
- Look at your own interests and areas where you have insider knowledge. Did you volunteer at a sea turtle rescue program one summer? Have you trained service dogs? Are you a retired NASA scientist? Have you taught your children or grandchildren how to bake delicious cookies? You can make any topic appealing and fun once you decide on one which is exciting to you because you have the confidence and passion to write about it.
- List 8-10 “teaching opportunities” you want to share. What is important for children to learn about your topic? What could they get out of knowing these? Choose your top 4-5 to explore.
- Think of something children already understand well and use that to help convey what you want them to learn. For example, in A Look Around a Coral Reef, Tracey Dils made her book relatable to first- and second-graders by describing the reef as a kind of underwater neighborhood.
- As you make an outline and note the points to cover, write down a description of the pictures that come to mind. You’ll start discovering images that can evolve into illustrations. You must illustrate your book yourself, have an illustrator do it, or use photographs (your own or ones you have full permission to use). For a young reader’s book, the role of the illustrations cannot be emphasized enough.
- Be sure you write at the “readability level” of your target reader. Check online resources as well as with teachers, parents, and children. As you write, double-check every fact and keep a thorough list of your references and resources used. Once you have a draft of your manuscript, set it aside for at least one week and then pick it up and see what you then think about your topic.
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