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Will I Have a Friend? |  
List Price: $5.99 
Your Price: $5.39 | 
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Reviews | 
 
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Rating:   Summary: A classic that's still true today Review: For over thirty years, this book has answered one of a young child's most important questions about starting school: will I have any friends? Walking  to school on the first day with his father, that's the question Jim asks.  His father smiles down at him and says, "I think you will."           Jim's a little intimidated at first. "All the boys were making  noise. All the girls were laughing. Where was his friend?" Like my two  oldest kids, Jim stands at the edge of the action and waits for someone to  invite him to join in. It takes awhile. He hasn't found his friend by snack  time. He hasn't found his friend by rest time. Where is his friend?           After rest time, the boy who was lying down next to Jim shows him a toy  truck. Jim promises to bring his toy gas pump. He's found his friend!           I wish my parents had shared this is a straight-forward, slice-of-life  story with me when I was a shy three year old starting nursery school. It  wouldn't have made me more outgoing, but it might have made me a little  less nervous.
  Rating:   Summary: A classic that's still true today Review: For over thirty years, this book has answered one of a young child's most important questions about starting school: will I have any friends? Walking to school on the first day with his father, that's the question Jim asks. His father smiles down at him and says, "I think you will." Jim's a little intimidated at first. "All the boys were making noise. All the girls were laughing. Where was his friend?" Like my two oldest kids, Jim stands at the edge of the action and waits for someone to invite him to join in. It takes awhile. He hasn't found his friend by snack time. He hasn't found his friend by rest time. Where is his friend? After rest time, the boy who was lying down next to Jim shows him a toy truck. Jim promises to bring his toy gas pump. He's found his friend! I wish my parents had shared this is a straight-forward, slice-of-life story with me when I was a shy three year old starting nursery school. It wouldn't have made me more outgoing, but it might have made me a little less nervous.
  Rating:   Summary: An excellent book to help preschoolers with friendships. Review: This is a great book for preschoolers about making friends. I thought the scenario was very similar to what many preschool children encounter when they enter a group of strange children and try to make friends. Jim wonders who will be his friend in his new school (which could also be a daycare); some early encounters with other children are disappointing, but eventually he forms a bond with another boy. This book can help three to five year olds anticipate social situations at school or child care.
 
 
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