INSTRUCTIONS
Rationale
Our teachers and administrators realize that we all – including students – need and benefit from the rest and relaxation we get during the summer months. We also recognize the need to keep our minds active. Studies have repeatedly indicated that students who don’t read over the summer not only fail to progress in their language and academic skills, but they decline; students actually “lose ground” academically if they don’t read during their summer break. Standardized test scores are lower for such students in September than they were the previous spring. We desire that our students see reading as something that is done all year round, in any setting, not just for school. In short, we want our students to be “readers.”
Objectives
We are hoping the summer reading program will accomplish the following in our high school students:
- Help students to keep their minds somewhat active throughout the summer months, so that the return to academics in the fall will not be as difficult an adjustment.
- Continue and reinforce the enthusiasm for “pleasure reading” that has been encouraged by their teachers.
- Prepare students for the curriculum/reading material they will encounter in their English classes in the fall.
- Encourage students who struggle with reading and/or are reading below their grade level to improve their reading skills in a pleasant, non-threatening environment.
- Guide students toward reading the kinds of books that are considered “classics” while also allowing them to choose books that are just fun for them to read.
- Reward students who choose to read more than the required amount.
Guidelines and Procedures
Students must abide by the following procedures to get “credit” for the requirement:
- Summer reading books must be read in English.
- Students may read their books in hard copy or digital form but may not be an audiobook unless given prior teacher approval as a supplemental aid.
- Summer reading books must be books that the student has not read before (in any language). [Exceptions may be made for ELL students; discuss this with your teacher.]
- Students will not be required to write a book report on their books over the summer. However, there will be a large, graded, written assessment during the first week of school in the fall.
- For every book a student reads, he/she must fill out the Summer Reading Report with the book’s title and author, number of pages, a brief comment about the book, etc.
Every student who is entering grades 9 through 12 must read TWO books:
- One book must be from the “required” list for his/her grade level or class.
- The second book may be any book of the student’s choice, as long as it meets the first two criteria (above), is grade-level appropriate, and is at least 200 pages long.
- Students may, but are not required to, choose their second book from a list of “recommended” books that is provided in this packet. (Any book on this list will be an acceptable choice regardless of its length.)
- As an added incentive for students to read more than the 2-book minimum, for every additional book they read, they will have a chance to win small treats or prizes. To qualify for prizes, they must fill out the Summer Reading Report for each of the 'extra' books.
- All high school students who enroll at ICSB prior to July 1 will be required to read both books. Those who enroll on or after July 1 must read only the book from the “required” list for their class.
- All book choices should be approved by parents/guardians.
Obtaining Books
Students may read books they have at home, buy or borrow books, go to local libraries (here or in the States), download books they find online at free sites such as Project Gutenberg Free E-books, or check out books from school. Our own school library has e-books of most of the titles on the required book list. For more information on how to read e-books, contact Mrs. Fraser. It is each student’s responsibility – not the teacher’s – to make sure he/she obtains the books and allows enough time to read them. However, every class’s “required” list will have at least two selections that are available to be checked out here at school.
The following guidelines will apply to books checked out from the school:
- Students who want to borrow library books over the summer may during library open hours: 9:00 am-12:00 pm on Wednesdays. See the library portal on the ICSB website for updated information. All library books borrowed during the summer will have flexible due dates, but must be returned no later than the first day of school. Fines for late or lost books will apply. Students may also check out school library books on the last day of school, Thursday, June 8.
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Students who want to borrow books from the Upper School classroom library or borrow a book from one of the class sets may do so by Friday, June 9 by seeing one of the Upper School English Teachers. These books must be returned on the first day of school. Students will be charged for any books that are not returned.
REQUIRED READING LIST
Find the list for the English class you will be enrolled in for the next school year, and read one book that you have not read before from that list. More descriptions can be found on the “Recommended…” list or Amazon.com. Then, read another book of your choosing that meets the basic requirements.
You must submit this brief Summer Reading Report before school begins for EACH of the two books you read! You can access this report through your English class Team as well.
English 9 and English 10 (American Literature)
- Golding, William – Lord of the Flies
- Crane, Stephen – The Red Badge of Courage
- Knowles, John – A Separate Peace
- Marshall, Catherine – Christy
- McBride, James – The Color of Water
- Buck, Pearl S. – The Good Earth
- Hansberry, Lorraine – A Raisin in the Sun
- Curtis, Christopher Paul – The Watsons Go to Birmingham-1963
- Taylor, Mildred - Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
- Bradbury, Ray - Fahrenheit 451
- Alcott, Louisa May - Little Women
English 11 and 12 (Modern World Literature)
- Buck, Pearl S. – The Good Earth
- Brontë, Charlotte – Jane Eyre
- Bunyan, John – The Pilgrim’s Progress
- Eliot, George – Silas Marner
- Fitzgerald, F. Scott – The Great Gatsby
- Gaskell, Elizabeth – North and South
- Hansberry, Lorraine – A Raisin in the Sun
- Orczy, Baroness Emmuska – The Scarlet Pimpernel
- Orwell, George – 1984
- Sinkiewicz, Henryk – Quo Vadis
- Ten Boom, Corrie – The Hiding Place
AP Language and Composition
See the required summer assignments for the AP Language and Composition class here.