Author: Betty Turpin

Opportunity and Social Mobility #1: Remember, by Toni Morrison

Lesson Overview:

In this lesson, students are confronted with evidence of vast inequalities between black and white people in the United States during the time leading up to the Civil Rights Era, which began in the 1960s.  Using period photographs, Toni Morrison pens words that might have been in the minds or hearts of the subjects of the photographs.  Both powerful and disturbing, this lesson will show young people what inequality looked like in the U.S. in the recent past.

Lesson Plan:

Suggested Grades:

4 and above. The content is too difficult and perhaps too mature for younger students.

Objective:

To understand what social inequality and lack of opportunity looks like and to imagine what it feels like in the minds of those experiencing it.  (AASL 2.3.1, “Connect understanding to the real world.”)

Suggested Time:

40-50 minutes

Success Criteria:

Each student will be able to explain some of the inequalities between black and white people in the United States in the years leading up to the Civil Rights Era, which began in the 1960s.  Each student will also complete a reflection assignment to show their understanding and thinking about the subject.

Lesson Outline:

1. Introduction:

Ask the students what their new Unit of Inquiry is about.  Hopefully they will be able to say something general about access to education and opportunities.

Explain that today we will be working from a text that will show them in some detail what limited opportunities looked like and felt like in the United States as recently as 50 or 60 years ago.  Tell the students that some of the images are shocking and the inequities very disturbing.  Ask them for their full attention and explain that this is not an easy topic to teach or learn about.

2. Main:

Show the cover of Toni Morrison’s Remember: The Journey to School Integration.  Ask the children if they know what integration means.  They probably won’t know, so quickly teach the concept of segregation according to race.  Racial segregation was legal in the U.S. and based on the doctrine of “separate but equal” until the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  The pictures in the text will show that in many places, separate was not equal!

Share a few of the pictures and lines.  Below I’ve listed several that I’ve used and feel comfortable working with.  I’ve noted the starting point and some of the possible comments/content you may wish to point out.

Pages 12-13, which begin, “Her name was Betty when she belonged to my cousin.”

  • The doll had two owners before this little girl got her.
  • The doll no longer has any clothes.
  • The doll’s voice is broken.
  • The doll does not resemble the child playing with her.

Pages 14-15, which begin, “Outside the grass is tall and full of bees and butterflies.”

  • No desks
  • No school supplies
  • Dark
  • Cold in the winter

Pages 16-17, which begin, “Our parents sued the Board of Education not because they hate them, but because they love us.”

  • Brown vs the Board of Education was the court ruling that destroyed the “separate but equal” doctrine.  It was highly controversial at the time.
  • What did black parents want for their children? What does any parent want for his or her child?
  • How could access to education change these children’s lives?

Pages 32-33, which begin, “No, no, they said.  You can’t come in here.”

  • Have you ever been kept out of a place because of your gender?  Skin color?  What does that feel like?
  • What does it feel like to be left out of something important, something good?
  • How would you feel if you knew that your Mom or Dad did not have a good job and would never have a good job because of his/her skin color?

Page 40, which begins, “I eat alone.”

  • The effects of racial segregation went on even after the laws changed. Here we see a girl at school, but it is still not a healthy environment for her.  Why not?
  • What would make this girl’s school experience better?
  • Have you ever seen someone sitting alone? What have you done?

Pages 44-45, which begin, “They are trying to scare me. I guess they don’t have any children of their own.”

  • Would you be scared if you were the one walking into a school where many people did not want you?
  • Would you be scared if you had to walk past people with guns to get to school?
  • Would you be scared if people with guns had to protect you while you were going to school? If appropriate, share Normal Rockwell’s The Problem We All Live With to highlight how school integration was such a controversial public issue.

3. Conclusion:

Emphasize that racial discrimination, segregation based on race, or any policy or practice that purposefully limits access to basic human rights is abhorrent.

Explain that these practices are still in effect in too many places in the world today, and that learning about them and raising awareness can help put an end to these practices.  Inform the children that throughout the unit we’ll be looking at more examples of people and efforts being made to ensure equal access to basic human rights as well as opportunities for advancement.

To end on a more hopeful note, play the short excerpt from Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

Resources:
  1. Remember: The Journey to School Integration by Toni Morrison
  2. Norman Rockwell’s The Problem We All Live With, found here: Normal Rockwell Painting of Ruby Bridges and her Federal Marshall Escorts
  3. I Have a Dream speech excerpt, Dr. Martin Luther King, found here: I Have a Dream Excerpt
  4. Student Assignment Sheet (attached)
  5. Additional age-appropriate items from your library’s collection about school segregation, desegregation, and race relations.
Notes:

It is rare that I issue a warning with a lesson, but you need to be careful with this one.  Remember is perfect for what we need it to do, but some of the images are not appropriate for elementary students because of the violence or hatred represented in them.  Spend time with the text, study it, and carefully choose the images you will use.

For some students, especially in an international school setting, seeing these images paired with Morrison’s words may be the first time they are confronted with racism.  I have taught this lesson to children who, figuratively speaking, lost their innocence as a result of what they learned.  I remember distinctly one little boy asking me, “But why did the skin color matter?”  He was both dismayed and perplexed by the problems for which, from one perspective, I was grateful.  Used to playmates of all colors and races from all over the world, the issue of racism had simply never occurred to him.  I wish that this were true for all children.

Also, be sure that you talk this lesson over with the classroom teacher before you teach it.  It is best if the classroom teacher is present when this lesson is taught so that there can be some continuity between what is covered in the lesson and follow-up throughout the unit.  If you choose to use the images of Ruby Bridges and Rosa Parks, their stories will need to be shared at some point later in the unit.

I’ve used Remember in two separate international schools.  Each time I have planned the lesson, I have received complete support from my teachers.  They were thrilled to know that this text was available and pleased with the way it prompts discussion.

I’ve left the lesson intentionally unstructured.  That is because the lesson is provocative.  The children will respond to the pictures and text, and the course of the lesson depends entirely on their comments and questions.  I’m always prepared with six of the images starting with the little girl and her doll on pp. 12-13.  From there, I follow the children’s lead.  If the material proves to be too much for them (this has not happened to me yet), transition into Ruby Bridges or Rosa Parks’s stories that can be followed through to a positive conclusion.  If the children have some exposure to the subject, let them share what they know.

This lesson focuses on the United States because plenty of materials exist to show and discuss racial discrimination in that country.  However, you could just as effectively use South Africa’s experience with Apartheid, the caste system in India, or any place in the world where race has played a role in oppression.  Sadly, there are many examples to choose from.

Most important is that the children understand that limited access to education, jobs, health care, food/nutrition housing, travel, nature (and many others), has devastating effects on human development and thus devastating effects on our society.

Don’t shy away from this lesson.  Teach it, but do so realizing that you really must be prepared and that you need to make a positive impression on the children in terms of their responsibility to treat all people equally and treat all human beings with dignity and respect.  This is fundamental to the IB philosophy and to international education.

Recommended books for this lesson: 
  1. Remember: The Journey to School Integration by Toni Morrison.
  2. The Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Coles and illustrated by George Ford.  (Optional)
  3. Rosa Parks by Cynthia Amoroso and Robert B. Noyed.  (Optional)
  4. A Picture Book of Rosa Parks by David A. Adler, illustrated by Robert Casilla.  (Optional)
Key Terms:

School integration, Discrimination in education, African-Americans

 

Student Assignment, Remember, by Toni Morrison

Life Cycles #5: The Mommy Book and The Daddy Book, by Todd Parr

Lesson Overview:

In this lesson, students use what they know about grown-ups to make connections to their Unit of Inquiry.  Using the library stock of print materials on Moms and Dads (or Grandmas and Grandpas – your choice!), get the kids thinking, writing, and playing with each other and with the collection.  Introduce them to Todd Parr’s colorful, happy, and healthy books, then send them back to class with their very own class story in Todd Parr’s style.  They will be proud of what they can write and create!

Lesson Plan:

Suggested Grades:

K–1

Objective:

Each class will write two original stories, one for Moms and another for Dads, which show their understanding of some of the things that adults do once they are grown up and have children of their own.  (AASL 4.1.8, “Use creative and artistic formats to express personal learning.”)

Suggested Time:

40-45 minutes

Success Criteria:

Given a story template, each class will work together to create two original stories patterned after Todd Parr’s The Mommy Book and The Daddy Book.

Lesson Outline:

1. Introduction:

Remind the students that they are learning about life cycles.  They have looked at the human life cycle including infants and growing children.  They have also considered how living things grow (Little Bear’s Little Boat) and some of the things that plants need to grow (Fran’s Flower).  Explain that today they will think about grown-ups, and what grown-ups do after they become Moms and Dads and start families of their own.

2. Main:

Before the lesson, prepare two flipchart story outlines that parallel Mr. Parr’s books.  These should look something like:

Our Mommy Book, by Grade 1NM

Some Mommies

  1. drive                                              drive                                       
  2. wear                                              wear                                       
  3. make                                       with you    make                            with you

All Mommies like to                                       

Some Mommies

  1. like to                                                         like to                                                 
  2. work at/in                                                 work at/in                                          
  3. teach you to                                              teach you to                                       

All Mommies  like to                                        

Some Mommies

  1. have                                   hair                have                             hair     
  2. like to                                                        like to                                                 
  3. go                                                              go                                           (activity ending with “ing”)

All Mommies love to                                           

Some Mommies

  1. fly                                                   fly                                           
  2. sing                                                read                                        

All Mommies want you to be                  

(The End)

Our Daddy Book, by Grade 1NM

Some Daddies

  1. take                                         draw                                       
  2. wear                                        wear                                       
  3. sing in                                     sing to                                          

All Daddies  like to                                           

Some Daddies

  1. work                                        work                                       
  2. like to build                                         like to cover                                       
  3. teach you how to                                            cover you with                                               

All Daddies  like to watch you                                      

Some Daddies

  1. have                             hair                have                             hair
  2. play in your                                        have                                with you
  3. make                                                   make                                      (kitchen/food words)

All Daddies love to                                              

Some Daddies

  1. walk/drive you to                                            walk/drive you to                                           
  2. like to                                      like to                                                 

All Daddies want you to be                     

(The End)

Ask the children to gather ideas from the library’s collections about mothers and fathers. Guide them to use any picture books or non-fiction texts on the subjects of mothers, fathers, or parents.  You could give them a few minutes to gather ideas before you start the story writing part of the activity.

Work with the children, either as a class or in groups, to complete the story outlines.  Encourage them to use what they know about Moms and Dads to fill in the blanks.  Once the story outlines are complete, let the class read their stories out loud. If you have worked as a class, this is a good chance for choral reading in which everyone reads together.

Next, share Todd Parr’s books.  The read-alouds go quickly!  This will give the children a chance to consider their own work/words with those Mr. Parr has used.

If there is time, encourage the children to illustrate their stories in Todd Parr’s style.  If you extend the lesson with illustrations, this could be a two-period lesson.

3. Conclusion:

Ask the children how their story about Moms was the same as Todd Parr’s.  How was their book different from Todd Parr’s?  Ask the same questions for the Dad story.  Is there a right or wrong way to write a Mom or Dad story?

Thank them for their attention and work.  Be sure to document the stories by taking a photo or making a copy of some of the work before it goes to class to be added to the Language or Unit of Inquiry notebooks.

Resources:
  1. Books in the “Recommended Books” section below. All four are Todd Parr titles.
  2. Flipchart paper, prepared as described.
  3. Flipchart markers in at least two colors.
  4. Student handout if you choose to use the story outlines for individual or small groups of children.
Notes:

I have written this lesson for The Mommy Book and The Daddy Book.  But, you could easily switch and use the same lesson format for The Grandma Book and The Grandpa Book.  It’s completely up to you.  Simply use the topics that have not received as much attention by the homeroom teacher.

If needed, differentiate the lesson as follows:

  1. Split the class into boys and girls. Have the girls fill out the story for one of the parents and the boys for the other.  Then, the groups can share their stories with the class.
  2. If you think that your kids are strong enough readers and can work independently, make the story templates into a handout. Then, ask pairs or small groups of children to write their own stories using Todd Parr’s outline.
Recommended books for this lesson: 
  1. The Mommy Book by Todd Parr
  2. The Daddy Book by Todd Parr
  3. The Grandma Book by Todd Parr
  4. The Grandpa Book by Todd Parr
Key Terms:

Life Cycles, Moms, Dads, Mothers, Fathers, Grandmothers, Grandfathers, Families, Adults

Student Handout, Moms and Dads, Todd Parr

Life Cycles #4: Fran’s Flower

Lesson Overview:

In this lesson, students learn what plants need to grow.  This is a very simplified “plant life cycle” lesson, but with a darling literature link.   Do plants eat pizza, cheeseburgers, or ice cream?  Have your students discover what plants need to thrive, then complete a simple drawing to show their understanding.

Lesson Plan:

Suggested Grades:

K–1 

Objective:

To know that plants need soil, water, and sunshine to grow.  (AASL 4.1.8, “Use creative and artistic formats to express personal learning.”)

Suggested Time:

35-40 minutes

Success Criteria:

Each student will complete a series of three simple, labeled drawings to show their understanding of what plants need to grow.

Lesson Outline:

1. Introduction:

Remind the students that they are learning about life cycles.  They have looked at the human life cycle, including infants and growing children.  Explain that today they will look briefly at how plants grow.

  • Ask students if they have ever planted a seed. What happened?
  • Ask students if they have ever seen a large tree. How did that tree begin its life?  Was the tree always big?
  • Ask students what a plant needs to change from a seed into a plant. (This will assess how much they already know.)

2. Main:

Tell the students that today they are going to read a story about a little girl named Fran.  Fran, unfortunately, did not understand much about lifecycles!

Share the story of Fran and her flower.  Follow up with thinking questions such as:

  1. What did Fran think her flower needed to grow?
  2. What did Fran’s flower really need to grow?
  3. What do the plants in our neighborhood need to grow?
  4. What would happen if you tried to feed your bushes, trees, or flowers people food?
  5. Why did Fran’s flower start to grow once she put it outside?
  6. How is a plant’s life cycle like a person’s life cycle?
  7. How is a plant’s life cycle different from a person’s life cycle?

Explain the assignment to the students.  Hold up an assignment sheet and talk through the “What I’m looking for” statement as well as the instructions.  The children should be able to say right away that a plant needs:

  • Soil
  • Sun and Fresh Air
  • Rain

to grow.  Ask them to sketch simple pictures of Fran’s flower (or any plant of their choosing) getting the things it needs to grow.  If they need it, help the children label their drawings.

3. Conclusion:

Show the children some books from the library’s collection about plants.  Encourage them to read about different kinds of plants and find out more about plant life cycles.  Fran’s flower was a simple story, but there is much more we can learn about plants in our world.  Scientists who study plans are called botanists.  Be a botanist and learn a few more things about plants by checking out some of the library’s plant-themed books.

Resources:
  1. Fran’s Flower by Lisa Bruce and Rosalind Beardshaw.
  2. Copies of Student Handout (attached).
  3. Colored pencils, crayons, markers, etc.
  4. Soil, egg cartons, and seeds (optional)
  5. A collection of the library’s books about flowers, trees, and plants (nonfiction).
Notes:

Although Fran’s Flower is a simple story, I find that the kids get a big kick out of it.  I love teaching this lesson because it is easy to understand, easy to prepare, and EAL-friendly, and I can pull it out quickly if one of my periods gets cut short and I need a shorter-than-normal kid-pleaser.  The lesson can also easily be used in any lesson on the environment, living vs nonliving things,  or even a seasonal lesson at springtime.

If you want, you can easily expand this lesson by having the children plant seeds.  I usually don’t do that, however, because the homeroom teachers almost always do!  If the homeroom teachers have kids working with plants that were bought as young plants, and if the kids have never planted a seed, be sure to plant seeds with them.  A couple of seed packets, one package of potting soil, and some thrift-store pots or old mugs, and you’re all set!

Recommended books for this lesson:

Fran’s Flower by Lisa Bruce and Rosalind Beardshaw

Key Terms:

Flowers, Plants, Life Cycles, Growth (Plants)

Student Handout, Fran’s Flower

Life Cycles #3: Growing Up: Little Bear’s Little Boat

Lesson Overview:

In this lesson, students think about growing up.  What are some of the things that will change as they grow?  How will they cope with these changes?  They already know the basic parts of a lifecycle, but growth happens in between.  The concepts in the life cycle unit tie perfectly to Eve Bunting’s sweet, simple, yet profound story of a little bear and his little boat.  And, if you have time, teach the children Raffi’s timeless “Everything Grows.”  They’ll be humming it all day and the lesson will stick!

Lesson Plan:

Suggested Grades:

Early Years–1

Objective:

To understand that all living things grow and change over time.  (AASL  2.3.1, “Connect understanding to the real world.”)

Suggested Time:

35-40 minutes

Success Criteria:

Each student will be able to name five items she has outgrown, what happened to the items, and how his or her life changed as a result.  Each student will also to be able to sing a simple song about growing, “Everything Grows” by Raffi.

Lesson Outline:

1. Introduction:

Remind the students that they are learning about life cycles.  Last week they looked at babies and what babies can do.  This week, the children will work with the concept of growth and what happens to some of our favorite items once we have outgrown them.

Show the cover of Little Bear’s Little Boat by Eve Bunting and Nancy Carpenter.   Ask the children if bears really sail around a lake in boats.  Of course not!  So, this is a fiction story, but we can still connect with it.  Ask the children to look for connections between what they are learning in their life cycle unit and Little Bear.  How many connections will they be able to find?

2. Main:

Share Little Bear’s Little Boat by Eve Bunting and illustrated by Nancy Carpenter.    Check for understanding by asking questions such as:

  • What did Little Bear love more than anything in the world?
  • What did he like to do with his boat?
  • What happened when Little Bear began to grow?
  • How did Mother Bear explain the situation to Little Bear?
  • What did Little Bear decide to do?
  • What would you do?

Class Activity:  Brainstorm and scribe a list of things that the children outgrow.  Just as Little Bear outgrew his boat, the students have also outgrown lots of things.  Ask the children to be specific so that the list is as long as possible.  Some items might include:

High chair                               Winter coat                             Crib

Booster Seat                          Gloves                                      Baby Blanket

Socks                                       Snowsuit                                  Teddy Bear

Pants                                       Wagon                                      Baby Books

Shirts                                       Riding Toy                                Stroller/Pram

Dresses                                   Infant Cup, Sippy Cup            Onesies

Infant swing                           Little Boat, Kite, etc.

T-Ball Bat                                Shoes

Ask the children what they do with their toys, games, books, and clothes when they are outgrown.  What did Little Bear do with his Little Boat?  What can they do with their outgrown items?  Scribe their answers as well.   A copy of this work can go back to the classroom as evidence of learning.

3. Conclusion:

If there is time, teach the children Raffi’s timeless song, “Everything Grows.”  This song has been around for a while but it fits the Unit of Inquiry perfectly and is a great complement to Bunting’s text.  If the children can read, pass out copies of the lyrics.  If not, simply speak the words of the song and then ask the children to sing along – they will be able to do it!

Resources:
  1. Little Bear’s Little Boat by Eve Bunting and illustrated by Nancy Carpenter.
  2. A collection of the library’s books about growing up. Titles could include: Verdi by Janell Cannon; We Are Growing by Laurie Keller, illustrated by Mo Willems; and When I Grow Up by Mercer Mayer.
  3. Video recording of Raffi singing “Everything Grows,” found here: Raffi’s “Everything Grows.”
  4. Lyrics to Raffi’s song, “Everything Grows.” (attached).
Notes:

Although the Bunting text is short and simple, I find this lesson to be very effective.  In my experience, children like to talk about how they have grown and changed.  This story, activity, and song ask them to reflect on their own growth in the context of their Unit of Inquiry.  (Key Concept:  Reflection.)  It is an old favorite of mine, and I know that it will work for you as well.

Recommended books for this lesson: 

Little Bear’s Little Boat by Eve Bunting.  (The book is out of print, and you may have a hard time finding anything except for a board book edition.  When I checked, Powell’s Used Books had a few reasonably priced hardback copies.)

Key Terms:

Growth, Size, Bears, Eve Bunting, Boats

Lyrics, Everything Grows by Raffi

Life Cycles #2: Infancy, Babies

Lesson Overview:

In this lesson, students think about the first part of the human life cycle, infancy and the toddler stages.  Using some of the library’s books about babies and toddlers, children will play “Guess the Baby” and be able to explain some of the things that babies and young children can do.  This is a Unit of Inquiry lesson with a strong literature connection and a fun game!

Lesson Plan:

Suggested Grades:

K–2

Objective:

To understand that all people started life as babies, that babies require special care, and that there are many things that babies can do.  (AASL 1.1.1, “Follow an inquiry based process in seeking knowledge in curricular subjects . . . )

Suggested Time:

35-40 minutes

Success Criteria:

Each class will prepare a short summary of at least ten things that babies can do.  Each student will also play the “Guess the Baby” game.

Lesson Outline:

1. Introduction:

In the last lesson the students learned the stages of a human life cycle.  Ask the children to remind you of what the stages of a human life cycle are.

Explain that today they will learn more about the first phase of a human life cycle, infancy and early childhood.  When human beings are in their infancy, we say that they are babies.  Ask the students how many of them have a baby in their home or in their family.  Allow time for one or two of them to tell about their babies.

Mention that later in the lesson they will get to see some baby pictures of special people.  But, do not give away that you have collected baby pictures from their teachers!

2. Main:

Share Guess the Baby by Simon French and Donna Rawlins.  Make sure the children understand that:

  • Every person, no matter how old, started life as a baby.
  • Babies are not able to do what school-aged children can do.
  • Babies need special care and lot of love to grow and learn.

Ask the children what we can do to help take care of babies.  Record their ideas on a piece of flipchart paper so that it can go back to class with them.

Teach a few pages from All About Me by Selina Young.  The book is too long to use in its entirety, but it will help the kids start to brainstorm about what babies and young children learn to do in their first few years of life.  If you prefer a shorter book that does the same thing, consider using Baby Can Bounce! by Lynne Chapman.

Ask the children what babies can do.  Record their ideas on flipchart paper so that it can go back to class with them.  (Example: Babies can cry, babies can smile, babies can eat, babies can sleep, babies can reach for a toy, babies can laugh, etc.)

Play “Guess the Baby” just like in the story.  Ask the children if they can correctly identify the people that these babies have grown up to be!  See “Resources” for how to prepare this game.  I like to play the game last, because after the game the kids will be very wound up and excited – there will be no more teaching moments once you show the pictures and let them start guessing.

3. Conclusion:

Wrap up by reminding the children how special babies are, and what a special time of life infancy is.  Challenge them to find a book to take home that is a story about a baby or a family with a baby.  Also, if you have board books, encourage the children to take home a board book and share it with a baby in their families.

Resources:
  1. Guess the Baby by Simon French and Donna Rawlins.
  2. All About Me: A Hundred Things That Happened To Me Between 0 and 3 by Selina Young.
  3. Baby Can Bounce! By Lynne Chapman.
  4. Baby photos from all the teachers who work with this grade level, mounted for display. I usually just make a “lift-the-flap” type activity on a piece of flip chart paper.  Be sure to include teaching assistants, specialist teachers, the school nurse, cafeteria workers, and administrative colleagues.  Gather as many baby pictures as you can so that the guessing game will be fun and challenging.  It is best to prepare a set of baby pictures for each class so that they can take the game with them and use it throughout the unit.
  5. Flipchart paper and markers to record children’s ideas.
Notes:

This lesson can fits well in a unit on families, but I have placed it in a unit on human life cycles.  It requires a bit of preparation because you have to gather and prepare the photos, but the effort is well worth it.

The “Guess the Baby” game was originally the idea of my Early Years colleagues at The International School of Stuttgart.  When I was asked to provide my picture, I realized what a perfect learning activity this is and that it matched Guess the Baby by Simon French.  I’ve kept my picture in the library ever since with the simple caption “Guess Who?  1969 Kindergarten” (attached).  It attracts a lot of attention, and the children are continually fascinated to see their teachers as children.

If colleagues do not have baby pictures, you can use any picture from early childhood as well.  You do not need to be strict about the photo being of a baby, just anything that would show the teacher or  member of staff as a very young person.

Recommended books for this lesson:
  1. Guess the Baby by Simon French and Donna Rawlins.
  2. All About Me: A Hundred Things That Happened To Me Between 0 and 3 by Selina Young.
  3. Baby Can Bounce! By Lynne Chapman.
Key Terms:

Life Cycles, Babies, Infants, Growth and Development

 

Guess Who 1969 Kindergarten