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Follow Your Dreams

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... know we must. A wonderful book to introduce the concept of a passion for learning that will drive people to go the extra mile. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Follow Your Dreams


1
Follow Your Dreams
  • Reading Ladder
  • Starting Conversations

Compiled by Anita Phillips, 2011.
2
The
Sheppards Granddaughter
The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate
Red Moon over
Sharpsburg Weed
flower Tofu Quilt
Three Cups of Tea The Secret
School Running Shoes
Dreams Can Come True...
What do you want more than anything else? What
would you give to have your dream come true?
3
Running Shoes by Frederick Lipp Jason Gaillard
  • A young girl in Southeast Asia has a dream of
    going to school. More than anything else, she
    wants to read and learn. The gift of a pair of
    running shoes makes it possible for her to run
    approximately five miles to school. She not only
    overcomes the obstacle of distance but the
    obstacle of discovering that there are only boys
    there. She earns their respect and they accept
    her into the school. Driven by an inner desire
    to know and learn sometimes it is a desire that
    we cannot define what or why but we know we must.
  • A wonderful book to introduce the concept of a
    passion for learning that will drive people to go
    the extra mile. A picture book to read out loud
    and revisit on your own.

4
The Secret School by AVI
  • The children in this rural community have a
    problem,
  • their teacher left town. Will they have to
    repeat their
  • grades when the new teacher comes next fall. No
    way,
  • there is only 2 months left in this school year.
    Now how
  • could a group of students work together to solve
    this problem?
  • Could they teach themselves? The boys and girls
    step up to learn together, led by a young girl
    with amazing determination.
  • Thinking about why we go school, this book builds
    well on the previous book. An easy novel that
    would be good for a read aloud or shared reading.

5
Three Cups of Tea by Sarah Thomson, Greg
Mortenson, David Relin, and
Jane Goodall.
  • There are children who do not have schools to
    attend. Girls are especially denied the
    opportunity to learn. As a result, poverty and
    poor health prevails in families.
  • When one man has an idea on how to fight
    ignorance and war with books and learning, people
    step up to help. Considering the lives of others
    can make us think more deeply about our own. How
    can we make a difference?
  • This book is a little more challenging to read
    but would be a great book to read out loud with
    interesting cultural perspectives on going to
    school. This book provides many opportunities for
    conversations.

6
Tofu Quilt
by Ching Yeung Russell
  • A Young girls struggle in Hong Kong to break
    out of her extended familys cultural
    expectations and follow her heart. Her mother is
    her roll model and her grandfather plants the
    seeds. Girls can do more than keep house. This
    book helps build independence in deciding for
    yourself, should I do my best in school? What is
    in it for me? What if my family or friends say
    no?
  • This is a good read-to-self book in poetic style
    to share in discussion circles such as RTI.

7
Weedflower by Cynthia Kaddacta
  • Sometimes we do not fit into the culture of our
    school. Sometimes it really hurts when you do go
    to school. What if prejudice and fear keeps you
    from learning?
  • When Pearl Harbor is bombed, fear and prejudice
    sends thousands of US born Japanese families to
    interment camps. Good teachers do not like to
    teach at these camps.
  • You are invited to think about how not having the
    opportunity to go to school can lead to severe
    boredom, anxiety, and uncertainty for a future.
    There is always two sides to the story. A very
    different boy shows Weedflower that there are
    many ways of knowing and learning.
  • Another good independent read that helps us think
    about how an education comes to us in many ways.

8
Red Moon over Sharpsburg
by Rosemary Wells
  • History repeats itself. Today, as in the days of
    the U.S. Civil War, many young people live in
    countries torn with war and loose their
    opportunity to go to school.
  • When all hope is ripped away, young people can be
    quite determined and diligent in following their
    heart. What if ignorance and prejudice is
    prevalent in your society? The young medical
    research doctor who tutors his young neighbor
    girl during the war with the states inspires her
    to study science in a time when science was only
    for men. How can education help drive away
    ignorance and superstition?
  • This book connects strongly to the themes in the
    previous books, furthering a historical
    perspective on current social issues. It is a
    very good independent read and great for
    discussions in book circles.

9
The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate
By Jacqueline Kell
  • The grandfather in this story feeds his
    granddaughters
  • curiosity for nature and the desire to become a
    scientist
  • in a time when a girl was praised for her skill
    in the art of
  • needlework.
  • Society norms and expectations play a strong role
    in a childs education. What if their
    educational goals and expectations do not match
    with what you want or what you are interested in?
    What will you do when you grow up? Will you be
    able to choose? Developing self-determination
    will have a powerful effect on our future.
  • A little deeper thinking, new ideas to consider,
    and invitations to connect with struggles of
    young people of our near past. An excellent
    book to tie into exploring and learning from
    nature.

10
The Sheppards Granddaughter by Anne Laurel
Carter 
  • Another perspective to consider, what if you are
  • happy with your cultural traditions and you
    do not
  • want to go to school for book learning. You
    believe
  • that important people in your life can teach
    you what
  • your heart yearns for most.
  • The grandfather teaches the young girl the wisdom
    of a sheepherder. The brother in the story
    teaches her math and science so she can stay home
    and take care of the family sheep. When she has
    to go to school at age 16 she is at the top of
    her class. But she discovers that learning
    English will open many doors.
  • We do learn from many people in our lives and in
    ways we might not fully understand. But when
    circumstances change and we have a fight to win,
    there are important lessons and skills we must
    reach out to learn on our own.

11
Continuing Conversations
  • If you noticed that the main characters in these
    books were girls, you also probably noticed that
    there were boys, fathers, and grandfathers who
    played in an important part to support the dream
    that was in their hearts. Education has been
    expressed as a basic world-wide human right.
    There are still powers in charge today who would
    prevent young people from obtaining the education
    they desire. I encourage you to keep reading
    about young people who overcome the struggle to
    go to school. Their stories truly make a
    difference in the lives of so many.
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