What reading level is Ramona the Brave?

What reading level is Ramona the Brave?

What reading level is Ramona the Brave?

Ages 8-12.

What age is Ramona the Brave for?

ages 6-12
Book Description Ramona the Brave is a wonderful choice for independent reading, sharing in the classroom, homeschooling, and book groups. Readers ages 6-12 will laugh and relate to Ramona’s timeless adventures.

What is the book Ramona the Brave about?

For a girl as enthusiastic about life as Ramona, starting the first grade should be easy! But with a teacher who doesn’t understand her, a tattletale classmate, and a scary dog who follows her on the walk home from school, Ramona has a hard time acting like the big girl everyone expects her to be.

What reading level is Ramona and Her Father?

Ramona and Her Father

Interest Level Reading Level ATOS
Grades 4 – 8 Grades 2 – 6 5.2

What age reads Junie B Jones?

Age 5: Junie B. Jones is any kindergartner’s most relatable literary character. Through the ups and downs of school, Junie has your child’s back. Junie B. Jones is a little advanced for five-year-olds, so their parents will probably have to read this book to them, but that might be for the best.

What type of book is Ramona the Brave?

Children’s literature
Fiction
Ramona the Brave/Genres

What is the problem in Ramona the Brave?

Plot summary Longing to be brave and grown-up, Ramona sticks up for her older sister, Beatrice “Beezus” Quimby, when some boys tease about her nickname (calling her “Beezus Jesus” or “Jesus Beezus”) by claiming they will go to hell for mocking Jesus.

What genre is Ramona and Her Father?

FictionNovel
Ramona and Her Father/Genres

What level is Ramona and her mother?

Ramona and Her Mother (Ramona Quimby)

Interest Level Reading Level Word Count
Grades 4 – 8 Grades 2 – 6 23946

Is Junie B. Jones a banned book?

Junie B. Jones was listed on ALA’s Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books 2000-2009, and in 2004, Park was listed in ALA’s 10 Most Frequently Challenged Authors. We are used to seeing censorship attempts for heavy, controversial topics: drugs, LGBTQ+ themes, sexual content, religion, death, ect.