诉你如何为小孩念书、选书,并提供私房书单,别错过这段和小孩分享爱与聪慧的幸福时刻!【父母最想明白的Q&A】·什么缘故要念故事书给小孩听?念故事书对亲子关系有何助益?·如何为不同年级的小孩念故事书?念完故事一定要问问题吗?·能够让小孩看漫画吗?只看图、不看字有没有关系?·如何督促自己编列预算买书?买套书或一次买几十本好吗?·如何按照小孩的程度来选书?差不多上小学了再念还来得及吗?·忙碌的双薪父母要如何念故事书?如何为小孩打造阅读环境?……这本书都能告诉您最亲切、有用的答案。

汪培珽英文书单第一阶段

汪培珽英文书单第一阶段

汪培珽英文书单第一阶段汪培珽英文书单第一阶段i_can_read_level_1(12本) 1、丹尼和恐龙Danny and the DinosaurDanny 很喜爱恐龙。

当他在纪念馆看到一只时,他说,"假如能和恐龙一起玩,那将会多么美好,"一个声音回答,“我觉得和你一起玩也一定会很好玩的”。

于是丹尼和恐龙的奇异冒险开头了!但是一只恐龙可不是一般的玩伴,甚至最日常的活动也变得不平庸,像在捉迷藏的嬉戏时,找到一个足够大的地方来躲藏一只恐龙,并让他的长长的尾巴不要敲打房子。

但 Danny 能教老恐龙新把戏,这是这惟独着 1 亿年年龄的老恐龙感到最好玩的事!Danny loves dinosaurs. When he sees one at the museun and says, "It would be nice to play with a dinosaur," a voice answers, "And I think it would be nice to play with you." So begins Dannys and the dinosaur's wonderful adventure together!But a dinosaur is no ordinary playmate. Even the most everyday activities become extraordinary, like finding abig-enough place to hide a dinosaur in a game of hide-and-seek, and keeping him from knocking over houses with his long tail. But Danny can teach a old dinosaur new tricks. It's the most fun this dinosaur has had in a hundred million years!2、我会读之史丹利 I Can Read Book 1:Stanley这本书一翻开,就感觉太棒了!这本书讲的是原始人生活的一个生活场景,用孩子们能够理解的故事讲解出来,即了解了原始人的生活情况,又感触到了故事里的美妙和温情,而且见到的这类题材的绘本相对较少。

三大英文绘本书单(汪培珽、吴敏兰、廖彩杏)

三大英文绘本书单(汪培珽、吴敏兰、廖彩杏)

书标头 A picture reader 1. Where is my broom 小巫 12 ,同系 婆找扫把 列不同 作者, 浅显易 懂。 2. Don’t wake the baby 不要 13 吵醒小baby 14 3. Silly Willy 幽默 15 4. The big snowball 探险 5. Benny’s big bubble 探险, 16 系列作家Tomie de paola 的 17 6. Otto the cat 友谊 7. The little engine that could 18 helps out 再试一次的勇气 19 20 21 8. Lots of hearts关怀 9. Pig out幽默 10. Picky Nicky认识营养的食
My Very First Mother Goose
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? The Wheels On The Bus My Very First Mother Goose Five Little Monkeys Jumping On the Bed Go Away, Mr. Wolf! My Very First Mother Goose Down By The Station Hop On Pop Five Little Men In A Flying Saucer Green Eggs And Ham
Red rockets and rainbow jelly
Walking Through The Jungle
Freight Train Where is the Green Sheep A Color of His Own Winnie the Witch CH3-2 Numbe Ten Black Dots * rs books The Doorbell Rang

一万个G的免费资源

一万个G的免费资源

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汪培珽第6阶段神奇树屋02TheKnightatDawn

汪培珽第6阶段神奇树屋02TheKnightatDawn

The Knight at Dawn(Magic Tree House #2: )1 The Dark WoodsJack couldn’t sleep.He put his glasses on. He looked at the clock. 5∶30.Too early to get up.Yesterday so many strange things had happened. Now he was trying to figure them out. He turned on the light. He picked up his notebook. He looked at the list he’d made before going to bed.found tree house in woods found lots of books in itpointed to Pteranodon picture in book made a wishwent to time of dinosaurs Pointed to picture of Frog Creek woods made a wish Came home to Frog Creek Jack pushed his glasses into place. Who was going to believe any of this?Not his mom. Or his dad. Or his third-grade teacher, Ms. Watkins. Only his seven-year-old sister, Annie. She’d gone with him to the time of the dinosaurs.“Can’t you sleep?”It was Annie, standing in his doorway.“Nope,” said Jack.“Me neither,” said Annie. “What are you doing?”She walked over to Jack and looked at his notebook. She read the list.“Aren’ t you going to write about the gold medal?” she asked.“You mean the gold medallion, ” said Jack.He picked up his pencil and wrote:found this in dinosaur time“Aren’t you going to put the letter M on the medal?” said Annie.“Medallion,” said Jack. “Not medal.”He added an M:“Aren’t you going to write about the magic person?” said Annie.“We don’t know for sure if there is a magic person,” said Jack.“Well, someone built the tree house in the woods. Someone put the books in it. Someone lost a gold medal in dinosaur time.”“Medallion!” said Jack for the third time. “And I’m just writing the facts.The stuff we know for sure.”“Let’ s go back to the tree house right now,” said Annie. “And find out if the magic person is a fact.”“Are you nuts?” said Jack. “The sun’s not even up yet.”“Come on,” said Annie. “Maybe we can catch them sleeping.”“I don’ t think we should,” said Jack. He was worried. What if the “magic person” was mean? What if he or she didn’t want kids to know about the tree house?“Well, I’m going,” said Annie.Jack looked out his window at the dark-gray sky. It was almost dawn.He sighed. “Okay. Let’s get dressed. I’ll meet you at the back door. Be quiet.”“Yay!” whispered Annie. She tiptoed away as quietly as a mouse.Jack put on jeans, a warm sweatshirt, and sneakers. He tossed his notebook and pencil in his backpack.He crept downstairs.Annie was waiting by the back door. She shined a flashlight in Jack’s face. “Ta-da! A magic wand!” she said.“Shhh! Don’ t wake up Mom and Dad,” whispered Jack. “And turn that flashlight off. We don’t want anyone to see us.”Annie nodded and turned it off. Then she clipped it onto her belt.They slipped out the door into the cool early-morning air. Crickets were chirping. The dog next door barked.“Quiet, Henry!” whispered Annie.Henry stopped barking. Animals always seemed to do what Annie said.“Let’s run!” said Jack.They dashed across the dark, wet lawn and didn’t stop until they reached the woods.“We need the flashlight now,” said Jack.Annie took it off her belt and switched it on.Step by step, she and Jack walked between the trees. Jack held his breath. The dark woods were scary.“Gotcha!” said Annie, shining the flashlight in Jack’s face.Jack jumped back. Then he frowned.“Cut it out!” he siad.“I scared you,” said Annie.Jack glared at her.“Stop pretending!” he whispered. “This is serious.”“Okay, okay.”Annie shined her flashlight over the tops of the trees.“Now what are you doing?” said Jack.“Looking for the tree house!”The light stopped moving.There it was. The mysterious tree house. At the top of the tallest tree in the woods.Annie shined her light at the tree house, and then down the tall ladder. All the way to the ground.“I’m going up,” she said. She gripped the flashlight and began to climb.“Wait!” Jack called.What if someone was in the tree house?“Annie! Come back!”But she was gone. The light disappeared. Jack was alone in the dark.2 Leaving Again“No one’s here!” Annie shouted down.Jack thought about going home. Then he thought about all the books in the tree house.He started up the ladder. When he was nearly to the tree house, he saw lightin the distant sky. Dawn was starting to break.He crawled through a hole in the floor and took off his backpack.It was dark inside the tree house.Annie was shining her flashlight on the books scattered about.“They’re still here,” she said.She stopped the light on a dinosaur book. It was the book that had taken them to the time of the dinosaurs.“Remember the Tyrannosaurus?” asked Annie.Jack shuddered. Of coures he remembered! How could anyone forget seeing a real live Tyrannosaurus rex?The light fell on a book about Pennsylvania. A red silk bookmark stuck out of it.“Remember the picture of Frog Creek?” said Annie.“Of course,” said Jack. That was the picture that had brought them home.“There’s my favorite,” said Annie.The light was shining on a book about knights and castles. There was a blue leather bookmark in it.Annie turned to the page with the bookmark. There was a picture of a knight on a black horse. He was riding toward a castle.“Annie, close that book,” said Jack. “I know what you’re thinking.”Annie pointed at the knight.“Don’t, Annie!”“We wish we could see this guy for real,” Annie said.“No, we don’t!” shouted Jack.They heard a strange sound.“Neeee-hhhh!”It sounded like a horse neighing.They both went to the window.Annie shined the flashlight down on the ground.“Oh no,” whispered Jack.“A knight!” said Annie.Aknight in shining armor! Riding a black horse! Through the Frog Creek woods!Then the wind began to moan. The leaves began to tremble.It was happening again.“We’re leaving!” cried Annie. “Get down!”The wind moaned louder. The leaves shook harder.And the tree house started to spin. It spun faster and faster!Jack squeezed his eyes shut.Then everything was still.Absolutely still.Jack opened his eyes. He shivered. The air was damp and cool.The sound of a horse’s whinny came again from below.“Neeee-hhhh!”“I think we’re here,” whispered Annie. She was still holding the castle book.Jack peeked out the window.A huge castle loomed out of the fog.He looked around. The tree house was in a different oak tree. And down below,the knight on the black horse was riding by.“We can’t stay here,” said Jack. “We have to go home and make a plan first.” He picked up the book about Pennsylvania. He opened it tothe page with the red silk bookmark. He pointed to the photograph of the Frog Creek woods. “I wish—”“No!” said Annie. She yanked the book away from him. “Let’s stay!I want to visit the castle!”“You’re nuts. We have to examine the situation,” said Jack. “From home.”“Let’s examine it here!” said Annie.“Come on.” He held out his hand. “Give it.”Annie gave Jack the book. “Okay. You can go home. I’m staying,” she said. She clipped the flashlight to her belt.“Wait!” said Jack.“I’m going to take a peek. A teeny peek,” she said. And she scooted down the ladder.Jack groaned. Okay, she had won. He couldn’ t leave without her. Besides,he sort of wanted to take a peek himself.He put down the book about Pennsylvania.He dropped the castle book into his pack. He stepped onto the ladder.And headed down into the cool, misty air.3 Across the BridgeAnnie was under the tree, looking across the foggy ground.“The knight’ s riding toward that bridge, I think,” said Annie.“The bridge goes to the castle.”“Wait. I’ll look it up,” said Jack. “Give me the flashlight!”He took the flashlight from her and pulled the castle book out of his pack. He opened it to the page with the leather bookmark.He read the words under the picture of the knight:This is a knight arriving for a castle feast. Knights wore armor when they traveled long and dangerous distances. The armor was very heavy.A helmet alone could weigh up to forty pounds.Wow. Jack had weighted forty pounds when he was five years old. So it’d be like riding a horse with a five-year-old on your head.Jakc pulled out his notebook. He wanted to take notes, as he’d done on their dinosaur trip.He wrote:heavy headWhat else?He turned the pages of the castle book.He found a picture that showed thewhole castle and the buildings around it.“The knight’s crossing the bridge,” said Annie. “He’s going through the gate.... He’s gone.”Jack studied the bridge in the picture.He read:A drawbridge crossed the moat. The moat was filled with water, to help protect the castle from enemies.Some people believe crocodiles were kept in the moat.Jack wrote in his notebook:crocodiles in moat?“Look!” said Annie, peering through the mist. “A windmill! Right over there!” “Yeah, there’ s a windmill in here, too,” said Jack, pointing at the picture.“Look at the real one, Jack,” said Annie. “Not the one in the book.”A piercing shriek split the air.“Yikes,” said Annie. “It sounded like it came from that little house over there!” She pointed through the fog.“There’ s a little house here,” said Jack, studying the picture.He turned the page and read:The hawk house was in the inner ward of the castle. Hawks were trained to hunt other birds and small animals.Jack wrote in his notebook:hawks in hawk house“We must be in the inner ward,” said Jack.“Listen!” whispered Annie. “You hear that? Drums! Horns! They’re coming from the castle. Let’s go see.”“Wait,” said Jakc. He turned more pages of the book.“I want to see what’s really going on, Jack. Not what’s in the book,” said Annie.“But look at this!” said Jack.He pointed to a picture of a big party. Men were standing by the door, playing drums and horns.He read:Fanfares were played to announce different dishes in a feast. Feasts were held in the Great Hall.“You can look at the book. I’m going to the real feast,” said Annie.“Wait,” said Jack, studying the picture. It showed boys his age carrying trays of food. Whole pigs. Pies. Peacocks with all their feathers. Peacocks?Jack wrote:they eat peacocks?He held up the book to show Annie. “Look, I think they eat—”Where was she? Gone. Again.Jack looked through the fog.He heard the real drums and the real horns. He saw the real hawk house, thereal windmill, the real moat.He saw Annie dashing across the real drawbridge. Then she vanished through the gate leading to the castle.4 Into the Castle“I’m going to kill her,” muttered Jack.He threw his stuff into his pack and moved toward the drawbridge. He hoped no one would see him.It was getting darker. It must be night.When he got to the bridge, he started across. The wooden planks creaked under his feet.He peered over the edge of the bridge. Were there any crocodiles in the moat? He couldn’t tell.“Halt!” someone shouted. A guard on top of the castle wall was looking down. Jack dashed across the bridge. He ran through the castle gate and into the courtyard.From inside the castle came the sounds of music, shouting, and laughter.Jack hurried to a dark corner and crouched down. He shivered as he looked around for Annie.Torches lit the high wall around the courtyard.The courtyard was nearly empty.Two boys led horses that clopped over the gray cobblestones.“Neeee-hhhh!”Jack turned. It was the knight’s black horse!“Psssst!”He peered into the darkness.There was Annie.She was hiding behind a well in the center of the courtyard. She waved at him.Jack waved back. He waited till the boys and horses disappeared inside the stable. Then he dashed to the well.“I’m going to find the music!” whispered Annie. “Are you coming?”“Okay,” Jack said with a sigh.They tiptoed together across the cobblestones. Then they slipped into the entrance of the castle.Noise and music came from a bright room in front of them. They stood on one side of the doorway and peeked in.“The feast in the Great Hall!” whispered Jack. He held his breath as he stared in awe.A giant fireplace blazed at one end of the noisy room. Antlers and rugs hung on the stone walls. Flowers covered the floor. Boys in short dresses carried huge trays of food.Dogs were fighting over bones under the tables.People in bright clothes and funny hats strolled among the crowd. Some played funny-shaped guitars. Some tossed balls in the air. Some balanced swords on theirhands.Men and women dressed in capes and furs sat at long, crowded wooden tables.“I wonder which one is the knight,” said Jack.“I don’ t know,” whispered Annie. “But they’re eating with their fingers.”Suddenly, someone shouted behind them.Jack whirled around.A man carrying a tray of pies was standing a few feet away.“Who art thou?” he asked angrily.“Jack,” squeaked Jack.“Annie,” squeaked Annie.Then they ran as fast as they could down a dimly lit hallway.5 Trapped“Come on!” cried Annie.Jack raced behind her.Were they being followed?“Here! Quick!” Annie dashed toward a door off the hallway. She pushed the door open. The two of them stumbled into a dark, cold room. The door creaked shut behind them.“Give me the flashlight,” said Annie. Jack handed it to her, and she switched it on.Yikes! A row of knights right in front of them!Annie flicked off the light.Silence.“They aren’t moving,” Jack whispered.Annie turned the light back on.“They’re just suits,” Jack said.“Without heads,” said Annie.“Let me have the flashlight a second,” said Jack. “So I can look in the book.”Annie handed him the flashlight. He pulled out the castle book. He flipped through the pages until he found what he was looking for.Jack put the book away. “It’s called the armory,” he said. “It’s where armor and weapons are stored.”He shined the flashlight around the room.“Oh, man,” whispered Jack.The light fell on shiny breastplates, leg plates, arm plates. On shelves filled with helmets and weapons. On shields, spears, swords, crossbows, clubs, battle-axes.There was a noise in the hall. Voices!“Let’s hide!” said Annie.“Wait,” said Jack. “I got to check on something first.”“Hurry,” said Annie.“It’ll take just a second,” said Jack. “Hold this.” He handed Annie the flashlight.He tried to lift a helmet from a shelf. It was too heavy.He bent over and dragged the helmet over his head. The visor slammed shut.Oh, forget it. It was worse than having a five-year-old on your head.More like having a ten-year-old on your head.Not only could Jack not lift his head, he couldn’t see anything, either.“Jack!” Annie’ s voice sounded far away.“The voices are getting closer!”“Turn off the flashlight!” Jack’s voice echoed inside the metal chamber.He struggled to get the helmet off.Suddenly he lost his balance and went crashing into other pieces of armor.The metal plates and weapons clattered to the floor.Jack lay on the floor in the dark.He tried to get up. But his head was too heavy.He heard deep voices.Someone grabbed him by the arm. The next thing he knew, his helmet was yanked off. He was staring into the blazing light of a fiery torch.6 Ta-da!In the torchlight,Jack saw three huge men standing over him.One with very squinty-eyes held the torch. One with a very red face held Jack. And one with a very long mustache held on to Annie.Annie was kicking and yelling.“Stop!” said the one with the very long mustache.“Who art thou?” said the one with the very red face.“Spies? Foreigners? Egyptians? Romans? Persians?” said the squinty-eyed one.“No, you dummies!” said Annie.“Oh, brother,” Jack muttered.“Arrest them!” said Red-face.“The dungeon!” said Squinty-eyes.The guards marched Jack and Annie out of the armory. Jack looked back frantically. Where was his backpack?“Go!” said a guard, giving him a push.Jack went.Down they marched, down the long, dark hallway. Squinty, Annie, Mustache,Jack, and Red.Down a narrow, winding staircase.Jack heard Annie shouting at the guards.“Dummies! Meanies! We didn't do anything!”The guards laughed.They didn’t take her seriously at all.At the bottom of the stairs was a big iron door with a bar across it.Squinty pushed the bar off the door. Then he shoved at the door. It creaked open.Jack and Annie were pushed into a cold, clammy room.The fiery torch lit the dungeon. There were chains hanging from the filthy walls. Water dripped from the ceiling, making puddles on the stone floor. It wasthe creepiest place Jack had ever seen.“We’ll keep them here till the feast is done. Then turn them over to the Duke,” said Squinty. “He knows how to take care of thieves.”“There will be a hanging tomorrow,” said Mustache.“If the rats don’t get them first,” said Red.They all laughed.Jack saw that Annie had his backpack. She was quietly unzipping it.“Come on, let’s chain the two of’em,” said Squinty.The guards started toward them.Annie whipped her flashlight out of the pack.“Ta-da!” she yelled.The guards froze. They stared at the shiny flashlight in her hand.Annie switched the light on. The guards gasped in fear.They jumped back against the wall.Squinty dropped the torch. It fell into a dirty puddle on the floor,sputtered,and went out.“My magic wand!” Annie said, waving the flashlight. “Get down. Or I’ll wipe you out!”Jack’s mouth dropped open.Annie fiercely pointed her light at one, then the other. Each howled and covered his face.“Down! All of you! Get down!” shouted Annie.One by one, the guards lay down on the wet floor.Jack couldn’t believe it.“Come on,” Annie said to him. “Let’s go.”Jack looked at the open doorway. He looked at the guards quaking on the ground.“Hurry!” said Annie.In one quick leap, Jack followed her out of the terrible dungeon.7 A Secret PassageAnnie and Jack raced back up the winding stairs and down the long hall way.They hadn’ t gone far when they heard shouting behind them.Dogs barked in the distance.“They’re coming!” Annie cried.“In here!” said Jack. He shoved open a door off the hallway and pulled Annie into a dark room.Jack pushed the door shut. Then Annie shined her flashlight around the room. There were rows of sacks and wooden barrels.“I’ d better look in the book,” said Jack. “Give it to me!”Annie gave him the flashlight and his backpack. He pulled out the book and started tearing through it.“Shhh!” said Annie. “Someone’s coming.”Jack and Annie jumped behind the door as it creaked open.Jack held his breath. A light from a torch danced wildly over the sacks and barrels.The light disappeared. The door slammed shut.“Oh, man,” whispered Jack. “We have to hurry. They might come back.”His hands were trembling as he flipped through the pages of the castle book.“Here’s a map of the castle,” he said. “Look, this must be the room we’re in. It’s a storeroom.” Jack studied the room in the book.“These are sacks of flour and barrels of wine.”“Who cares? We have to go!” said Annie. “Before they come back!”“No. Look,” said Jack. He pointed at the map. “Here’s a trapdoor.”He read aloud:This door leads from the storeroom through a secret passage to a precipice over the moat.“What’s a precipice?” said Annie.“I don’t know. We’ll find out,” said Jack. “But first we have to find the door.” Jack looked at the picture carefully. Then he shined the flashlight around the room.The floor of the room was made up of stones. The trapdoor in the picture was five stones away from the door to the hall.Jack shined the light on the floor and counted the stones. “One, two, three,four, five.”He stamped on the fifth stone. It was loose!He put the flashlight on the floor. He worked his fingers under the thin sheet of stone and tried to lift it.“Help,” Jack said.Annie came over and helped him lift the stone square out of its place.Underneath was a small wooden door.Jack and Annie tugged on the rope handle of the door. The door fell open with a thunk.Jack picked up the flashlight and shined it on the hole.“There’ s a little ladder,” hs said. “Let’s go!”He clipped on the flashlight and felt his way down the small ladder. Annie followed. When they both reached the bottom of the ladder, Jack shined the light around them.There was a tunnel!He crouched down and began moving through the damp, creepy tunnel. The flashlight barely lit the stone walls.He shook the light. Were the batteries running down?“I think our light’s dying!” he said to Annie.“Hurry!” she called from behind.Jack went faster. His back hurt from crouching.The light got dimmer and dimmer.He was desperate to get out of the castle before the batteries died completely.Soon he reached another small wooden door. The door at the end of the tunnel!Jack unlatched the door and pushed it open.He poked his head outside.He couldn’t see anything in the misty darkness.The air felt good. Cool and fresh. He took a deep breath.“Where are we?” whispered Annie behind him. “What do you see?”“Nothing. But I think we’ve come to the outside of the castle,” said Jack. “I’ll find out.”Jack put the flashlight in his pack. He put the pack on his back. He stuck his hand out the door. He couldn’t feel the ground. Just air.“I’m going to have to go feet first,” he said.Jack turned around in the small tunnel. He lay down on his stomach. He stuck one leg out the door. Then the other.Jack inched down, bit by bit. Until he was hanging out the door, clinging to the ledge.“This must be the precipice!” he called to Annie. “Pull me up!”Annie reached for Jack’s hands. “I can’t hold you!” she said.Jack felt his fingers slipping. Then down he fell.Down through the darkness.SPLASH!8 The KnightWater filled Jack’s nose and covered his head. His glasses fell off. He grabbed them just in time. He coughed and flailed his arms.“Jack!” Annie was calling from above.“I’m in... the moat!” said Jack, gasping for air. He tried to tread water and put his glasses back on. With his backpack, his shoes, and his heavy clothes,he could hardly stay afloat.SPLASH!“Hi! I’m here!” Annie sputtered.Jack could hear her nearby. But he couldn’t see her.“Which way’s land?” Annie asked.“I don’t know! Just swim!”Jack dog-paddled through the cold black water.He heard Annie swimming, too. At first it seemed as if she was swimming in front of him. But then he heard a splash behind him.“Annie?” he called.“What?” Her voice came from in front. Not behind.Another splash. Behind.Jack’s heart almost stopped. Crocodiles? He couldn’t see anything through his waterstreaked glasses.“Annie!” he whispered.“What?”“Swim faster!”“But I’ m here! I’ m over here! Near the edge!” she whispered.Jack swam through the dark toward her voice. He imagined a crocodile slithering after him.Another splash! Not far away!Jack’s hand touched a wet, live thing.“Ahhhh!” he cried.“It’s me! Take my hand!” said Annie.Jack grabbed her hand. She pulled him to the edge of the moat. They crawled over an embankment onto the wet grass.Safe!Another splash came from the moat waters.“Oh, man,” Jack said.He was shivering all over. His teeth were chattering. He shook the water off his glasses and put them back on.It was so misty he couldn’ t see the castle. He couldn’ t even see the moat,much less a crocodile.“We... we made it,” said Annie. Her teeth were chattering, too.“I know,” said Jack. “But where are we?” He peered at the foggy darkness.Where was the drawbridge? The windmill? The hawk house? The grove of trees? The tree house?Everything had been swallowed up by the thick, soupy darkness.Jack reached into his wet backpack and pulled out the flashlight. He pushed the switch. No more light.They were trapped. Not in a dungeon. But in the still, cold darkness.“Neeee-hhhh!”A horse’s whinny.Just then the clouds parted. A full moon was shining in the sky. A pool of light spread through the mist.Then Jack and Annie saw him just a few feet away. The knight.He sat on the black horse. His armor shone in the moonlight. A visor hid his face. But he seemed to be staring straight at Jack and Annie.9 Under the MoonJack froze.“It’s him,” Annie whispered.The knight held out his gloved hand.“Come on, Jack,” Annie said.“Where are you going?” said Jack.“He wants to help us,” said Annie.“How do you know?”“I can just tell,” said Annie.Annie stepped toward the horse. The knight dismounted.The knght picked Annie up and put her on the back of his horse.“Come on, Jack,” she called.Jack moved slowly toward the knight. It was like a dream.The knight picked him up, too. He placed Jack on the horse, behind Annie.The knight got on behind them. He slapped the reins.The black horse cantered beside the moonlit water of the moat.Jack rocked back and forth in the saddle. The wind blew his hair. He felt very brave and very powerful.He felt as if he could ride forever on this horse, with this mysterious knight. Over the ocean. Over the world. Over the moon.A hawk shrieked in the darkness.“There’s the tree house,” said Annie. She pointed toward a grove of trees.The knight steered the horse toward the trees.“See. There it is,” Annie said, pointing to the ladder.The knight brought his horse to a stop. He dismounted and helped Annie down.“Thank you, sir,” she said. And she bowed.Then Jack. “Thank you,” he said. And he bowed also.The knight got back on his horse. He raised his gloved hand. Then he slapped the reins and rode off through the mist.Annie started up the tall ladder, and Jack followed. They climbed into the dark tree house and looked out the window.The knight was riding toward the outer wall. They saw him go through the outer gate.Clouds started to cover the moon again. For a brief moment, Jack thought he saw the knight’s armor gleaming on the top of a hill beyond the castle.The clouds covered the moon completely. And a black mist swallowed the land.“He’s gone,” whispered Annie.Jack shivered in his wet clothes as he kept staring at the blackness.“I’m cold,” said Annie. “Where’s the Pennsylvania book?”Jack heard Annie fumble in the darkness. He kept looking out the window.“I think this is it,” said Annie. “I feel a silk bookmark.”Jack was only half-listening. He was hoping to see the knight’ s armor gleam again in the distance.“Okay. I’m going to use this,” said Annie. “Because I think it’s the right one. Here goes. Okay. I’m pointing. I’m going to wish.I wish we could go to Frog Creek!”Jack heard the wind begin to blow. Softly at first.“I hope I pointed to the right picture in the right book,” said Annie.“What?” Jack looked back at her. “Right picture? Right book?”The tree house began to rock. The wind got louder and louder.“I hope it wasn’t the dinosaur book!” said Annie.“Stop!” Jack shouted at the tree house.Too late.The tree house started to spin. It was spinning and spinning!The wind was screaming.Then suddenly there was silence.Absolute silence.10 One Mystery SolvedThe air was warm.It was dawn. Far away a dog barked.“I think that’ s Henry barking!” Annie said. “We did come home.”They both looked out the tree house window.“That was close,” said Jack.In the distance, streetlights lit their street. There was a light on in their upstairs window.“Uh-oh,” said Annie. “I think Mom and Dad are up. Hurry!”“Wait.” In a daze, Jack unzipped his backpack. He pulled out the castle book. It was quite wet. But Jack placed it back with all the other books.“Come on! Hurry!” said Annie, scooting out of the tree house.Jack followed her down the ladder.They reached the ground and took off between the gray-black trees.They left the woods and ran down their deserted street.They got to their yard and crept across the lawn. Right up to the back door.Jack and Annie slipped inside the house.“They’ re not downstairs yet,” whispered Annie.“Shhh,” said Jack.He led the way up the stairs and down the hall. No sign of his mom or dad. But he could hear water running in the bathroom.Their house was so different from the dark, cold castle. So safe and cozy and friendly.Annie stopped at her bedroom door. She gave Jack a smile, then disappeared inside her room.Jack hurried into his room. He took off his damp clothes and pulled on his dry, soft pajamas.He sat down on his bed and unzipped his backpack. He took out his wet notebook. He felt around for the pencil, but his hand touched something else.Jack pulled the blue leather bookmark out of his pack. It must have fallen out of the castle book.Jack held the bookmark close to his lamp and studied it. The leather was smooth and worn. It seemed ancient.For the first time Jack noticed a letter on the bookmark. A fancy M.Jack opened the drawer next to his bed. He took out the gold medallion.He looked at the letter on it. It was the same M.Now this was an amazing new fact.Jack took a deep breath. One mystery solved.The person who had dropped the gold medallion in the time of the dinosaurs was the same person who owned all the books in the tree house.Who was this person?Jack placed the bookmark next to the medallion. He closed the drawer.。

汪培珽第一阶段英文书单

汪培珽第一阶段英文书单

汪培珽第一阶段英文书单汪培珽第一阶段英文书单:书标头An I can read book (level 1),此系列有level 1、2、3,每个level有40本以上不同主题的书,尤其level 3,每本都值得阅读,此书单只列出我有收藏的。

1. Happy birthday, Danny and the dinosaur* 分享、友谊2. Danny and the dinosaur* 幽默、冒险、友谊3. Sammy the seal* 冒险4. The lighthouse children 关怀5. Stanley 勇于改变、爱6. Captain cat 幽默、友谊7. Grizzwold 努力、冒险、幽默8. Chester 不气馁9. Danny and the dinosaur go to camp 团体生活、幽默10. Who will be my friends 交朋友11. Oliver书标头A picture reader,同系列不同作者,浅显易懂。

1. Where is my broom 小巫婆找扫把2. Don’t wake the baby 不要吵醒小baby3. Silly Willy 幽默4. The big snowball 探险5. Benny’s big bubble探险,系列作家Tomie de paola 的作品6. Otto the cat 友谊7. The little engine that could helps out 再试一次的勇气8. Lots of hearts 关怀9. Pig out 幽默10. Picky Nicky 认识营养的食物汪培珽第二阶段英文书单含下列書目书标头An I can read book (level 2)1. Small pig 追求所自己的喜欢2. There is Carrot in my ear 大幽默3. Newt 自信4. Two silly trolls 幽默5. Buzby 独立、探险、幽默6. Father bear comes home * 关怀7. The adventures of snail at school 幽默、冒险8. Harry and the lady next door * 幽默各名家绘本1. Fireman small 认真2. Heaven 死亡、爱3. The snowman 奇幻探险4. Now one foot, now the other 亲情5. Who’s afraid of the big, bad b ully 对抗恶势力、勇气6. Blueberries for Sal * 温馨7. Winnie in winter 知足、幽默8. Marsha makes me sick9. Marsha is only a flower10. Oi! Get off our trains 环境保护、分享11. The doorbell rang 分享、数字概念12. Little polar bear finds a friend 友谊、冒险By Cynthia Rylant,一个小男孩Henry和一只大狗Mudge的系列故事,幽默小品,浅显易懂。

530本世界经典绘本

530本世界经典绘本

530本世界经典绘本链接:/s/1c0rO9O0密码: smp1820史上最全儿童小说、诗歌散文、世界名著链接:/s/1c0ANCnY密码: p8jk1000G学英语又正能量满满的儿童动画电影链接: /s/1gdDyUlH密码: 33o250部迪士尼经典动画(国语发音!!)链接: /s/1sjK7ZDN密码: x9kw20部近1200集超经典的英语启蒙动画片链接: /s/1o6iIc2I密码: b49o350本超清晰彩绘英文原版绘本链接: /s/1pJzAqa3密码: imet200本英语绘本的原声MP3故事链接: /s/1dD1q4Wp密码: 7tto世界名画大师纪录片(全34集,500幅名画赏析)链接: /s/1c00FdC0密码:ng7h99幅世界名画乐园链接: /s/1sjLTUod密码: ehb4世界儿童钢琴名曲集136首链接: /lb/5lbbjy9awadg礼包码:5lbbjy9awadg儿童中国民乐品赏(24CD)链接: /s/1dJmG2密码: tfek宫崎骏的12部珍藏电影链接: /s/1dDfEXZN 密码: m7eq109部高清双语迪士尼动画链接: /s/1dDyAElV 密码: ack369部BBC经典纪录片链接: /s/1dDEQA7f 密码: y6hf4-16岁英语《国家地理儿童百科》mp3+pdf链接: /s/1dDriHTR 密码: gw6w120首圣诞儿歌+10本原版英文圣诞绘本链接: /s/1qWAxWwk 密码: k9tz52部国际儿童获奖小说MP3链接: /s/1gd5qq1H 密码: 5nvx105个奥斯卡最佳动画短片链接: /lb/5lbbx8i0lhfe 礼包码:n5lbbx8i0lhfe26个世界经典音乐剧故事链接: /s/1sjsNA1J 密码: dmwp200个中国现代童话MP3音频链接: /s/1bn1xIhh 密码: sxd724首经典幼儿绕口令[MP3]链接: /s/1hqregr6 密码: fh4930本父母必看育儿PDF电子书/s/1dDzTAsp密码:5cgm贝贝熊80集视频链接: /s/1o6p5XUE密码: u8kp数学启蒙教材MathStart链接: /s/1hq29yOO密码: jydr巴巴爸爸10册绘本音频等链接: /s/1bnhKTwr密码: c8cu安徒生睡前有声故事112篇MP3格式链接: /s/1jGxfDVw密码: cvxd廖彩杏100本英文绘本阅读+音频+视频链接: /s/1o6zFuzC密码: ys2k彩绘英文原版绘本学龄前、小学1-2年级、高年级链接: /s/1kTxdDP1密码: cwjs汪培珽的私房英文书单(1-6阶段)链接: /s/1hqeSQ1Y密码: wukx手工类365个艺术创意链接: /s/1bnARP6n密码: vx92Mister Maker 系列链接: /s/1dD8fTBj 密码: km58Kumon Book儿童手工书合辑(共35本)链接: /s/1xwEjs 密码: c2d9。

汪曾祺的书籍大全

汪曾祺的书籍大全

汪曾祺的书籍大全1.《小学校的钟声》2.《老鲁》3.《复仇》4.《鸡鸭名家》5.《异秉》6.《羊舍一夕》7.《看水》8.《骑兵列传》9.《受戒》10.《塞下人物记》11.《岁寒三友》12.《黄油烙饼》13.《跑警报》14.《瑞云》15.《黄英》16.《蛐蛐》17.《双灯》18.《捕快张三》19.《同梦》20.《迟开的玫瑰或胡闹》21.《小芳》22.《老虎吃错人》23.《人变老虎》24.《樟柳神》25.《护秋》26.《尴尬》27.《鹿井丹泉》28.《喜神》29.《丑脸》30.《三列马》31.《大尾巴猫》32.《去年属马》33.《花园》34.《前天》35.《冬天的树》36.《下水道和孩子们》37.《国子监》38.《关于葡萄》39.《旅途杂记》40.《天山行色》41.《翠湖心影》42.《昆明的雨》43.《昆明的果品》44.《金岳霖先生》45.《林肯的鼻子》46.《我的解放》47.《四方食事》48.《多年父子成兄弟》49.《自得其乐》50.《草巷口》51.《晚翠园曲会》52.《北京的秋花》53.《邂逅集》54.《羊舍的夜晚》55.《晚饭花集》56.《茱萸集》57.《菰蒲深处》58.《关于葡萄》59.《逝水》60.《蒲桥集》61.《人间草木》62.《旅食小品》63.《矮纸集》64.《汪曾祺小品》65.《初访福建》66.《汪曾祺:文与画》。

03汪培珽英语书单第一阶段Happy_Birthday_Danny_and_the_Dinosaur(生日快乐,丹尼和恐龙!)译文

03汪培珽英语书单第一阶段Happy_Birthday_Danny_and_the_Dinosaur(生日快乐,丹尼和恐龙!)译文

生日快乐,丹尼和恐龙!第5页丹尼匆匆忙忙的。

他必须去见他的恐龙朋友。

第6页“我今天6岁了”丹尼说,“你会来参加我的生日派对吗?”第7页“我很乐意去”,恐龙说。

第8页丹尼骑着恐龙,第9页走出了博物馆。

第10页在路上,他们把丹尼的朋友接去生日派对了。

“今天我1亿岁零一天了”恐龙说。

第11页“那么,这也是你的生日派对”,丹尼说。

第 12页孩子们帮丹尼的爸爸挂起了气球。

第13页“看,我也能帮上忙”恐龙说。

第14页丹尼的妈妈派发派对帽子。

第15页“我看起来怎么样?”恐龙问。

第16页“我们想唱一首歌”,一个女孩和一个男孩说。

第17页他们俩唱起来,大家都为他们拍起掌来。

第18页“我也会唱歌”恐龙说。

第19页它唱起歌来,大家都堵起了耳朵。

第20页“让我们玩‘蒙眼给驴贴尾巴’的游戏吧”丹尼说。

第21页恐龙把尾巴贴到了自己屁股上。

第22页孩子们坐下来休息,“请不要把你的脚放在家具上”,丹尼说。

第23页恐龙把它的脚放到了窗外。

第24页丹尼的妈妈和爸爸给了每个孩子一盘冰激凌。

第25页他们不得不给恐龙多一些。

第26页“生日蛋糕来了!”,孩子们说。

第27页他们数起蜡烛来“一、二、三、四、五、六”。

第28页恐龙开始吃蛋糕。

第29页“等一下”丹尼说,“我们要先许个愿”。

第30页“我希望我们明年还能在一起”,丹尼说。

“我也这么希望”恐龙说。

第31页他们吹灭了蜡烛“生日快乐”大家一起唱。

第32页“这是我过的最好的一次生日派对了”丹尼说,“我也是”恐龙说。

汪培珽推荐书单《红色小母鸡》中文词

汪培珽推荐书单《红色小母鸡》中文词

《红色小母鸡》中文词摘自汪培珽推荐的英文启蒙书单Niny Huang 抄写从前有一只猫,一只狗,一只小老鼠和一只红色小母鸡,他们共同生活在一个温暖舒适的小房子里。

猫整天都在柔软的沙发上睡觉,狗整天都在阳光明媚的后院打着盹,老鼠整天在温暖的壁炉旁的椅子上打着瞌睡,所以,小红母鸡只好包了所有的家务活。

它要做饭,洗碗,铺床;它得拖地板,擦窗户,补衣服;它要扫落叶,割草,打理花园;一天,当它打扫花园的时候,发现了一些小麦种子,于是它喊到“谁愿意种这些麦种啊?”“我不种。

”猫说;“我不种。

”狗说;“我不种。

”老鼠说。

“好吧,那么我来种。

”小红母鸡说。

于是它把麦种种进了土里。

每天清晨小红母鸡都要给麦种浇水,除杂草。

很快的,麦种就发芽了,接着就长高了。

小麦成熟的时候,小红母鸡又问道“谁愿意割麦子呀?”猫说“我不割。

”;狗说“我不割。

”;老鼠说“我不割。

”。

“好吧,那么我来割。

”小红母鸡说。

于是它开始收割麦子。

等麦子收割完了,小红母鸡问到“那现在谁愿意把这些麦子送到磨坊里去磨成面粉?”猫说“我不去”;狗说“我不去”;老鼠说“我不去”;“好吧,那么我去送”小红母鸡说。

于是它抱着麦子走了,小红母鸡从磨坊里带回了一小袋精细的白面粉,它又问到“谁愿意用这些面粉做个蛋糕呢?”猫说“我不做”,狗说“我不做”,老鼠说“我不做”。

“好吧,那么我做吧。

”小红母鸡说。

于是它开始做蛋糕,它找来木柴,在炉子里生起火,它把面粉和牛奶,白糖,鸡蛋,黄油一起倒进一个大碗里,和成面粉糊,等烤箱热了,它把面粉糊倒进亮闪闪的烤盘里,然后放进烤箱里去烤,没一会,一阵香气飘进了舒适的小屋里。

猫从柔软的沙发上下来,循着香味走到了厨房;狗呢,从阳光明媚的后院里起了身,循着香味来到了厨房;老鼠呢,从温暖的椅子里跳下来,循着香味跳进了厨房;他们正好看到小红母鸡把一个漂亮的蛋糕从烤箱里拿出来。

“谁想吃蛋糕?”小红母鸡问到。

猫说“我想吃”,狗说“我想吃”,老鼠说“我想吃”。

最完整汪培珽书单1-7阶段

最完整汪培珽书单1-7阶段
1.Fox and His Friends
2.Fox All Week
3.Fox at school
4.Fox on Wheels
5.Fox be Nimble
6.Fox on Stage
7.Fox on the Job
13.Amanda pig and the wiggly tooth
14.Amanda pig first grader
【James Marshall】Fox系列读本
作者James Marshall,我称这位作家的作品为小孩版的《心灵鸡汤》,为幽默首选。每本书都分成数个小故事,浅显易懂,潜藏于其中的深深幽默感,是值得一辈子收藏的。
4.One Hundred Hungry Ants 数字概念
第四阶段(5-10岁)
【I Can Read】系列
01.The Grandma Mix-up 幽默、祖孙情
02.Zack’s Alligator 幽默、友情、关怀
04.A Bargain for Frances 坦诚、不欺瞒
03.Tales of Oliver Pig
04.More Tales of Oliver Pig
05.Tales of Amanda Pig
06.Amanda Pig on Her Own
07.More Tales of Amanda Pig
14.The Case of the Hungry Stranger 天真幽默的侦探故事
15.Kick, Pass, and Run 团队合作
16.Buffalo Bill and the Pony Express 勇气、荣耀,真实故事改编

汪培珽私房书单——中英都有

汪培珽私房书单——中英都有

《喂故事书长大的孩子》1-2岁1、《阿文的小毯子》2、《好宝贝》3、《巫婆与黑猫》4、《小灰狼》5、《我不知道我是谁》6、《哈利海边历险记》7、《好脏的哈利》9、《手套》10、《我爱玩》11、《小荳荳》12、《做得好,小小熊》13、和鬼玩捉迷藏》14、《张开大嘴打哈欠》15、《棒棒天使》16、《蜘蛛先生要搬家》17、《蛇偷吃了我的蛋》18、《没有声音的运动会》19、《嘘》20、《小黑捉迷藏》21、《风姐姐来了》22、《没有名字的小狗》23、《兔子先生去散步》24、《叶子小屋》25、《我家是动物园》26、《哎呦呦呦》27、《圣诞树》2-3岁1、《妈妈的红沙发》2、《让路给小鸭子》3、《做妈妈都是这样》4、《爷爷一定有办法》5、《穿过隧道》6、《7号梦工厂》7、《讨厌黑夜的席奶奶》8、《162只蟑螂》9、《100只饥饿的蚂蚁》10、《菲菲生气了》11、《小羊睡不着》12、《露西儿》13、《小猪离家记》14、《鳄鱼怕怕牙医怕怕》15、《小阿力的大学校》16、《家》17、《哈利的家》18、《小菲菲和新弟弟》19、《安娜想养一只狗》20、《勇敢的沙沙》21、《莉莉的紫色小皮包》22、《我好担心》23、《下雨天接爸爸》24、《给森林的信》25、《草莓园里的拇指婆婆》26、《小莫娜上山》27、《小真的长头发》28、《小猫去散步》29、《白鹭鸶来了》30、《雁鸭和野狐》31、《神奇画具箱》32、《旋风起、小虫急》33、《黑毛船长》34、《你变我也变》3-4岁1、《想生金蛋的母鸡》2、《卡夫卡变虫记》3、《蜗牛屋》4、《聪明的小乌龟》5、《小房子》6、《星月》7、《绿笛》8、《兔子小白的礼物树》9、《巴警官和狗利亚》10、《花婆婆》11、《埃玛画画》12、《谁嗯嗯在我的头上》13、《亲朋自远方来》14、《是蜗牛开始的》15、《喂!下车》16、《蓝弟与口琴》17、《三只小狼和大坏猪》18、《萨琪观底有没有小鸡鸡》19、《纸袋公主》20、《我是大象》21、《青蛙和蟾蜍——快乐年年》22、《老鼠汤》23、《雷公糕》24、《蜜蜂树》25、《传家宝被》26、《三重溪水坝事件》27、《小布做木工》28、《小布缝围裙》29、《小布种豆子》30、《小布烤蛋糕》31、《小布刷油漆》32、《小布修东西》33、《小象欧弟找弟弟》34、《阿伦王子历险记》35、《我的名字叫国王》36、《想看海的小老虎》37、《我是你的好朋友》38、《陪你一起飞》39、《别怕我在你身边》4-5岁1、《姗姗的月光》2、《永远的朋友》3、《明锣移山》4、《有趣的小妇人》5、《我讨厌书》6、《你和特别》7、《种子战争》8、《哈拉老爹说故事》9、《天才大笨猫》10、《芭芭雅嘎奶奶》11、《城市庭园》12、《大姊姊和小妹妹》13、《蛋大小老鼠、胆小大巨人》14、《阿莲娜、老鼠和巨猫》15、《寇特尼》16、《有什么毛病》17、《小恩的秘密花园》18、《神奇魔奇树》19、《贝克的纽约》20、《叔公的理发店》21、《家族相簿》22、《杰西卡和大野狼》23、《南瓜汤》24、《小鲁的池塘》25、《没什么大不了》26、《大象舅舅》27、《看谁在搞鬼》28、《小猫斗公鸡》29、《听!葛鹂儿的鸟叫声》30、《嘉贝拉的歌》31、《用爱心说实话》32、《大箱子》33、《外婆万岁》34、《先左脚、再右脚》35、《美术课》36、《奥利佛是个娘娘腔》37、《爱心树》38、《大树,你给我记住》39、《幸福是什么》《培养孩子的英文耳朵》0-2岁1、Happy Birthday,2、Danny and the Dinosaur3、Danny and the Dinosaur Go to Camp4、The Lighthouse Children5、Who Will be My Friends6、Captain Cat7、Stanley8、Grizzwold9、Chester10、Mine’s the Best11、Oliver12、Mrs. Brice’s Mice13、Sammy the Seal14、Don’t wake the Baby15、Benny’s Big Bubble16、Silly Willy17、The Big Snowball18、Otto the Cat19、The Little Engine That Could Help Out20、Lots of Hearts21、Pig Out22、Picky Nicky23、Do You See a Mouse?24、Little Gorilla25、My Mother is Mine26、No Nap27、So Many Cats!28、The Little Red Hen2岁1、Small Pig2、Oscar Otter3、Red Fox and His Canoe4、The Fire Cat5、Harry and The Lady Next Door6、No More Monsters for Me7、Newt8、Two Silly Trolls9、There is a Carrot in My Ear10、The Adventures of Snail at School11、Buzby12、Father Bear Comes Home13、Little Bear14、Little Bear’s Friend15、Little Bear’s Visit16、Fireman Small17、Heaven18、The Snowman19、Now One Foot, Now the Other20、Who’s Afraid of the Big, Bad Bully21、Blueberries for Sal22、Winnie in Winter23、Marsha Makes Me Sick24、Marsha is Only a Flower25、Oi! Get Off Our Train26、The Doorbell Rang27、The Great Pig Escape28、Stone Soup29、Daddy Makes the Best Spaghetti30、Katy No-Pocket31、Little Polar Bear32、Henry and Mudge and the Best Day of All33、Henry and Mudge in Puddle Trouble34、Henry and Mudge the First Book35、Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night36、Henry and Mudge in the Sparkle Days37、Henry and Mudge and Annie’s Perfect Pet38、Henry and Mudge Take the Big Test39、Henry and Mudge and the Bedtime Thumps 3岁1、Frog and Toad Are Friends2、Frog and Toad Together3、Frog and Toad All Year4、Days with Frog and Toad5、Grasshopper on the Road6、Mouse Soup7、Mouse Tales8、Owl at Home9、Uncle Elephant10、Last One in Is a Rotten Egg!11、Clara and the Bookwagon12、Inspector Hopper13、Big Max14、Here Comes the Strikeout15、The Smallest Cow in the World16、The Biggest Bear17、Nana Upstairs and Nana Downstairs18、Pompeii:Buried Alive19、The Bravest Dog ever Balto20、One Hundred Hungry Ants21、Corduroy22、Eek! There’s a Mouse in the House23、The Tenth Good Thing about Barney24、Red Fox Running25、Happy Birthday, Dear Duck26、Fox and His Friends27、Fox All Week28、Fox at School29、Fox on Wheels30、Fox be Nimble31、Fox on Stage32、Fox on the Job33、Fox in Love34、Three up a Tree35、Three by the Sea36、Four on the Shore37、Amonda Pig and Her Big Brother Oliver38、Amanda Pig and Her Best Friend Lollipop39、Tales of Oliver Pig40、More Tales of Oliver Pig41、Tales of Amanda Pig42、Amanda Pig on Her Own43、More Tales of Amanda Pig44、Amanda Pig, School Girl45、Oliver Pig at School46、Oliver, Amanda and Grandmother Pig47、Amanda Pig and the Awful, Scary Monster48、Oliver and Amonda and the Big Snow49、Courious George50、Courious George Flies a Kite51、Courious George Gets a Medal52、Courious George Goes to the Hospital53、Courious George Rides a Bike54、Courious George Takes a Job55、Franklin in the Dark56、Franklin Goes to the Hospital57、Franklin and the Thunderstorm58、Hurry up, Franklin59、Franklin is Lost60、Franklin’s Blanket61、Franklin Goes to School62、Franklin’s New Friend63、Franklin is Messy64、Franklin is Bossy65、Franklin’s Bad Day66、Franklin and Hrriet67、Franklin Fibs68、Franklin Has a Sleepover69、Franklin’s Secret Club70、Franklin’s Halloween71、Franklin’s Christmas Gift72、Franklin’s School Play4岁1、The Grandma Mix-up2、Zack’s Alligator3、Rollo and Tweedy and the Ghost at Dougal Castle4、A Bargain for France5、The Big Balloon Race6、Sam the Minuteman7、The Josefina Story Quilt8、The Golly Sisters Go West9、Hill of Fire10、The Drinking Gourd11、The Long Way to a New Land12、Wagon Wheels13、The Cases of the Scaredy Cats14、The Cases of the Hungry Stranger15、Kick, Pass and Run16、Buffalo Bill and the Pony Express17、Harry in Trouble18、Emma’s Yucky Brother19、The 18 Penny Goose20、Daniel’s Duck 21、The Golly Sisters Ride Again22、 A Bear for Miguel23、Snowshoe Thompson24、Small Wolf25、Aunt Eater’s Mystery Halloween26、Ghosts27、In a Dark, Dark room28、Arthur’s Birthday Parth29、Arthur’s Loose Tooth30、Arthur’s Christmas Cookies31、Arthur’s Honey Bear32、Arthur’s Camp-out33、Arthur’s Great Big Valentine34、Arthur’s Funny Money35、Arthur’s Pen Pal36、Arthur’s Prize Reader37、 A Day’s Work38、Our Teacher’s Having a Baby39、The Wednesday Surprise40、The Giant Jam Sandwich41、Jamaica’s Find42、Sami and the Time of the Trouble5岁以后1、Alexander, Who Used to Be Rich Last Sunday2、Alexander, Who’s Not Going to Move3、Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, VeryBad Day4、Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel5、The Little House6、Maybelle the Cable Car7、Katy and the Big Snow8、Gingerbread Baby9、The Mitten10、The Hat11、Hedgie’s Surprise12、Town Mouse, Country Mouse13、Berlioz the Bear14、The Night Before Christmas15、Who’s That Knocking on Christmas Eve16、Lyle, Lyle Crocodile17、The House on East 88th Street18、Ira Sleeps Over19、Ira Says Goodbye20、Miss Nelson Is Back21、Miss Nelson Has a Field Day。

(转载)王培廷书单

(转载)王培廷书单

(转载)王培廷书单汪培珽的英文私房书单第一阶段( 0-2岁)书标头An I can read book (level 1),此系列有level 1、2、3,每个level有40本以上不同主题的书,尤其level 3,每本都值得阅读,此书单只列出我有收藏的。

1. Happy birthday, Danny and the dinosaur* 分享、友谊2. Danny and the dinosaur* 幽默、冒险、友谊3. Sammy the seal* 冒险4. The lighthouse children 关怀5. Stanley 勇于改变、爱6. Captain cat 幽默、友谊7. Grizzwold 努力、冒险、幽默8. Chester 不气馁9. Danny and the dinosaur go to camp 团体生活、幽默10. Who will be my friends 交朋友11. Oliver书标头A picture reader,同系列不同作者,浅显易懂。

1. Where is my broom 小巫婆找扫把2. Don’t wake the baby不要吵醒小baby3. Silly Willy 幽默4. The big snowball 探险5. Benny’s big bubble探险,系列作家Tomie de paola 的作品6. Otto the cat 友谊7. The little engine that could helps out 再试一次的勇气8. Lots of hearts 关怀9. Pig out 幽默10. Picky Nicky 认识营养的食物第二阶段( 2岁)书标头An I can read book (level 2)1. Small pig 追求所自己的喜欢2. There is Carrot in my ear 大幽默3. Newt 自信4. Two silly trolls 幽默5. Buzby 独立、探险、幽默6. Father bear comes home * 关怀7. The adventures of snail at school 幽默、冒险8. Harry and the lady next door * 幽默各名家绘本1. Fireman small 认真2. Heaven 死亡、爱3. The snowman 奇幻探险4. Now one foot, now the other 亲情5. Who’s afraid of the big, bad bu lly 对抗恶势力、勇气6. Blueberries for Sal * 温馨7. Winnie in winter 知足、幽默8. Marsha makes me sick9. Marsha is only a flower10. Oi! Get off our trains 环境保护、分享11. The doorbell rang 分享、数字概念12. Little polar bear finds a friend 友谊、冒险By Cynthia Rylant,一个小男孩Henry和一只大狗Mudge的系列故事,幽默小品,浅显易懂。

汪培珽英文书单第一阶段

汪培珽英文书单第一阶段

汪培珽英文书单第一阶段i_can_read_level_1(12本) 1、丹尼和恐龙Danny and the DinosaurDanny 很喜欢恐龙。

当他在纪念馆看到一只时,他说,"如果能和恐龙一起玩,那将会多么美妙,"一个声音回答,“我觉得和你一起玩也一定会很有趣的”。

于是丹尼和恐龙的奇妙冒险开始了!但是一只恐龙可不是普通的玩伴,甚至最日常的活动也变得不平凡,像在捉迷藏的游戏时,找到一个足够大的地方来隐藏一只恐龙,并让他的长长的尾巴不要敲打房子。

但 Danny 能教老恐龙新把戏,这是这只有着 1 亿年年龄的老恐龙感到最有趣的事!Danny loves dinosaurs. When he sees one at the museun and says, "It would be nice to play with a dinosaur," a voice answers, "And I think it would be nice to play with you." So begins Dannys and the dinosaur's wonderful adventure together!But a dinosaur is no ordinary playmate. Even the most everyday activities become extraordinary, like finding a big-enough place to hide a dinosaur in a game of hide-and-seek, and keeping him from knocking over houses with his long tail. But Danny can teach a old dinosaur new tricks. It's the most fun this dinosaur has had in a hundred million years!2、我会读之史丹利 I Can Read Book 1:Stanley这本书一翻开,就感觉太棒了!这本书讲的是原始人生活的一个生活场景,用孩子们能够理解的故事讲解出来,即了解了原始人的生活状况,又感受到了故事里的美好和温情,而且见到的这类题材的绘本相对较少。

汪培珽英文书单

汪培珽英文书单

汪培珽英文书单汪培珽英文书单第一到第五阶段合集第一阶段目录[An I can read book] Level1. Happy birthday, Danny and the dinosaur* pdf mp3 分享、友情2. Danny and the Dinosaur* pdf mp3冒险、友情3.Danny and the Dinosaur Go to Camp pdf mp3团体生活、幽默4.The lighthouse children关怀、友情5.Who Will be My Friends pdf交朋友6.Captain Cat pdf友情、幽默7.Stanley pdf勇于改变、爱8.Grizzwold pdf努力、冒险、环保9.Chester pdf追求理想不气馁10.Mine's the Best pdf mp3炫耀心态、友谊11.Oliver pdf追求12.Mrs. Brice's Mice pdf关怀、友谊13.Sammy the Seal* pdf mp3冒险、追求理想【Penguin Group】系列读本(PICTURE READER)每本约24页,加载中...内容加载失败,点击此处重试加载全文浅显易懂,书后附有可裁剪的生词?目录:14. Don't Wake the Baby PDF MP3关怀、爱、手足之情15. Benny's Big Bubble PDF MP3冒险旅程,知名作家Tomie depaola作品16. Silly Willy PDF MP3爱、幽默17. The Big Snowball PDF MP3幽默18. Otto the Cat PDF MP3友情、关怀19. The Little Engine That Could Helps Out PDF 再试一次的勇气20. Lots of Hearts PDF MP3关怀21.Pig Out PDF MP3欢乐气氛22.Picky Nicky PDF MP3营养食物的基本认识23.In a Dark Dark House PDF MP3冒险之旅24、Too Noisy PDF MP3噪音、关怀25、Dog Wash Day PDF照顾小动物26、Space Kid PDF想象力、有趣14-22是书单?狭谐龅氖?23-26是新出的同系列的书各名家绘本27.Do You See a Mouse? 找找书 pdf28.Little Gorilla 爱、友情 pdf29.My Mother is Mine 还是自己的妈妈最好 pdf30.No Nap 小孩儿都不喜欢睡觉 pdf31.So Many Cats 关怀、数数 pdf32.The Little Red Hen 天下没有免费的午餐 pdf mp3 第二阶段【An I can read book】level 1、21. Small pig pdf mp3关怀、追求理想2. Oscar Otter pdf螳螂捕蝉,黄雀在后的幽默3. Red Fox and His Canoe pdf分享、幽默、追求理想4. The Fire Cat pdf爱、关怀、做大事5. Harry and The Lady Next Door pdf mp3梦想成真6. No More Monsters for Me pdf mp3可爱的怪兽、机智、关怀7. Newt(无)自信8. Two Silly Trolls (无)友情、分享、幽默9.There Is a Carrot in My Ear pdf无厘头式的幽默10. The Adventures of Snail at School pdf冒险、想象、自信11. Buzby pdf mp3独立、自信、工作态度12. Father Bear Comes Home pdf mp313. Little Bear pdf mp314. Little Bear’s Friend pdf mp315. Little Bear’s visit pdf mp312-15这4本是描写一只小小熊的一系列温馨家庭故事16. A Kiss For Little Bear pdf mp3这本不在书单内,但和12-15四本一样也是写的小小熊的故事[Cynthia Rylant]作品 pdf文档 mp3(8本全) 206.09MB描写一个小男孩Henry和一只大狗Mudge的系列故事。

汪培珽的中文私房书单(适合打印版)

汪培珽的中文私房书单(适合打印版)

汪培珽的中文私房书单一、一岁到两岁(前八本小学低年级也会很喜欢)1、《阿文的小毯子》(优先起步阅读)取舍、变通、2、《好宝贝》机智3、《巫婆与黑猫》(优先起步阅读)同情心、解决问题、幽默。

详细的构图,可激发孩子的观察力。

4、《小灰狼》(优先起步阅读)同情心、幽默5、《我不知道我是谁》(优先起步阅读)认识自己、幽默6、《哈利海边历险记》(优先起步阅读)幽默、勇气7、《哈利的花毛衣》(优先起步阅读)解决问题、幽默8、《好脏的哈利》(优先起步阅读)机智9、《手套》分享10、《我爱玩》各种传统童年游戏,以韵文的方式表现。

11、《小荳荳》家庭生活、父爱12、《做得好,小小熊》自信心以下为十八公分的小本平装书,名为「经典好书」,一系列共二十四本,有故事性,简短好听,价格平实。

以下列出我所买的各册,但目前并不分开销售,请自行评估,可洽信谊出版社购买。

1、《和鬼玩捉迷藏》让孩子以正面的态度来看待「鬼」的书,内容和绘图一点也不可怕。

2、《张开大嘴打哈欠》国语韵文的上等好书,连绘图都有逻辑性。

3、《棒棒天使》韵文、认识相反词4、《蜘蛛先生要搬家》搬家5、《蛇偷吃了我的蛋》推理6、《没有声音的运动会》团队合作、关怀7、《嘘》认识生活环境和声音8、《小黑捉迷藏》空间概念9、《风姐姐来了》感觉概念10、《没有名字的小狗》推理以下为二十公分平装书「我的小书包」,一系列共三十本。

以下只列出我所买的各册,但目前并元分开销售,请自行评估,可洽信谊出版社购买。

1、《兔子先生去散步》认识标志、幽默2、《叶子小屋》认识昆虫、关心生物3、《我家是动物园》以人物认识抽象概念4、《唉唷唷唷》生活趣味5、《圣诞树》节庆、绘图丰富6、《我不知道我是谁》二、两岁到三岁 (小学低年级也会听得津津有味)1、《妈妈的红沙发》(优先起步阅读)勤俭、努力、达成愿望、单亲2、《让路给小鸭子》爱、冒险3、《做妈妈的都是这样》(优先起步阅读)妈妈为什么爱孩子4、《爷爷一定有办法》(优先起步阅读)机智、勤俭5、《隧道》(优先起步阅读)手足之情6、《7号梦工厂》无字书、奇幻7、《讨厌黑夜的席奶奶》(优先起步阅读)幽默、想象力8、《162只螳螂》(优先起步阅读)生命循环、数字概念9、《100只饥饿的蚂蚁》数字概念、幽默10、《菲菲生气了》情绪处理11、《小羊睡不着》数数书12、《露西儿》做回自己13、《小猪离家记》追求理想、关怀、幽默14、《鳄鱼怕怕牙医怕怕》看牙医的心理建设、幽默以下为相同作者系列作品——罗伦斯·安荷特:文;凯瑟琳·安荷特:图。

关于「廖彩杏书单」,我走过的弯路你就不要走了

关于「廖彩杏书单」,我走过的弯路你就不要走了

关于「廖彩杏书单」,我走过的弯路你就不要走了〖本文系果果妈妈投稿作品〗果果妈妈,曾在孩宝小镇公众号发布广受好评的《这可能是我看过的最全面、最走心的英文启蒙阅读分享》等文章。

这次她给我们带来的,是她在四年多亲子阅读时光和「廖彩杏书单」执行过程中走过的一些弯路和思考,以及廖单常见问题解析。

相信大家看完后一定会有所启发。

原标题丨《廖彩杏书单之我见》台湾三大英文启蒙书单,分别是「汪培珽书单」、「廖彩杏书单」和「吴敏兰书单」——「廖彩杏书单」,因为操作性强最受推崇。

目前,廖彩杏的简体版《用有声书轻松听出英语力》已在全国开售,但还是有很多爸爸妈妈对廖彩杏书单有很多疑惑。

在此,我想谈谈我对「廖彩杏书单」的一些看法,希望能对大家有所帮助。

一、廖彩杏书单适合0-8 岁孩子?书的封皮上赫然写着「0-8 岁儿童英语启蒙圣经」,可见廖彩杏的书多受推崇。

但是我希望大家不要受封皮的影响,误认为「只有0-8 岁孩子英文启蒙适用廖彩杏书单,大孩子不适用廖彩杏书单。

」(一)区分生理年龄与英文年龄廖彩杏老师在书中认为:生理年龄与英文年龄是不一样的,孩子的年龄或许是五岁、十岁,但若无法用流利的英文掌握一本适合三岁幼儿阅读的英文童书的内容,我会认为他们的英文年龄都是零岁。

既然英文年龄是零岁,那就得按部就班、循序渐进,从最基本的开始,请他们把自己当初嗷嗷待哺的「英文婴儿」,把英语当成母语来学。

同样一个八岁的孩子,一个没有接触英文的经验,另一个听英文故事已经听了三年,那么他们的英文年龄就是不同的,适合他们选读的英文故事也完全不同。

这个我很赞同。

英文年龄跟孩子具体几岁,其实并没有太大的关系。

如果只是按学校的进度学习,没有在家里持续地听英文故事,应该是从零基础开始。

因为学校里的英语,只是学了一些简单的单词或是短句,即使考试考满分,也还是英语听力、口语不行,更没有能力进行英语课外书籍的阅读。

所以,即使生理年龄超过8 岁,依然可以参考廖彩杏的《用有声书轻松听出英语力》,进行英文启蒙。

汪培珽中英文书单

汪培珽中英文书单

第一阶段( 0-2岁)[An I can read book] (level 1)Harper Collins所出版的系列读本。

这样的标头会出现在每本书的封面上方。

它其实是国外为不同年龄孩子设计的读本,依照程度分为不同阶段。

在以下各阶段的书单,将陆续列出这系列读本中我喜欢、并曾反复为孩子念过的作品,本本精彩,不容错过。

附录音带版本更是让孩子习惯听英文的好帮手。

每本约32~64页,每页1~3句话,每句话平均为6、7个单字书名主题1. Happy Birthday, Danny and the Dinosaur* 分享、友情2. Danny and the Dinosaur* 冒险、友情3. Danny and the Dinosaur Go to Camp 团体生活、幽默4. The Lighthouse Children 关怀、友情5. Who Will be My Friends 交朋友6. Captain Cat 幽默、友NGE7. Stanley 勇于改变、爱8. Grizzwold 努力、冒险、环保9. Chester 追求理想不气馁10 Mine’s the Best 炫耀心理、友谊11. Oliver 追求12 Mrs. Brice’s Mice 关怀、友谊13. Sammy the Seal* 冒险、追求理想[Penguin Group]系列读本每本约24页,浅显易懂,书后附有可裁剪的生字卡,但我未实际用过,只是念着好玩而已。

书名主题1 Don’t Wake the Baby 关怀、爱、手足之情2 Benny’s Big Bubble 冒险旅程、知名作家Tomie dePacia作品3 Silly Willy 爱、幽默4 The Big Snowball 幽默5 Otto the Cat 友情、关怀6 The Little Engine That Could Help Out 再试一次的勇气7 Lots of Hearts 关怀8 Pig Out 欢乐气氛9 Picky Nicky 营养食物的基本认知[各名家绘本]书名主题1 Do Y ou See a Mouse 找找书2 Little Gorilla 爱、友情3 My Mother is Mine 还是自己的妈妈最好4 No Nap 小孩都不爱午睡5 So Many Cats! 关怀、幼儿数数6 The Little Red Hen 天下没有白吃的午餐第二阶段( 2岁)[An I can read book] (level 1、2),每本约48~64页书名主题1. Small pig 家、关怀、追求理想2 Osca Otter 螳螂捕蝉黄雀在后的幽默3 Red Fox and His Canoe 分享、幽默、追求理想4 The Fire Cat 爱、关怀、做大事5 Harry and The Lady Next Door* 梦想成真6 No More Monsters for Me* 可爱的怪兽、机智、关怀7 Newt 自信8 Two Silly Trolls 友情、分享、幽默9 There is Carrot in My Ear 无厘头式的幽默10 The Adventures of Snail at School 冒险、想像、自信11 Buzby * 独立、自信、工作态度12 Father Bear Comes Home 这四本书是描写一支小小熊的一系列温馨家庭故事13 Little Bear*14 Little Bear’s Friend*15 Little Bear’s V isit[各名家绘本]以下书单中的最后一本《Little Polar Bear》若照程度来说,应该放在第四阶段,但它真的是这个时期我讲给孩子听的故事书,所以维持实际状况不做变动,藉以提醒父母不要低估孩子对故事书和语言的接受能力。

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汪培珽的中文私房书单
1-2岁
1、《阿文的小毯子》可购得
2、《好宝贝》
3、《巫婆与黑猫》
4、《小灰狼》
5、《我不知道我是谁》可购得
6、《哈利海边历险记》可购得
7、《好脏的哈利》可购得有套装
8、《哈利的花毛衣》可购得
9、《手套》可购得
10、《我爱玩》
11、《小荳荳》
12、《做得好,小小熊》
13、《和鬼玩捉迷藏》
14、《张开大嘴打哈欠》
15、《棒棒天使》
16、《蜘蛛先生要搬家》
17、《蛇偷吃了我的蛋》
18、《没有声音的运动会》
19、《嘘》
20、《小黑捉迷藏》
21、《风姐姐来了》
22、《没有名字的小狗》
23、《兔子先生去散步》
24、《叶子小屋》
25、《我家是动物园》
26、《哎呦呦呦》
27、《圣诞树》
汪培珽2-3岁(幼小也适用)小学低年级也会听得津津有味
1、《妈妈的红沙发》可购得
2、《让路给小鸭子》可购得
3、《做妈妈都是这样》
4、《爷爷一定有办法》可购得
5、《穿过隧道》可购得有更名
6、《7号梦工厂》可购得
7、《讨厌黑夜的席奶奶》可购得
8、《162只蟑螂》
9、《100只饥饿的蚂蚁》
10、《菲菲生气了》可购得
11、《小羊睡不着》可购得有套装
12、《露西儿》
13、《小猪离家记》
14、《鳄鱼怕怕牙医怕怕》可购得
15、《小阿力的大学校》可购得
16、《家》
17、《哈利的家》
18、《小菲菲和新弟弟》
19、《安娜想养一只狗》
20、《勇敢的沙沙》
21、《莉莉的紫色小皮包》
22、《我好担心》可购得
23、《下雨天接爸爸》可购得类似
24、《给森林的信》
25、《草莓园里的拇指婆婆》
26、《小莫娜上山》
27、《小真的长头发》可购得套装
28、《小猫去散步》
29、《白鹭鸶来了》
30、《雁鸭和野狐》
31、《神奇画具箱》
32、《旋风起、小虫急》
33、《黑毛船长》
34、《你变我也变》
汪培珽3-4岁(同样适合小学)也会吸引小学任何年级的孩子
1、《想生金蛋的母鸡》
2、《卡夫卡变虫记》可购得
3、《蜗牛屋》
4、《聪明的小乌龟》
5、《小房子》可购得
6、《星月》可购得有英文版
7、《绿笛》可购得
8、《兔子小白的礼物树》
9、《巴警官和狗利亚》可购得大陆有更名
10、《花婆婆》可购得有英文版
11、《埃玛画画》可购得
12、《谁嗯嗯在我的头上》可购得
13、《亲朋自远方来》
14、《是蜗牛开始的》
15、《喂!下车》
16、《蓝弟与口琴》
17、《三只小狼和大坏猪》可购得
18、《萨琪观底有没有小鸡鸡》可购得
19、《纸袋公主》可购得
20、《我是大象》
21、《青蛙和蟾蜍——快乐年年》可购得
22、《老鼠汤》
23、《雷公糕》可购得套装书
24、《蜜蜂树》可购得套装书
25、《传家宝被》
26、《三重溪水坝事件》可购得套装书
27、《小布做木工》可购得有套装27-32都在套装书里面
28、《小布缝围裙》可购得
29、《小布种豆子》可购得
30、《小布烤蛋糕》可购得
31、《小布刷油漆》可购得
32、《小布修东西》可购得
33、《小象欧弟找弟弟》可购得有套装
34、《阿伦王子历险记》
35、《我的名字叫国王》
36、《想看海的小老虎》
37、《我是你的好朋友》
38、《陪你一起飞》
39、《别怕我在你身边》
汪培珽4-5岁(只要是爱书的孩子,任何年龄都会被吸引)
1、《姗姗的月光》可购得有更名
2、《永远的朋友》
3、《明锣移山》
4、《有趣的小妇人》可购得有更名
5、《我讨厌书》可购得
6、《你很特别》可购得
7、《种子战争》
8、《哈拉老爹说故事》
9、《天才大笨猫》
10、《芭芭雅嘎奶奶》
11、《城市庭园》
12、《大姊姊和小妹妹》
13、《胆大小老鼠、胆小大巨人》
14、《阿莲娜、老鼠和巨猫》可购得
15、《寇特尼》
16、《有什么毛病》
17、《小恩的秘密花园》可购得
18、《神奇魔奇树》可购得
19、《贝克的纽约》
20、《叔公的理发店》
21、《家族相簿》
22、《杰西卡和大野狼》
23、《南瓜汤》可购得
24、《小鲁的池塘》可购得
25、《没什么大不了》
26、《大象舅舅》
27、《看谁在搞鬼》
28、《小猫斗公鸡》可购得
29、《听!葛鹂儿的鸟叫声》
30、《嘉贝拉的歌》
31、《用爱心说实话》
32、《大箱子》
33、《外婆万岁》
34、《先左脚、再右脚》可购得
35、《美术课》可购得
36、《奥利佛是个娘娘腔》可购得
37、《爱心树》可购得
38、《大树,你给我记住》
39、《幸福是什么》。

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