

Attach one side of hook-and-loop tape to the backs.

Print the words on index cards or sentence strips and laminate them. Select about 10 of the words from the book to introduce to your students. Make practicing those words more exciting with the silly antics of the dogs. Go! are found on traditional sight word lists, including the Dolch list. Go with the dogs on the journey to exploring antonyms, activity and friendship. Later, when Geisel and his wife started the Beginner Books series, they recruited Eastman to write easy readers, including Go, Dog. He enlisted in the Army during World War II and served in the film unit headed by Theodore Geisel, better known as Dr. It also provides material for teaching opposites, color words and prepositions and, less obviously, about detail, diversity, traffic safety and pet care.Įastman worked for a time with Walt Disney Studios in his early career. Teachers also find the book perfect for practicing basic sight words, since it contains only 75 unique one-syllable words. Go! has provided beginning readers simple reading fun for five decades. A CGI television series based on the book and produced by DreamWorks Animation and WildBrain Studios premiered on Netflix on January 26, 2021.P.D.The play has been widely staged throughout the U.S., often as an introduction to theater for young children. In 2003, a musical version of the book was developed by Steven Dietz and Allison Gregory for the Seattle Children's Theatre.Throughout the book, the conclusion is elusive, but at the end all the dogs have a wild party. In this way, a relationship development is shown between the characters despite the simplicity of the text. In their final meeting, her hat - now even more elaborate - finally meets the approval of the yellow dog. The yellow dog does not like the long ski cap the pink dog is wearing. When we next see them together, they are skiing. But as they part, he has made off with the feather. She has a hat with a feather, and again he does not like her hat. Several pages later, we meet them again as they are riding scooters. In their first appearance, a pink dog asks a yellow dog if he likes her hat with its little flower. Throughout the book, details in Eastman's illustrations seem to invite the reader to notice the deeper significance of small things. The dogs featured in the book use their cars to help them get their work done and get to places. The book also teaches children colors and conveys emotion. The book helps children learn basic concepts and actions like playing, working, going up, going down. The book introduces concepts such as color and relative position with simple language and humor.

It describes the actions and interactions of a group of highly mobile dogs, who operate cars and other conveyances in pursuit of work, play, and a final mysterious goal: a dog party. Go! is a 1961 children's book written and illustrated by P.
