Sunday, November 13, 2011

Inspiring and Motivational Books




As both book excerpts, Negotiating Critical Literacies With Young Children by Vivian Maria Vasquez and Castle in the Classroom by Ranu Bhattacharyya, children can become competent citizens with some teacher interventions. Negotiating Critical Literacies With Young Children focuses on how to offer teachers “a way to think about what students are learning to read and write, what they do with that reading and writing, and what that reading and writing does to them in their world” (101). This excerpt uses the interactions and confrontations kindergarteners from a Canadian school have with the even of French Café. In the excerpt from The Castle in the Classroom, the author essentially teaches the reader how to expand the writing workshop.


The students from Canada, at a school where French is no longer the second-most popular language, took action toward being included in school functions such as the French Café and “raised concern about the existing power structure where young children are not treated as equal participants in the school community”(96). Because of how the teacher chose to intervene to a student asking why they were not included in this 1st-8th grade event, she inherently “offered a space in which to change how they were positioned in the social hierarchy of their school.” This taught a fine lesson:

When a child asks a teacher a question, the teacher has choice in their response. Most often, the question will allow for 3 possible responses:

1. Treat the question with a potentially uncritical but valid answer.

2. Repose the question that positions the inquirer a little differently but can easily lead towards responding to the question with an activity.

3. Offer a critical challenge; treat the question as an opportunity for taking social action and disrupting inequity.

Curtis and his classmates ultimately created a petition and went through the process of creating social change as they strived to become equal participants within their school. “Through taking social action, the children learned not only a different way to resist and exercise their democratic abilities, but also the possibilities available through collectively working through a problem” (99).


From Canada to India, Georgia Heard, notices that Ranu’s classroom has the same learning needs as American children. At the American Embassy School located in Delhi, India, Ranu’s students are engaged in “setting the scene” for their classroom. In Castle in the Classroom, Ranu guides the reader with a beautiful description on how to really expand the child’s literacy experience. Ranu Bhattacharyya gives specific guidelines on how to engage the children in reading workshops, writing workshops, and word-study activity centers. The book beautifully illustrates the various purposes of each focused lesson. For example, in the lesson ‘Writing Descriptions of Settings,’ the purpose is “to recognize that giving voice to imagination paves the way for adding details to descriptions and makes a setting come alive for a reader.

6 comments:

  1. I loved reading about the kindergartners who stood up for their rights within their school. The way the teacher treated this situation was so well done, allowing the children to take responsibility for their opinions and share them publicly. I think this also connects with the Castle in the Classroom excerpt, in which the children represented their understanding of the castle setting publicly. Both scenarios give the children control of their thoughts and ideas, which I think is great.

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  2. I really liked that you talked about answering their questions in a way that sparks conversation. We want to give children the answers that they are looking for but we want to encourage exploration on their part as well.

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  3. I really enjoyed hearing your thoughts about these interesting readings. I think it is important for teachers to have high expectations of the children in their classroom. When teachers set children up to achieve high goals children rise to these expectations.

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  4. It is important to let children investigate their own interests and what they feel is important to them. One way they can do this is by the teacher creating an environment where children are free to ask questions and where the children can learn about how to find the answers to their own questions and make a change in the world.

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  5. Those three options from netgotiations are really the most important things a teacher can think about during a learning opportunity like this one. The teacher can either dismiss the question and simply answer it or turn it into a real learning experience for all of the children

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  6. Very good post. To expand a child's literary experience, a teacher needs to stress the purpose of each part of a book. Children should know why a setting should be vivid, why the characters should seem real, why the title should capture a reader's attention and more. By doing this, student's will most likely understand the process of writing a book instead of just going through the motions.

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