While the back-to-school season can be exciting and fun for some, it can also be anxiety-inducing and scary for others. 

Check out these books to make the transition back to school a happy moment for all!

โ€˜Getting Ready for Kindergarten: A First Day of School Bookโ€™ (2024)

For the child thatโ€™s all new to the whole idea of school, โ€œGetting Ready for Kindergarten: A First Day of School Bookโ€ by Vera Ahiyya, illustrated by Debby Rahmalia (Random House Books for Young Readers, $5.99) will get them excited for whatโ€™s ahead. Itโ€™s a cute little story of Cynthia and all the things sheโ€™ll need for school, and it includes a punch-out First Day of School sign you can use for the next 13 years!


โ€˜Make New Friends: A Picture Bookโ€™ (2025)

Elementary-age children will enjoy reading โ€œMake New Friends: A Picture Bookโ€ by Joshua David Stein, illustrated by Mariachiara Di Giorgio. (Courtesy photo)

Elementary-age children will enjoy reading โ€œMake New Friends: A Picture Bookโ€ by Joshua David Stein, illustrated by Mariachiara Di Giorgio (Abrams Books for Young Readers, $18.99). Young Tomasso is new at school and itโ€™s hard to make friends, so he comes up with a creative solution for when his father asks about Tomassoโ€™s friends. So what will he do when his secret is about to be discovered?


โ€˜The Academyโ€™ (2024)

Meant for youth ages 7-to-13, “The Academy” by T.Z. Layton is the first in an intended series. (Courtesy photo)

Middle-grade is hard, so the sports-minded tween will like reading โ€œThe Academyโ€ by T.Z. Layton (Sourcebooks Young Readers, $9.99). Itโ€™s the story of 12-year-old Leo who loves soccer, and heโ€™s excited when an elite team invites him to play. Competition is fierce and thatโ€™s tough on a kid who feels like he doesnโ€™t measure up. Will he be good enough to make the team? Meant for 7-to-13-year-olds, this is the first in an intended series.


โ€˜Slow Violence: Confronting Dark Truths in the American Classroomโ€™ (2025)

“Slow Violence: Confronting Dark Truths in the American Classroom” by Ranita Ray reveals how teachers, even well-meaning ones, sometimes seem to put minority students on a “slow violence” track that became a major detriment to their education. (Courtesy photo)

As parents work to keep a pulse on their childrenโ€™s education, โ€œSlow Violence: Confronting Dark Truths in the American Classroomโ€ by Ranita Ray (St. Martinโ€™s Press, $30) may raise some eyebrows. In 2017, Ray entered a classroom in Las Vegas to study resources in the public schools there. What she learned was shocking: teachers, even well-meaning ones, sometimes seemed to put minority students on what Ray calls a โ€œslow violenceโ€ track that became a major detriment to their education. The overall results of her research are a clarion call to parents of all school-age children, especially those in the tender lower grades.

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