Tuesday, January 29, 2008

The Girl With the Brown Crayon

The Girl with the Brown Crayon covers important topics that cannot be learned in any college course but they can be acknowledged through experience. When reading the Girl with the Brown Crayon it gave me new insight on how Kindergartners can think. While I was reading I could not believe the topics that Paley gets her Kindergartners to discuss through the stories by the author Leo Lionni. For example they discuss topics such as race, identity, gender, and essential human needs to create and to belong. As Paley begins to discuss Reeny you begin to realize what type of child she is right off the get go. She does not take the teachers suggestions but she has a form of self-identity that most people do not come across until they are much older.

While reading the book I noticed that the children talked a lot about being accepted and the need to belong. When I was younger I always felt that I needed to belong and be in the “in crowd.” I felt like I needed to become like everyone else to fit in. In the book the story about Tico made me realize that all those years of trying to fit in was not me and I was different from everyone else, even if everyone else did not accept this. (Text to Self)

In addition, while I was reading I noticed that many of the issues that the Kindergartners were discussing were related to the world. For example race. In the first story that Reeny reads by the author Leo Lionni, she identifies herself with Fredrick the mouse. She realizes that Fredrick and her are the same color. Even before reading this story she and another boy Cory are coloring. She explains to Cory that she cannot use a marker to color in her skin in the picture because it is to dark. She shows him by putting her hand up the paper. Cory also puts his hand up to the brown marker and says that it is also to dark for him as well. I thought this was a great example of how even Kindergartners realize that there is something different about their skin color, but they do not make judgments about any of their classmates because they are different. This is not like our world today. We need to think more like Kindergartners in the fact that they realize they are different races, but do not linger on the fact that they are of a different race. There is something to be taught here by the Kindergartners and we should follow more in their example. (Text to World)

One part of the book that I found interesting was the part when they were going to write a letter to Mr. Lionni. This reminded me of story that I read when I was in school. We would go through the story and on each page there would be a letter written from a character with a story on it. After we had finished reading the story we would then write letters to our pen pals. Our teacher was very nervous about us writing to a pen pal because she was worried that they might not write back. This is just how the teacher Mrs. Paley felt. She wasn’t sure what to think about Leo Lionni and what he would write back, if he would write back. (Text to Text, and Text to Self)

So far I have found this book to be enlightening and it has also made me think about the way children think in a whole new light. It made me realize that just because these children are only in Kindergarten it does not mean they can not handle a challenge. It also made me think about my childhood and even my adult life and look back and reexamine everything. It has changed my way of thinking about topics such as being accepted into a group or feeling like you belong. It has also given me some examples of how to introduce important topics such as race, and gender into young children so that they understand the importance of knowing that your race or gender does not matter and that you can be whatever you aim to be.

1 comment:

Carolyn H said...

I agree with you that this book conveys messages that we might not learn in the classroom. It is only through experience that we will see just how amazing students really are. Sure, teachers and professionals can tell us all about it, but it isn't until we experience these things for ourselves that they become a reality. I feel like Tuesday Experience is giving us a glimpse of what students are really like and how they interact with everything they see, hear and do in their environment. It's wonderful to be able to see what goes on during the day so we can start to form our own ideas to put to use when we are the real teachers.