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The Girl with the Brown Crayon
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
1998
About this book
Paley tells in this book a story of her own farewell from teaching, as well as a story of the self-discovery of Reeny, a little girl with a fondness for the color brown. Led by Reeny, Paley and the children develop a passion for the books of Italian author Leo Lionni, exploring the essential human need to create and to belong.
Reviews
Paley’s book is the breathtaking account of a golden time she has carved out in the lives of [her school] children and herself. Essentially, she conducts a high-power kindergarten think tank in which she, the children, and some parents explore ‘the artist’s role in society, the conditions necessary for thinking, and the influence of music and art on the emotions.’ Infected by their teacher’s enthusiasm, wisdom, and human warmth, these beautiful children shape their semester of art, dance, song, and applied psychology around 14 picture books by the great writer-illustrator Leo Lionni… [Paley] render[s] tellingly the originality and sensitivity with which her kindergartners explore art and life as they skip from work to work, character to character, and back to their daily lives with persistence, eloquence, and depth… Her book is a reminder for adult readers that our task, at home and abroad, is to ensure that children may flourish with such awareness of their own worth that they can be free, then, to love another.
-- Peter F. Neumeyer Boston Sunday Globe
-- Peter F. Neumeyer Boston Sunday Globe
Paley [tells how she] and her co-teacher turn a sizable portion of their curriculum over to a study of Lionni stories, and her students blossom with insight… Paley’s book is a treasure for anyone who wants to know more about what magic is possible in a classroom where a teacher encourages what Paley calls…a ‘narrative community.’
-- Carol Doup Muller San Jose Mercury-News
-- Carol Doup Muller San Jose Mercury-News
To focus a year’s curriculum on a single writer, no matter how acclaimed or popular, was a departure for [Vivian Gussin Paley] and her school. But as anyone can tell from reading The Girl with the Brown Crayon, Paley’s experiment was a resounding success, cultivating among very young children a deep engagement with literature that they were able to share every day.
-- Molly McQuade Book Links
-- Molly McQuade Book Links
I was delighted after an initial reading of The Girl with the Brown Crayon and couldn’t wait to share it. However, after rereading the text and discussing it as a member of a learning community, I can more fully appreciate why it was awarded Harvard University Press’s annual prize for an outstanding publication about education and society.
-- Reading Teacher
-- Reading Teacher
[Paley describes how] she decides to give direction to her curriculum by focusing on the books of one author, Leo Lionni… The result, as recorded in the book, is a long exploration, questioning, and debate among the children and teachers about the characteristics and actions of the characters and important ideas (which become curriculum themes) as the books are read, dramatized, and portrayed in notebooks and posters. Throughout this journey, Paley shares her unique insight into the nature of young children and kindergarten learning as it could be, as it should be.
-- Young Children
-- Young Children
A beautifully realized, deceptively simple classroom memoir from a longtime kindergarten teacher and author. Paley begins the narrative of her final year of teaching by focusing on Reeny, a self-assured, thoughtful, and creative black five-year-old girl in a class that’s mostly Caucasian and Asian. Reeny is a wonderful character, but it is her identification with another character, Frederick the Mouse in a Leo Lionni children’s book, that is the catalyst for a truly remarkable classroom experience… Disproving the general opinion that kindergartners are unable to focus on a lengthy, ongoing project, these children show an amazing aptitude for referring back to previous discussions, understanding metaphor, relating their reading to the world around them, and using the information they glean in creative and unusual ways. Their discussions cover everything from race and friendship to gender and the artistic personality, and they are able to appreciate the Lionni titles with a maturity that is sometimes startling… The reader closes the book with the hope that Paley will, with Reeny’s help and her own newfound self-awareness, overcome her ambivalence about standing out and continue to write superb books like this one.
-- Kirkus Reviews
-- Kirkus Reviews
Paley, the charismatic teacher and author…is taken on a metaphorical journey of discovery and self-discovery by kindergartners with inquiring minds… [Paley’s class] is an oasis, blessed with a unique curriculum and a teacher willing to be taught by her students.
-- Publishers Weekly
-- Publishers Weekly
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Frontmatter
i -
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Preface
vii -
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Reeny
1 -
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Frederick
5 -
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Posters
9 -
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Tico
11 -
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Wings
15 -
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Cornelius
21 -
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Oliver
26 -
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Family Stories
31 -
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Letters
35 -
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Little Blue and Little Yellow
38 -
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Inch by Inch
43 -
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Rituals
48 -
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Walter
51 -
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Second Thoughts
55 -
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Swimmy
57 -
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Another Layer
62 -
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Hanuman
65 -
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Girls and Boys
68 -
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Geraldine
72 -
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Forgiveness
76 -
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Going Fishing
81 -
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The Easy Tree
84 -
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Mr. McMouse
87 -
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Family Discussion
90 -
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Brown Baby
92 -
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Until the Cock Crows
95 -
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Books byLeo Lionni
101
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 1, 2009
eBook ISBN:
9780674041837
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
112
eBook ISBN:
9780674041837
Audience(s) for this book
General/trade;