Thursday, January 18, 2018

How to prepare a book for a teenager -- find some GOLD NUGGETS

Start with a book. 

Open the book and scan the table of contents.

Find a chapter that looks interesting.

Scan the pages of the chapter until you find a fact or a sentence or a quote that grabs you.

MARK THAT SENTENCE.   Circle the sentence and put an arrow pointing to the sentence.

Write the page number on the EDGE of the book (so the page number can be seen when the book is closed) with a short hint about the "gold nugget."

Find a blank page in the book, usually at the front or back.  It should be a page that the next reader will easily find.  Write the page number on that page and write "why you should look at this page" (give a reason, such as "tips about starting a business" in the Sam Walton autobiography or "p. 34 Curriculum tips from Robert Reich.")

BONUS:  Get tape and put a "tab" on the edge of the page so that it is easy to turn to that page.

I wanted to get a 13-year-old boy to open a Bible, so I created a "word hunt" in a set of "fill in the blank" worksheets.  You can download this free set of worksheets here:
https://sites.google.com/view/free-bible-worksheets/home

TinyURL.com/FreeBibleWorksheets (for the PDF)


TinyURL.com/FreeBibleWorksheetsSite (for the site)


Thank you for reading this far.  You can download more free ebooks at TinyURL.com/FreeForFamily.

You can find the free worksheets at TinyURL.com/FreeWorksheetsforTeens

and at TINYURL.com/FreeBibleWorksheets

Please suggest more verses by writing to Steve at ManyPosters@gmail.com

or call +1 (954) 646 8246

These worksheets are donated to you to encourage you to "read to your child" and to encourage people to visit TinyURL.com/FreeForFamily to get more free ebooks (many ebooks at this site are about education).

Thank you!



This technique is described by Tai Lopez.  You can get book summaries from his website TaiLopez.com/books

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