Related Booklist

Scholastic Recommends: Grades K–4

If Your Name Was Changed at Ellis Island
Ellen Levine (Grades 1–4)
This unique, interactive history book encourages readers to step into the past guided by a question-and-answer format in full color. It's also packed with quotes from children and adults who passed through Ellis Island.

Coming to America: The Story of Immigration
by Betsy Maestro (Grades K–3)
A succinct history of U.S. immigration for students of all levels, this expressive book captures the joy and anxiety of the successive waves of immigrants looking for a better life.

Scholastic Recommends: Grades 5–8

Immigrant Kids Guided Reading Set: 6 Books
Russell Freedman (Grades 3–6)
In the late 1800's and early 1900's, millions of immigrants sailed by the Statue of Liberty and took to heart her words: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free..." Immigrant kids sold newspapers, hauled firewood, worked in sweatshops, and did many other kinds of work. They played, fought in gangs, and became integrated into the life of America.

Illustrated with 50 authentic and fascinating photographs.

This collection contains 6 paperback copies of the same book.

Dreams in the Golden Country
Kathryn Lasky (Grades 4–8)
New dreams and old traditions flourish and clash when a Jewish girl and her family emigrate from Russia to America.

The Journal of Otto Peltonen
William Durbin (Grades 4–8)
Offering a perspective on what people have endured in our land of opportunity, Otto Peltonen's journal documents his daily descent down a Minnesota mine. He essentially gives his life to the Iron Mining Company in pursuit of his family's dream for their own farm. The fictionalized journal includes historical notes and photographs that ground Otto's journal in reality.

A Coal Miner's Bride: The Diary of Anetka Kaminska, Lattimer, Pennsylvania, 1896
by Susan Campbell Bartoletti (Grades 4–9)
Spirited Anetka is only 13 when she leaves her Poland home for Pennsylvania mine country and a husband she's never met. Watch Anetka adapt to her strange new life, finding joy even under desperate circumstances.

The Journal Of Wong Ming-Chung
Laurence Yep (Grades 4–8)
Experience the Gold Rush's excitement and hardships along with Wong Ming-Chung, a Chinese boy who ventures across the ocean to seek fortune for his family. Though he feels alienated by the other miners, Wong chases his dreams. An award-winning author journals Wong's achievement as he discovers physical and spiritual wealth.

New Kids in Town: Oral Histories of Immigrant Teens
http://shop.scholastic.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=18911&langId=-1&storeId=10001&catalogId=10002&categoryId=null (Grades 4–8)
Eleven teenage immigrants tell compelling stories of their escape from war, poverty, and repression to carve out new lives in America.

Dear America: So Far From Home
VHS (Grades 4–7)
With the potato famine devastating her homeland in Ireland, Mary Driscoll must leave her parents to seek out a better life in America. Mary finds work in a mill, where working conditions are dreadful. Although her new friends encourage her to join the union, Mary hesitates to speak out for fear of losing her job. When her dear friend, Sean, is falsely accused of murder, Mary must decide if she is ready to face her fears and sacrifice everything to save him.

Scholastic Recommends: Professional Books

The Immigrant Experience Fiction/Nonfiction Set
(Grades 4–6)
Pairing fiction and nonfiction titles with similar themes is a great way to build on students' interests and comprehension skills. They can see how similar themes and concepts are presented in different types of books — and expand both their imagination and their knowledge. This set, for older students, illustrates models of narrative and expository writing and also helps build the critical reading skills necessary for standardized testing.

A chronicle of immigration in the days of Ellis Island and the same experience from a fictional immigrant's perspective helps students integrate knowledge from different sources.

Primary Sources Teaching Kit: Immigration: A Rich Collection of Authentic Documents, Certificates, Diaries, Photographs, Travel Artifacts, and More With Great Teaching Materials That Makes History Come Alive
by Karen Baicker (Grades 4–8)
Packed with reproducible primary sources from photographs of Ellis Island to the Oath of Citizenship this collection of authentic documents will capture students' interest in immigration to America between the late 1800s and the early 1900s.

Decisions, Decisions 5.0 Immigration: 1-Computer License
(Grades 5–10)
Your students play the role of President of the United States facing a recurring dilemma in U.S. history. Students learn to apply the lessons of the history of U.S. immigration policy. Decisions, Decisions: Immigration works well in any U.S. history unit on immigration and its effect on the nation. Includes a program disk or CD-ROM, and backup license, 28 Student Reference Books (7 sets of 4), and a comprehensive Teacher's Guide with detailed lesson plans and reproducible worksheets.

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