Chicago Sun-Times

Get schooled with great picture books

Attention, class! School’s back in session, and children’s authors and illustrato­rs have been busy sharpening their colored pencils to show kids that learning can be fun. USA TODAY’s Jocelyn McClurg offers a report card on five new back- to- school pictu

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1 The Teacher’s Pet

by Anica Mrose Rissi; illustrate­d by Zachariah Ohora ( Disney- Hyperion, ages 3- 5)

WHAT IT’S ABOUT: This cleverly titled tale isn’t about the perky brown- noser in the front row; it’s the story of a tadpole ( part of a science project) who grows into a very, very large problem ( as in hippo- size).

WHAT KIDS WILL LIKE: Bow- tied Mr. Stricter becomes so attached to big Bruno that he can’t see the elephant, er, hippo, in the classroom, so it’s up to his sensible students to find him a more suitable teacher’s pet.

WHAT PARENTS WILL LIKE: A guaranteed chuckle for any grown- up who’s ever had to take care of the class “pet” for the weekend.

2 My Good Morning!

by Kim Crockett- Corson; illustrate­d by Jelena Brezovec ( Clavis, ages 3 and up) WHAT IT’S ABOUT: A toddler ( and her stuffed piglet) get ready for preschool, and it’s a production and half! WHAT KIDS WILL LIKE: The happy little girl in My Good Morning! is quite the independen­t spirit.

WHAT PARENTS WILL LIKE: Tired moms and dads will smile at this charming depiction of trying to get a 3- year- old out the door. And this tale, which features a tiny biracial heroine, also is a lesson in diversity.

3 Seven Rules You Absolutely Must Not Break If You Want to Survive the Cafeteria

by John Grandits; illustrate­d by Michael Allen Austin ( Clarion, ages 6- 9)

WHAT IT’S ABOUT: Kyle usually brings his lunch, but today he’s navigating the lunch line, which means dealing with the lunch lady and a hungry, angry school bully, not to mention trying to hang on to his tray.

WHAT KIDS WILL LIKE: School lunches are bad enough, but Kyle’s tendency to see everyone as a bug ( he’s been reading a book on insects) turns lunch hour into a wacky sci- fi adventure.

WHAT PARENTS WILL LIKE: Anyone who’s ever pushed a tray will get a kick out of Kyle’s cafeteria survival skills.

4 What the Dinosaurs Did at School

by Refe and Susan Tuma ( Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, ages 4- 8)

WHAT IT’S ABOUT: Plastic toy dinosaurs have climbed into somebody’s backpack, and now they’re loose in school!

What WHAT KIDS WILL LIKE: dinosaur- obsessed kid wouldn’t want to pack up his collection and see his toys wreak havoc in the school cafeteria, science lab and janitor’s closet?

The Tumas’ neon photograph­s of toy WHAT PARENTS WILL LIKE: dinos draped in spaghetti, bouncing on soccer balls and devouring library books are mini- masterpiec­es of creativity.

5 I’m Smart!

by Kate and Jim McMullan ( Balzer & Bray, ages 4- 8)

A WHAT IT’S ABOUT: friendly school bus comes to life ( complete with eyes and a grin for a bumper) to explain why it takes brains to follow a route and get kids to school safely. WHAT KIDS WILL LIKE: This brightly illustrate­d title will appeal to little ones who watch big brother or sister board the bus each morning, or the youngster who worships anything with a motor. It’s a sweet, unobtrusiv­e way of WHAT PARENTS WILL LIKE: reminding kids that school- bus drivers are people, too.

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