Archive for October, 2010

Too Bad, Ants! (A Halloween Unmasking)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

It’s Halloween the day after tomorrow, that most perplexing of holidays, when everybody nice and safe puts on the mask of danger and death, and everyone laughs in the face of the very scariest things.

In some ways, though, every day is Halloween, because the world is always masked: that is, everyday life conceals great risks. And we don’t usually laugh about these everyday dangers, especially if there are toddlers in the house. Instead, we safety-proof our homes. Because the modern world of big experienced grown-ups really is very dangerous for little innocent kids. We can issue dire warnings to try convince children to keep their precious fingers out of electrical sockets, or toasters, or sink food-grinders, but it’s up to the dire cautionary tales we tell, to clarify what might happen if kids disobey our “safety first” injunctions.

Peter Rabbit ignores his mother’s warning to stay away from Mr. McGregor’s garden and ends up in a scary chase, followed by a stomachache (his father hadn’t been so lucky and was put in a pie). Curious George causes trouble for the fire department by playing with the telephone, and spends time in jail before landing in a zoo. The moral of such tales is clear: do as you’re told or suffer consequences.

Chris Van Allsburg’s hilarious Two Bad Ants appears on the surface to be just such a cautionary tale. Two friends leave their group to indulge forbidden desires. They gorge on sugar, fall asleep in the sugar bowl, and awaken to a terrifying morning caught in the midst of what we readers understand is a human family’s normal breakfast ritual. The two ants are inadvertently dropped in coffee, dumped into the sink-grinder, shot out of a toaster, shocked in an electrical socket. They escape this dangerous kitchen battered and bruised. The cautionary moral seems clear: stay with the group, do as you’re instructed, or else. (Good advice for trick-or-treaters seeking sweets!)

Van Allsburg tells the tale from the ants’ standpoint, using an ominous and highly dramatic narrative voice that ignores the human reality of the situation, focusing on the fearful and strange structure of this weird kitchen universe in which the ants suffer their horrible experiences. It’s up to the ant’s-eye-view illustrations to reveal to readers what is in fact happening to our charming central characters: seeing our ordinary world from the ants’ miniature standpoint provides the book’s humor. Children adore seeing close-ups of a massive whirlpool of coffee, a super-gigantic English muffin, a huge burst of water gushing from a faucet.

I’ve always loved performing Two Bad Ants at storytimes, and a few years ago I had the terrific opportunity to present a performance of this book for the author himself.

The occasion was The Carle’s December 2004 opening party for Chris Van Allsburg’s gallery exhibition here, which was timed to coincide with the release of his movie, The Polar Express. I knew that my audience for this performance would be composed of adults.

I found myself puzzling over the deeper meaning of Two Bad Ants, starting with that punster title (“Two Bad Ants” or “Too Bad, Ants”). Yes, the story can be seen at two levels—human and ant—but is there also an additional level—the level where the reader sees both perspectives simultaneously?

I started thinking about the premise of tiny creatures in a world composed of gigantic structures and systems that make no sense. Unlike Jack in the giant’s house, or Lemuel Gulliver in the land of the Brobdingnagians, these two ants have no comprehension of the world they have entered: their experience of toast, sugar, water faucet and electricity doesn’t make sense to them before, during or after their terrifying travail.

I remembered Nobel Prize-winning physicist Murray Gell-Mann’s remarkable book that attempts to explain the physics of sub-atomic particles, and how these strange things form the material of which our world is constructed. In The Quark and the Jaguar, this incomprehensible subject is clarified from a number of different angles. I began to search the text for a passage that might unmask for the ant characters in Two Bad Ants the nature of the kitchen universe, and thereby help them understand the unlikely travails they were enduring. A text that the ants would like to read.

I found a passage that seemed in some abstract way to perfectly match up with the text and story of Two Bad Ants. I imagined a show in which, as the action proceeds, one of the ants is rapidly reading The Quark and the Jaguar to the other ant, as if this book were a fascinating instruction manual to the crazy world they have entered.

Here’s how the performance went.

On the movie screen in the museum’s auditorium, we projected the illustrations from the book, in sequence, as background to the action on stage.

Steve Angel—our visitor services manager, and a terrific actor—played one of the ants: a daredevil-ringleader tough guy. Steve’s task, while enacting the action, was to speak the text of the book, narrating in a bewildered way the events passing moment by moment.

I played the other ant: a maniac-brainiac geek. My task, while also enacting the action, was to be obsessed with reading aloud from The Quark and the Jaguar. That is, as we ants were battered and bruised and knocked all over the stage in turmoil and hazard, I, the crazed intellectual, was oblivious to the danger. I only wanted to read aloud to my friend from this amazing book I’d gotten my hands on.

What words was I, the ant, reading aloud so rapidly? What did I find so fascinating that I couldn’t spare an instant even to save myself from catastrophe? What does The Quark and the Jaguar have to say to an ant living out his terrible destiny inside the story of Two Bad Ants?

I can’t include the complete text of Two Bad Ants, alternating with the text from pages 16 to 20 of The Quark and the Jaguar, juxtaposed in exactly the way we did. But here is the first half of the performance: perhaps, just as my ant-character was able to unmask his terrifying world, you will find, via Murray Gell-Mann—the man who invented the concept of the quark—that the universe is a place that can be unmasked as well.

Steve Ant: The news traveled swiftly through the tunnels of the ant world. A scout had returned with a remarkable discovery—a beautiful sparkling crystal. When the scout presented the crystal to the ant queen she took a small bite, then quickly ate the entire thing.

Andy Ant: A wonderful example of the simple underlying principles of nature is the law of gravity, specifically Einstein’s general-relativistic theory of gravitation (even though most people regard that theory as anything but simple).

Steve Ant: She deemed it the most delicious food she had ever tasted. Nothing could make her happier than to have more, much more. The ants understood. They were eager to gather more crystals because the queen was the mother of them all. Her happiness made the whole ant nest a happy place.

Andy Ant: The phenomenon of gravitation gave rise, in the course of the physical evolution of the universe, to the clumping of matter into galaxies and then into stars and planets, including our Earth. From the time of their formation, such bodies were already manifesting complexity, diversity, and individuality. But these properties took on new meanings with the emergence of complex adaptive systems.

Steve Ant: It was late in the day when they departed. Long shadows stretched over the entrance to the ant kingdom. One by one the insects climbed out, following the scout, who had made it clear—there were many crystals where the first had been found, but the journey was long and dangerous.

Andy Ant: Here on Earth that development was associated with the origin of terrestrial life and with the process of biological evolution, which has produced such a striking diversity of species. Our own species, in at least some respect the most complex that has so far evolved on this planet, has succeeded in discovering a great deal of the underlying simplicity, including the theory of gravitation itself.

Steve Ant: They marched into the woods that surrounded their underground home. Dusk turned to twilight, twilight to night. The path they followed twisted and turned, every bend leading them deeper into the dark forest.

Andy Ant: Research on the sciences of simplicity and complexity…naturally includes teasing out the meaning of the simple and the complex, but also the similarities and differences among complex adaptive systems…

Steve Ant: More than once the line of ants stopped and anxiously listened for the sounds of hungry spiders. But all they heard was the call of crickets echoing through the woods like distant thunder.

Andy Ant: …functioning in such diverse processes as the origin of life on Earth, biological evolution, the behavior of organisms in ecological systems, the operation of the mammalian immune system, learning and thinking in animals…the evolution of human societies, the behavior of investors in financial markets, and the use of computer software and/or hardware designed to evolve strategies or to make predictions based on past observations.

Steve Ant: Dew formed on the leaves above. Without warning, huge cold drops fell on the marching ants. A firefly passed overhead that, for an instant, lit up the woods with a blinding flash of blue-green light.

Andy Ant: The common feature of all these processes is that in each one a complex adaptive system acquires information about its environment and its own interaction with that environment, identifying regularities in that information, condensing those regularities into a kind of “schema” or model, and acting in the real world on the basis of that schema. In each case, there are various competing schemata, and the results of the action in the real world feed back to influence the competition among those schemata.

Steve Ant: At the edge of the forest stood a mountain. The ants looked up and could not see its peak. It seemed to reach right to the heavens. But they did not stop. Up the side they climbed, higher and higher.

Andy Ant: Each of us…functions in many different ways as a complex adaptive system. (In fact the term “schema” has long been used in psychology to mean a conceptual framework such as a…being always uses to grasp data, to give them meaning.)

Steve Ant: The wind whistled through the cracks of the mountain’s face. The ants could feel its force bending their delicate antennae. Their legs grew weak as they struggled upward. At last they reached a ledge and crawled through a narrow tunnel.

Andy Ant: Imagine you are in a strange city during the evening rush hour, trying to flag down a taxi on a busy avenue leading outward from the center. Taxis rush by you, but they don’t stop. Most of them already have passengers, and you notice that those cabs have their roof lights turned off. Aha! You must look for taxis with roof lights on.

Steve Ant: When the ants came out of the tunnel they found themselves in a strange world. Smells they had known all their lives, smells of dirt and grass and rotting plants, had vanished. There was no more wind and, most puzzling of all, it seemed that the sky was gone.

Andy Ant: Then you discover some in that condition and indeed they lack passengers, but they don’t stop either. You need a modified schema. Soon you realize that the roof lights have an inner and outer part, with the latter marked “Out of Service.” What you need is a taxi that has only the inner part of the roof light illuminated.

Steve Ant: They crossed smooth shiny surfaces, then followed the scout up a glassy curved wall. They had reached their goal. From the top of the wall they looked below to a sea of crystals. One by one the ants climbed down into the sparkling treasure.

Andy Ant: Your new idea receives confirmation when two taxis discharge their passengers a block ahead and then their drivers turn on just the inner roof lights. Unfortunately, those taxis are immediately grabbed by other pedestrians. A few more cabs finish their trips nearby, but they too are snapped up.

Steve Ant: Quickly they each chose a crystal, then turned to start the journey home. There was something about this unnatural place that made the ants nervous. In fact they left in such a hurry that none of them noticed the two small ants who stayed behind.

Andy Ant: You are impelled to cast your net wider in your search for a successful schema. Finally, you observe, on the other side of the avenue, going in the opposite direction, many taxis cruising with just their inner roof lights on. You cross the avenue, hail one, and climb in.

Steve Ant: “Why go back?” one asked the other. “This place may not feel like home, but look at all these crystals.” “You’re right,” said the other,” we can stay here and eat this tasty treasure every day, forever.” So the two ants ate crystal after crystal until they were too full to move, and fell asleep.

Andy Ant: As a further illustration, imagine that you are a subject in a psychology experiment in which you are shown a long sequence of pictures of familiar objects. The pictures represent various things, and each one may be shown many times. You are asked from time to time to predict what the next few images will be, and you keep trying to construct mental schemata for the sequence, inventing theories about how the sequence is structured, based on what you have seen. Any such schema, supplemented by the memory of the last few pictures shown, permits you to make a prediction about the next ones. Typically, those predictions will be wrong the first few times, but if the sequence has an easily grasped structure, the discrepancy between prediction and observation will cause you to reject unsuccessful schemata in favor of ones that make good predictions. Soon you may be foreseeing accurately what will be shown next.

Steve Ant: Daylight came. The sleeping ants were unaware of changes taking place in their new found home. A giant silver scoop hovered above them, then plunged deep into the crystals. It shoveled up both ants and crystals and carried them high into the air.

Andy Ant (Here is where I started to speak directly to Two Bad Ants author Chris Van Allsburg in the audience): Now imagine a similar experiment run by a sadistic psychologist who exhibits a sequence with no real structure at all. You are likely to go on making up schemata, but this time they keep failing to make good predictions, except occasionally by chance. In this case the results in the real world afford no guidance in choosing a schema, other than the one that says, “This sequence seems to have no rhyme or reason.” But…subjects find it hard to accept such a conclusion.

Steve Ant: The ants were wide awake when the scoop turned, dropping them from a frightening height. They tumbled through space in a shower of crystals and fell into a boiling brown lake…..

We continued our travails and our attempts to decode these…but I can’t quote the entire picture book in this blog. (You’ll have to buy a copy.) I think the audience liked the show. At least, afterwards, someone told me that Chris Van Allsburg said he had.

And so, persistent blog-readers, I leave you to your own Halloween maskings and unmaskings, in hope that the world will act more gently to you and yours than it did to those two bad ants.  Stay safe!

A Children’s Book-a-Day Does the Body Good

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Anita Silvey certainly wears many hats (pun intended, for those who know of Anita’s fondness for hats!) and this writer/teacher/editor/reviewer is at it again. The former Houghton Mifflin publisher and Horn Book editor has a new project up her sleeve and, oh boy, is it big! A Children’s Book-a-Day Almanac! This newly launched website features daily children’s book recommendations from the expert herself.

I first met Anita when she taught my History of Children’s Publishing graduate class and was continually blown away not only by her wealth of knowledge of the publishing industry, but also by her seemingly endless magic hat of juicy behind-the-scenes stories about children’s books. Many of these stories appear in her wonderful collections of book recommendations, such as 100 Best Books for Children or The Essential Guide to Children’s Books which are some of the most trusted resource books on children’s book that we sell in our store. Click here to see more books by Anita.

And now, in what will certainly be her biggest compilation yet, Anita is combining her massive amounts of knowledge about children’s literature with fun daily trivia. Like, did you know October is Family History Month? Anita can recommend the perfect book that started as an author’s exploration of her own family history. Each day of the almanac features an in-depth recommendation of a classic (or destined to be a classic) children’s book, but make sure you also read the sidebars which are filled with more fun facts and excellent books special to that day.

I can see this website as an amazing resource to use in a classroom, as well as a fun daily read. It’s organized not only by date, but by age, genre, and theme so that it can become a go-to site for book reference and recommendations. So head on over to Anita Silvey’s Children’s Book-A-Day Almanac and check it out. Read on!

At The Carle: Celebrating Leo Lionni

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Here at The Carle, we pay homage to Leo Lionni every day with our logo (which includes, among its memorable Caterpillar and Wild Thing images, Leo Lionni’s iconic mice from Tillie and The Wall). And until November 28th, you can see our most recent exhibition of Leo Lionni’s work from his picture book, Geraldine, the Music Mouse in our Central Gallery.

You may know that Lionni’s modern design aesthetic and use of collage and white space was a major influence on many future children’s book illustrators like Eric Carle, but did you know that before either of them became children’s book creators Leo Lionni helped a young Eric Carle get his first job in New York as a graphic designer? Years later, Lionni encouraged Carle to try his hand at illustrating children’s books.  Eric Carle once said, “Long before I myself was aware of it, Leo Lionni saw the picture-book artist in me.” You can read more about Eric Carle’s appreciation for Leo Lionni in our exhibition catalog from our 2003 show, Leo Lionni: A Passion for Creativity.

Leo Lionni was an art director for several advertising agencies and Fortune magazine before he began a long and successful career in children’s books, which earned him four Caldecott Honor medals. His very first picture book, Little Blue, Little Yellow, was a story he invented with pieces of torn paper to entertain his restless grandchildren, Annie and Pippo, on a long train ride. This same granddaughter, Annie Lionni, will join us at The Carle on Saturday, October 30th at 1:00 pm to share her memories of her grandfather in our Auditorium, followed by two live theater performances of two of his picture books.

We are excited to welcome back Picture Book Theatre, a children’s puppet and dance theater company, who will be performing Leo Lionni’s Tico and The Golden Wings and Geraldine, the Music Mouse. Tickets are $5.00 and performances are at 2:00 pm and 3:00 pm on Saturday. On this special day before Halloween, children are encouraged to come dressed in their costumes to enjoy a costume parade following the performance. If you miss Saturday’s performance, don’t worry! Picture Book Theatre will be back each Saturday at The Carle for the entire month of November.

In celebration of 100 years since Leo Lionni’s birth, one of Lionni’s publishers, Random House, has some wonderful resources about Lionni available on their website, including photos, videos, and even some fun activities to use at home or in the classroom in connection with his books. My favorite is the “Make your own Paper Mouse” activity. So cute!

Are you missing a Leo Lionni book from your collection? We carry them all in our store! Click here to purchase.

For about 50 years, Lionni’s books have been a part of children’s homes, libraries and schools. Maybe you have a special story to tell about your connection with a Lionni book. Maybe you use one of his picture books in your classrooms. I adored Lionni’s Swimmy when I was little (and still do!). I could stare and stare at those beautifully textured illustrations for hours. I was especially entranced by the illustrations of seaweed that looked like it had been printed with lace doilies and spent many hours attempting my own paper doily print art.  I’m sure you have a Lionni book that’s special to you, too. Help us celebrate 100 years of Leo Lionni and tell us your story in the comments below!

Top of the Shelf: Max & Ruby’s Bedtime Book

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Max & Ruby’s Bedtime Book by Rosemary Wells

Families familiar with these bunny siblings will rejoice in their reappearance. As Grandma reads the two to sleep, the stories, to Ruby’s chagrin, seem to find Max, as usual, coming out on top. Wells entertains with laugh-filled tales and her signature, perky images will please at nighttime or even at story breaks during the day.

Click here to buy Max & Ruby’s Bedtime Book or click here to read more Top of the Shelf book reviews.

A Monster in All of Us: A Monster Book Round-Up

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

There are monsters in all of us. Oh trust me, you know what I’m talking about. The-I’m-so-hungry-I-could-eat-an-elephant-monster. The-I-haven’t-had-my-coffee-yet-so-don’t-talk-to-me-monster. The-I-told-you-to-get-dressed-five-minutes-ago-monster.  And each day we fight these monsters (or at least we try) to keep them hidden from the rest of the world. And kids most certainly have these inner monsters too, but its understandably often much harder for them to hide. The-why-can’t-I-do-it-too-monster. The-I’m-not-going-to-bed-even-though-I’m-overtired-monster. The-I’m-not-going-to-eat-that-monster. Oh, yes, we know those monsters well.

Sometimes, we all (yes, adults too!) could use a little help dealing with our monsters.  Because sometimes our monsters are fun, but then sometimes our monsters are too much fun. Sometimes they’re pushy. Sometimes they’re scary. In honor of Halloween being just around the corner and our newest exhibition Monsters & Miracles up in our gallery, I’d like to suggest a few wonderful children’s books that not only challenge our monsters, but celebrate them as well.

One of my favorite monster books needs no hand selling and, chances are, you already have a copy on your bookshelf right now. Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak very neatly and simply deals with the need to once in a while get a little wild and run free with your monsters. I have always loved that Max became king of the Wild Things because they were his creation and as a child I related to his need to be the craziest, the wildest, the boldest sometimes.  Even though our imaginations can sometimes run away from us, Max wasn’t scared. And when you’re not scared of your monsters (even when those monsters have awfully sharp teeth and claws) you rule them, not the other way around.

Ed Emberley’s Go Away, Big Green Monster! is another wonderful book about empowering children to conquer those monsters, and works wonders with a  toddler audience. It features playful cut-outs and bright colors set against a dramatic black background, teaching shapes and color concepts, but best of all – it’s funny.  Piece by piece a monster appears with each turn of the page – eyes, nose, big sharp teeth – but the child reader gets the chance the take away each feature piece by piece until the monster disappears, all the while being able to say, Go Away, Big Green Monster! And quite frankly, where once two pairs of yellow eyes on a black page looked scary, by the end of the book, it’s just plain silly. Seriously, Big Green Monster. You don’t scare us.

But what maybe does scare us is vegetables. Lima beans, yuck! In Dan Yaccarino’s The Lima Bean Monster, illustrated by Adam McCauley, a boy’s clever way out of eating lima beans turns into a much BIGGER problem. The only way to get rid of a Lima Bean Monster? You guessed it, eat your vegetables. This is a very funny story that many kids can relate to and I love that in a situation so discouraging to a kid like having to eat something you don’t like, the child still ends up the one who’s empowered in the end.

Another favorite book is last year’s Jeremy Draws a Monster by Peter McCarty. Jeremy is an introverted boy who never goes outside, but is seen watching other kids playing from his window. When he draws himself a monster that comes to life, instead of creating a friend, Jeremy has created one pushy, demanding monster. He even takes over Jeremy’s bed at night! While being funny to the reader, Jeremy has had enough and has to get rid of his monster once and for all, which in doing so, gets him outside for the first time and ultimately playing with the other children. For Jeremy, his monstrous creation is all the things Jeremy isn’t:  extroverted, demanding and able to come and go when he pleases. Ultimately, creating the monster and confronting him is the catalyst for Jeremy to take control of his life.

Monsters don’t have to be bad or scary. Sometimes our monsters are WAY fun, but other people don’t think so. In Tony DiTerlizzi’s Ted, a boy’s imaginary friend has lots of ideas that although they look really fun, turn out to be not-so-great when his dad gets home. But, seriously, who hasn’t fantasized about making a room of your house into a swimming pool? It’s hard to tell whose monster Ted really is…the little boy’s or his dad’s? And like the Wild Things or Jeremy’s monster, Ted encourages the characters to let loose and actually ends up bringing the child and parent closer.

I’d love to hear about your favorite monster book recommendations in the comments below. And if you’re looking for more monster book recommendations, you might also be interested in reading my selections for scary books that are not too scary. And of course, if you’d like to buy any copies of the books I mentioned, we’ll give all of our lovely readers 15% off any of the books featured here. Just click here to start shopping and remember to enter in the coupon code: MONSTER at checkout. Coupon expires October 31, 2010.

Now if you’ll excuse me, my monster tells me I’m hungry and it’s time for lunch!

At The Carle: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Join us at The Carle on Sunday, October 24th at 1:00 pm & 3:00 pm for two special performances of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Just in time to get us all in the mood for Halloween, this wonderful rendition of the classic American folktale will be performed by the PuppeTree as a shadow puppet play. Using over 100 puppets and professional puppeteers, this production will be sure to evoke the illustrations of my favorite version of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Arthur Rackham, as well as capture the mood and atmosphere of such a delightfully spooky tale.

Tickets are $7.00 ($6.50 for Carle Members) and can be purchased in advance by calling our Admissions Desk at (413) 658-1126.  For more about the performance, be sure to watch The PuppeTree’s trailer of the show below and visit their website which offers a wonderful lesson plan for use in the classroom or at home to accompany the show.

After each performance, the puppeteers will also let the audience in on the magic behind the play by taking down the screens and showing how the puppets are operated and how the shadows are cast. Our art studio will also have a special project after the performance so that visitors get the chance to try their hand at making their own shadow puppets.

Can’t make the performance? Pick up a copy of our favorite version of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and try making your own shadow puppet show at home! This edition contains the complete, unedited text by Washington Iriving with Arthur Rackham’s sepia-toned watercolors and pen-and-ink drawings.  Click here to purchase.

Hope to see you Sunday!

Top of the Shelf: In the Wild

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

In the Wild by David Elliott, illustrated by Holly Meade

Elliott chooses familiar animals from the wild – elephant, panda, sloth, zebra – and effectively catches their personalities and innate capabilities in short, meaningful poems. Meade’s accompanying woodcuts cleverly round out the double-page spreads.

Click here to buy In the Wild or click here to read more Top of the Shelf book reviews.

Picture Book Puzzler: The Story Behind the Story

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Our Picture Book Puzzler this week is in honor of our new exhibition, Monsters & Miracles: A Journey through Jewish Picture Books.

What famous children’s book, originally titled The Adventures of Fifi, made a narrow escape from a besieged Paris during World War II with its creators on a homemade bicycle?

At The Carle: Monsters & Miracles

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Today marks the very first day of our newest exhibition, Monsters & Miracles: A Journey through Jewish Picture Books. The beautiful exhibition catalog featuring artwork from this amazing show, as well as essays by the guest curators Ilan Stevens and Neal Sokol, is now available for purchase online here.

We have so many wonderful events planned here for the duration of the show, including guest appearances by many of the talented artists whose artwork is featured in our gallery.

To kick things off with a bang, we have artist and author Mark Podwal at the Museum this Sunday at 1 pm. He’ll be speaking about one of the most fascinating of Jewish legends, The Golem, tracing its history through Jewish culture and art. His presentation is a must-see for anyone interested in Jewish history and culture, as well as those delighted by all myths and legends. Mark will be signing books outside of our store following his presentation. If you are interested in getting a signed book, but can’t make it to the Museum, place your order online before Sunday, October 17th and we’ll make sure to ship you a signed copy after the event. Click here to see the books available for purchase.

For more programming around our new exhibit, visit our website here and start planning your visit. Our neighbors at The Yiddish Book Center also have wonderful events planned, so be sure to check their event calendar as well. Hope to see you soon!

Picture Storybooks Against Bullying

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

In 1992 I held a picture storybook sale outside the lecture hall where Professor Donald Graves was presenting a full-day seminar to five hundred teachers on the subject of creative writing in the classroom. I listened in on the closing question-and-answer session. A brave teacher spoke up. “How do we find time to use these creative writing techniques when all our time is spent teaching to the test?’

This was the question all the teachers had been puzzling over. Of course every teacher wants to run a classroom where creative writing, artistic expression, and reading for pleasure are nurtured. But the hard truth is that basic skills lessons, with time for review, plus plenty of repetitive drilling are essential to ensure students achieve high scores on standardized tests.

Professor Graves answered firmly, “You have a union. You can change things.”

Slowly the teachers rose, and, murmuring, left the lecture hall. Their day of creative exercises had ended on a somber note. Their labor unions would not fight for this sort of curricular change.

In the world of children’s books much is being made of a recent New York Times article asserting that parents’ need for children to achieve high test scores is now leading to an early abandonment of picture storybooks; longer chapter-books being believed by parents and teachers to be associated with higher reading scores. Another New York Times article published a few days later reports the impact popular culture is having on the rise of “mean-girl” bullying in the early grades.

Evidently, pressure on elementary school children to both achieve high test scores and to adopt aggressive pop-culture behavior styles are rising in tandem. Perhaps a well-known picture storybook can explain this correlation.

In Hansel and Gretel, like children under too much testing pressure, Hansel and Gretel are challenged to grow up fast. Their father is too weak to prevent their evil stepmother from evicting them. During their first exile in the forest, Hansel passes a test: he has left a trail of pebbles, which he and Gretel follow home. The second time however Hansel fails; his breadcrumbs don’t solve the problem of ensuring a safe return. He and Gretel are attracted to a house of candy created by a witch, just as our children, alienated from too-demanding school and schoolwork-dominated home environments, are drawn to sexualized pop culture, violent videogames, and sugary foods, all produced by amoral and sometimes immoral corporations.

To flee the witch, Hansel and Gretel—who have been eating her candy—must push her into her own oven: their escape initiates them willy-nilly into her violence. Perhaps our children, like Hansel and Gretel, must assimilate our popular culture’s violence in order to master it.  If so, our role should be to mediate this hazardous process. Picture storybooks—rich in allusion, artistically stimulating, and many with language more complex than that in chapter-books—are an invaluable tool.

Hansel and Gretel return home to find their father chastened and welcoming. But their return would have been meaningless if the father hadn’t already arrived at his own corrective conclusion, and banished the evil stepmother. Are today’s teachers and parents capable of learning from the father of Hansel and Gretel? Are we prepared to push back against the demands of excessive test prep and set aside time in home and classroom for shared reading of picture storybooks?