Picture books perfect for spring that are recommended for elementary school children. Picture books that make them look forward to going to elementary school.
A first school, a new class, new friends.
Spring is a season when even elementary school children encounter many firsts and new experiences.
In this article, we’ll introduce picture books recommended for elementary schoolers in spring!
We’ve gathered picture books that are perfect for first graders starting their very first school life after graduating from daycare or kindergarten, as well as books that will make going to elementary school feel exciting and fun.
If your child is feeling anxious—Will I make friends? Can I keep up with my studies?—have them read these picture books and catch the joyful excitement that will carry them into school life!
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Picture books perfect for spring recommended for elementary school children. Picture books that will make you look forward to elementary school (21–30)
dandelionText/Pictures: Kazuko Hirayama
Dandelions bloom with cute little flowers even by the roadside and in cracks in concrete.
We tend to picture dandelions blooming gently in the warm spring air.
This work carefully portrays the familiar plant from its rosette state at the end of winter to the moment it turns into white fluff and releases its seeds.
The part about friends who have always been together graduating in March overlaps with the scene of the dandelion sending off its fluffy seeds.
Just as dandelions let their seed-tufts fly, we hope children, too, will leap forward with hope.
A Small SeedEric Carle
This picture book portrays many seeds traveling on the wind.
As they soar alongside various kinds of seeds, all sorts of events unfold.
Scorching sun, cold rain, and strong winds—formidable trials for the seeds—arrive one after another, yet the small seed perseveres each time and continues its journey.
Eventually, the seed falls into the soil, slowly sprouts, and grows little by little.
Over time, the small seed transforms into a beautiful, large flower that produces new seeds in turn.
This story clearly conveys how life is interconnected in nature.
It shows that even something small has the potential to grow large, and that growth takes time—a picture book that evokes hope and the power of life.
The school backpack has arrived.Written by Hirotaka Nakagawa / Illustrated by Yasunari Murakami
A book I highly recommend reading around the time a child starts elementary school is “The Randoseru Has Arrived.” In this volume, the text is by Hirotaka Nakagawa and the illustrations are by Yasunari Murakami.
The story revolves around the theme of the randoseru school bag.
It begins when the young boy protagonist suddenly receives a blue randoseru as a gift one day, and it depicts him heading out with it on his back and thanking the grandfather who gave it to him.
Reading it will surely make you excited to wear a randoseru yourself.
Story ClassroomWritten and illustrated by Shinobu Saito
There are certain things you start using when you enter elementary school—pencil cases, pencils, recorders, and red-and-white caps.
This book, “Ohana shi Kyōshitsu” (Story Classroom), focuses on those very tools.
By cleverly weaving in their uses and characteristics, it turns “what the tools are thinking” into a story.
Because items that elementary schoolers use every day appear one after another, it captures children’s interest and may also foster a desire to take good care of the tools they’re using now.
Each spread features a different story, so it’s also recommended for kids who aren’t fond of long stories.
Kunchan’s First Day of SchoolWritten and Illustrated by: Dorothy Marino / Translated by: Ruriko Masaki
Kun-chan’s First Day of School is a picture book recommended for children who are about to start first grade.
The protagonist is Kun-chan, a little bear who’s becoming a first grader.
He heads to elementary school excited, but then gets nervous and runs out of the classroom.
In the end, though, he comes to love school.
Your child is probably feeling both excitement and anxiety, just like Kun-chan.
At times like that, try reading this book together.
While elementary school is different from kindergarten or preschool, it still has friends and teachers—and it’s a fun place.
This book can help your child feel that anew.
To you at age sixText by Masami Sasaki / Illustrations by Miho Satake
Here is a book I’d like incoming first graders—and their parents—to read: “To You at Six.” Rather than a story, it’s a collection of short lines expressing a parent’s love for their child, offering a beautiful look back on the past six years.
When children read it, they can feel how dearly they’ve been loved as they grew.
When parents read it, they may feel, “We’ve received so many treasures up to now.” It’s a book I especially recommend reading once before the next six years begin.
Little Fox, First GraderWritten by: Hiroshi Saito / Illustrated by: Mayu Niki
This is a work by Hiroshi Saito, also known for The Ghost and the Library and the Rudolf series.
A young fox who wants to be a first-grader transforms into a human and slips in among the first-grade students.
While there are fun moments—attending class together and eating school lunch—there are also scenes where it seems like the fox’s true identity might be discovered, which will have child readers on the edge of their seats.
Please enjoy the little fox’s adventure, surrounded by friendly classmates and a kind teacher who make being together so much fun.


