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Showing posts with label Childhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Childhood. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

I Believe Every Child can be a Reader

I'm three courses into my master's degree in literacy and teacher-librarianship. I wanted to share my latest assignment, modeled after the This I Believe project.

I hope you enjoy it!

As long as I can remember, I’ve always been a lover of the written word.  As a kid I read anything I could get my hands on. I devoured books by Montgomery, Lewis, and Tolkien, as well as series like Nancy Drew, The Babysitter’s Club, even Sweet Valley High. I haunted the school library, bonding over books with my elementary school librarian. I racked up late fines at the public library.  I got in trouble at school for reading ahead during novel studies, or secretly reading in my desk when I was supposed to be listening. I read The Princess Bride out loud to anyone who would listen.  I missed my bus stop countless times, neglected my homework, read and re-read and re-read again. Books were an adventure, an escape, as well as a place of belonging. They still are.

I wasn’t born a reader. My grandmother, my mother, my older sister, a few teachers, and one very special teacher-librarian all helped to make me the book lover that I am today. Today when I look at my bookshelves, I see books that represent the people who instilled that love of literature in me.

Hardcover copies of The Secret Garden and Jane Eyre, given to me by my grandmother, sit on my shelf, next to my mother’s childhood Anne of Green Gables novels. I have a battered copy of The Witch of Blackbird Pond in my classroom library.  I borrowed it from my junior high language arts teacher and forgot to give it back. Somehow I think she would forgive me if she knew. I also have a book of fairy tales that Mrs. Austin gave me in grade two. She was a wonderful teacher-librarian who took an interest in me. She made the school library feel like home.

Most special of all, I have my sister’s worn and well-read Lucy Maud Montgomery collection. My grandmother gave them to her, one book at a time each Christmas and birthday. I remember borrowing them without permission, hoarding them in my room until she came looking for them. After my sister passed away a few years ago, I inherited them.  Every time I look at them, I think of my sister, a woman who, among other things, was a passionate reader.

Today, I try to instill a love of literature in my students. I love to talk about books, to bond over bookshelves, to tell them about books that touched me, spoke to me, or transformed me. I love to tell them about books that made me laugh or cry, and the very special books that have burrowed into my heart.

I believe that something magical happens when you share a love of reading with kids. Books fly off the shelves. Students who are labeled as non-readers become readers. Kids beg for more reading time.  They wait with bated breath for the next installment of the read aloud. They talk excitedly about the book they are reading, recommending books to their friends, even forming impromptu book clubs. Reading skills improve, often dramatically. Sometimes it just takes one perfect book, and they are hooked. I believe that every child can become a reader.

To become readers, kids need to be surrounded by books. They need school libraries and public libraries, as well as classroom libraries full of books that come in all shapes and sizes. Not only certain books. Not only award winners or literary classics. Not only “real” books pushed by the well-meaning adults in their lives. Just books. They need silly books, books about farts, boogers, and superheroes in underwear. They need books about cupcakes, bullies, and fights with BFFs. They need comics and graphic novels, magazines and e-books. Most of all, most important of all, they need books they can see themselves in, books that truly become a part of them. They also need books that provide glimpses of worlds they otherwise could never see. They need books that transform them, that become a part of them.


I believe just one book, one conversation, and one adult can transform a child into a reader. I believe that instilling a love of reading can truly make a difference, sparking imaginations, opening doors, and unlocking potential.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Lit for Chicks

I love my local library. It has saved me many times from both boredom and financial problems- it would be easy for me to max out my credit card at the local bookstore! And while I love almost everything about the library, one thing drives me crazy. Chick Lit is not recognized as its own genre- it is lumped together with romance. I take great issue with this, because I think they are very distinct genres. For starters, chick lit is not about the romantic relationship-though that may play a large role- it is about the personal journey of the female protagonist. She faces struggles and difficulties with which the reader can sympathize, and though many chick lit novels are hysterically funny,  they tend to pull at the heartstrings too. There seems to be more layers to (most) chick-lit novels than to the typical romance novel. The plot involves more than the classic boy meets girl, girl changes boy, boy marries girl scenario. They are usually more realistic and more real-life. And most importantly, I love a good chick lit novel, but I can barely tolerate romance novels!

My favourite chick lit authors are definitely Sophie Kinsella and Helen Fielding, but recently I've discovered another fabulous author- Jennifer Weiner. I first discovered Weiner when I read In her Shoes after seeing the movie. Having experienced my own up and down (but always there for each other) relationship with my own sister, I related to the story of the tumultuous relationship between two completely opposite sisters. Recently, I read Little Earthquakes at the recommendation of a co-worker who, as it turns out, has fabulous taste. This novel tells the story of four very different women and the way their funny, heartwarming and even tragic experiences with their pregnancies and children bring them together. This novel made me laugh and cry- I thought it was great. In Goodnight Nobody, a woman with three kids and an absentee husband moves to a Stepford-like community where she just doesn't fit in. When a seemingly perfect mommy is murdered, she is determined to find out what happened. This is more of a suspenseful read, although thoroughly enjoyable.

I hope to continue to add to my repertoire of fabulous chick lit authors. Happy reading!

Thursday, May 27, 2010

A future possibility?

I am a big fan of futuristic or post-apocalyptic science fiction novels. A really good futuristic novel is not only intriguing and engrossing because of the fictional future world it depicts, but it is also rather frightening because the reader can see parallels to our own present-day societies. Books like 1984 or The Giver are prime examples of this. These novels would not be nearly so powerful if we didn't see Big Brothers or vestiges of the community in our own lives.

Two such novels look at some very important questions: do some members of society have more value than others? Should some members of society be used to improve the lives of others? Are some people dispensable for the greater good? This isn't a new issue. We see it everyday in abortion clinics and in the debates about euthanasia. This blog isn't intended as a platform for either of those issues but it is hard to dispute that the futures described in The Unit and Never Let Me Go are very frightening possibilities.

In Ninni Holmqvist's The Unit, there is a special place reserved for those who don't contribute meaningfully to society. The unit is full of unmarried and childless men and women, past middle age who do not work in important industries. They are given fine food and entertainment, art, recreation and the company of others. While the unit is a pleasant place, it has a much more sinister purpose: the residents of the unit are kept healthy for as long as possible while their bodies are slowly harvested for the desirables. The men and women of the unit are fully aware of their role in society. They are even accepting of their imminent deaths- but what happens when two people on the unit fall in love?  Holmqvist keeps the reader emotionally invested in the novel, right up until the surprising- but perfect- ending.

 Kazuo Ishiguro explores similar themes in Never Let Me Go. Kathy narrates her experiences growing up in an unusual English boarding school. As Kathy transitions from childhood to adulthood, she dares to deam about a future with the boy she loves. More than anything, Kathy just wants to be a normal girl- will she be given the chance? As you put the pieces together, you will be captivated by Ishiguro's commentary on humanity and value. This is a complex, multi-layered and intelligent novel.

I hope that you will enjoy these novels and, more importantly, I hope they will make you see the frightening possibilities.