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In reply to the discussion: the school librarian told this to my 13 year old granddaughter [View all]TheBlackAdder
(29,981 posts)2. The only thing that comes close is an Academic Peer Review (Placed in the open for all to comment).
If a publication isn't peer reviewed, then it is not checked for accuracy.
And by peer review, it has to be academia doing it, not a bunch of political hacks.
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the school librarian told this to my 13 year old granddaughter [View all]
iwillalwayswonderwhy
Jan 2014
OP
The only thing that comes close is an Academic Peer Review (Placed in the open for all to comment).
TheBlackAdder
Jan 2014
#2
They can if they want, but stopping the story to look up every unfamiliar word destroys the
El_Johns
Jan 2014
#9
Clicking on it doesn't teach them how to deduce the meaning from context on their own.
El_Johns
Jan 2014
#17
It was my grandparents' library for me. And their ancient Encylopedia Britannica,
pnwmom
Jan 2014
#15
Because it takes you out of the flow of the story and much of the fun goes away.
pnwmom
Jan 2014
#14
Yes, better than someone who looked it up. You forget something you looked up easily, but when
El_Johns
Jan 2014
#20
It's the same way children learn spoken language. Babies don't sit there asking adults
pnwmom
Jan 2014
#22
Yes. Babies are rewarded by interaction with people, just like kids under the best of circumstances
El_Johns
Jan 2014
#24
Agree. Let them read what captures their imagination. My 7 year old cousin is reading comic
El_Johns
Jan 2014
#33
I doubt it was a librarian anyway. Librarians are generally book people, & book people know that
El_Johns
Jan 2014
#25
Tell your granddaughter to ask the librarian if "Mein Kampf" is all true. (nt)
Nye Bevan
Jan 2014
#26
tell your granddaughter to stay away from the section where they place all the new, popular
liberal_at_heart
Jan 2014
#39