Working Cotton

Working Cotton is a 1992 Caldecott Honor Book,[1] Coretta Scott King Honor Book for Illustration,[2] and an ALA Notable Book. It was written by Sherley Anne Williams and illustrated by Carole Byard. It was based off Williams's childhood experience in the Fresno cotton fields.[3]

Working Cotton
AuthorSherley Anne Williams
IllustratorCarole Byard
Cover artistCarole Byard
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreChildren's literature
PublisherHarcourt Brace Jovanovich
Publication date
1992
Pages32
ISBN0-15-299624-9

The Gale Group, an education, advocacy, and technology company that provides advisory curricula to libraries and schools, selected Working Cotton for its 2002 compendium Teaching Children Mathematics (Vol. 8, Issue 8), published by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, Inc., as they deemed the book a resource for teaching schoolchildren about increments of time and the hours on a clock.[4] The Working Cotton entry in the compendium is called "Working Cotton: Toward an understanding of time" and was authored by Eula Ewing Monroe, Michelle P. Orme, and Lynnette B. Erickson.[5]

Synopsis

gollark: There's the avian carrier QoS RFC already, so I suppose there's precedent for extensions.
gollark: > IOB will be the new buzz wordYESWE NEED APIARY CARRIERS AND A BUZZWORD PUN
gollark: Most fonts *don't*.
gollark: This is a very excellent RFC.
gollark: > The details for expanding the Unicode code point space are not covered in this document. Such details need to be worked out between the IETF, ISO, the Unicode Consortium, and various gods

References


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