A digital solution for your classroom with features created with teachers and students in mind: - Perpetual license - 24 hour, 7 days a week access - No limit to the number of students accessing one title at a time - Provides a School to Home connection wherever internet is available - Easy to use - Ability to turn audio on and off - Words highlighted to match audio A biography telling the life of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a staunch supporter of women's rights including women's right to vote. Written in graphic-novel format.
A digital solution for your classroom with features created with teachers and students in mind: - Perpetual license - 24 hour, 7 days a week access - No limit to the number of students accessing one title at a time - Provides a School to Home connection wherever internet is available - Easy to use - Ability to turn audio on and off - Words highlighted to match audio A biography telling the life of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a staunch supporter of women's rights including women's right to vote. Written in graphic-novel format.
Cynthia Martin has worked in comics and animation since 1983. Her credits include Star Wars, Spider-Man, and Wonder Woman for Marvel Comics and DC Comics, in addition to work as a storyboard artist for Sony Children's Entertainment and the Krislin Company. Cynthia's recent projects include an extensive series of graphic novels for Capstone Press and two issues of Blue Beetle for DC Comics. She also illustrated the book Alley of Shadows, published by Stone Arch Books.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton proved that perseverance and patience
accomplish great things. She spent most of her life working hard to
change laws that many people told her would never be changed.
Elizabeth believed that women should have the same rights as men.
She lobbied endlessly for women's suffrage. In addition to raising
a large family, she wrote speeches and books, traveled and gave
speeches, and organized numerous petitions. This book is arranged
as a graphic novel. The illustrations accurately portray life in
the nineteenth century and the characters' dialog support and
supplement the story. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was an influential
historical figure and the highlights of her inspirational story are
presented here in an easy-to-read and entertaining format. The
appendix provides tools for further information. This title is part
of the "Graphic Library: Graphic Biographies" series.-- "Children's
Literature Comprehensive Database"
Readable and inviting, these beginning biographies serve as good
basic introductions to these individuals. A yellow background is
used to set apart text that is a direct quotation from a primary
source, allowing readers to distinguish it from the fictional
dialogue and the narration. The "Internet Sites" section leads
readers to FactHound.com where they can enter a book code to get a
list of relevant sites. While not outstanding, the art is engaging
and bright, and the format will appeal to graphic-novel fans as
well as reluctant readers searching for a simple biography.--
"School Library Journal"
REVIEW -- Women's rights advocate, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, is a
staple in elementary education - a woman of strength and
progressive thought whose death preceded her intended goal. Like
most strong women, Stanton's views were considered edgy and
controversial. Despite the poor treatment of women she continued
her fight to end discrimination in the face of strong opposition by
powerful men. This strong woman, who knew her place was not
relegated only to the home and child rearing, was an instrumental
and influential force in the women's suffrage movement. The story
is short and offers a primer on the life and times of a woman who
refused to live with oppression and discrimination, a small
portrait of one woman's life. ART REVIEW -- One- and two-panel
pages are combined with generous amounts of dialogue and narration
bubbles to make for significant factual information, without the
burden of dense paragraphs. The art is heavily inked and bright.
AGE RECOMMENDATION -- Most students under age 8 would not be ready
for the vocabulary, otherwise there is nothing preventing younger
children from accessing the book. IN THE CLASSROOM -- This short
biography gives the young reader a glimpse into the struggles and
trials of one of America's most influential women and the forces of
opposition that stood in her way. The lesson is a strong one for
all children - boys, girls, ethnic minorities, persons with
disabilities, those in poverty - one person can make a difference
in a democracy and affect the lives of everyone in an oppressed
group. It takes education, determination, perseverance, and
alliances with like-minded spirits to achieve a goal greater than
one's self. OTHER INFORMATION -- Capstone offers an additional
facts list, a glossary, Internet sites, an index, and a
bibliography. CHRIS' RECOMMENDATION - Recommended. Children need to
learn about democracy and how to affect change appropriately and
civilly. That begins with studying some of the great advocates of
history, including Elizabeth Cady Stanton. http:
//graphicclassroom.blogspot.com/2008/08/elizabeth-cady-stanton-womens-rights.html--
"The Graphic Classroom Blog"
When she was only eleven years old Elizabeth Cady asked her father
why it was that women were not allowed to vote. She felt that it
was not fair that men alone could create the laws that affected all
Americans. Later, as a young woman and after she had graduated from
college, Elizabeth heard much talk about how wrong slavery was and
how unjust it was that slaves had no rights. Elizabeth wondered
that such people could talk about the slaves and yet not see that
women too also lived without rights. Elizabeth then met and married
the abolitionist lawyer, Henry Stanton and she went with him to the
World Anti-Slavery Convention in London. Once again Elizabeth was
upset because all the men who spoke of the slavery issue refused to
accept that women had no more rights than slaves did. So, back in
America Elizabeth joined other women to talk about what could be
done to make sure that women got more rights. The women determined
that the time had come to bring about change and make some new
rules and they set to arranging the first women's rights convention
which took place in Seneca Falls, New York. This was just the
beginning of a long battle which Elizabeth fought for the rest of
her life. Unfortunately she did not live to see American women get
the vote but her daughter and granddaughter did, and both were
present when women were able to vote for the first time in 1920.
This is an excellent introduction to the life and career of one of
America's most well known women's rights workers. With a graphic
rich format and an interesting narrative, this book will help girls
realize that many women like Elizabeth Cady Stanton had to work for
many years before rights that we take for granted today were given
to us.-- "Through the Looking Glass Children's Book Review"
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