Monday, April 19, 2010

Fairy Tales in the Classroom Week: Q&A with Veronika Martenova Charles


Earlier today I posted about Fairy Tales in the Classroom: Teaching Students to Write Stories with Meaning Through Traditional Tales by Veronika Martenova Charles. The following is a short Q&A with Charles for SurLaLune about her new book discussing her inspiration and personal philosophy of using fairy tales in the classoom.

Q: How did the book come about?

A: I often go to schools as a visiting author and invariably the first question that the children ask is, “Where do you get your ideas from?”

So I tell them the truth: “I read tons of fairy tales when I was a kid. And I daydream a lot.” “What’s daydreaming?” is the students’ next question.

That made me curious: Would children today have the time and the patience to read and reflect on those old tales? So many of them are text-heavy and filled with dated imagery. Was there a way to connect them with those stories?

So I set on a journey to find out. And that became the starting point of the research for a graduate thesis. My newest book is about the many surprising discoveries made along the way. I was amazed how easily and fast children could create stories if they got involved in the stories personally and how much writing they would do afterwards.

Q: What is your philosophy about using fairy tales in schools?

A: Look, anytime fairy tales are used in a classroom it is a good thing. And there are many lesson plans available if one searches the Internet. I think using fairy tales as an entry point to teaching a history lesson would be great: to talk about social mores of the particular time, professions people had, to research the period clothing, housing, agriculture, etc. But, there is so much more that can be accomplished with those stories!

They can provide children with emotional guidance; they introduce them to the essence of the story; they help them to think outside the box and become independent and creative thinkers.

Children of the 21st century are visual learners. They are wired differently. So to reach them, I used in my research an interactive approach with elements of play that I describe in the book. The point is to involve the children with the stories, to draw them in, to let them play inside of those tales.

I chose to work mainly with grades 2 and 3 because that is the age when children are interested in fairy tales the most and when they can easily and subconsciously absorb the narrative bases.

What is different and radical in my method is that the class activity is student-driven. This means that during the creation of the story, the teacher hands over the authority to the students and she/he becomes the listener and the guide, asking children for their ideas and steering them in the direction they want to go. Children have the freedom to alter the text, to invent the characters and setting of the story. They are in charge of the story and the images supplied for the new tale come from them.

That is very empowering for the kids and the classroom can become quite noisy, as many students want to participate. For the teacher, it provides a glimpse of how the children see the world and what is important to them. The story-inventing activity becomes an adventure both for the kids and the teacher because the story can develop in many different ways.

I was surprised at how much technology and pop culture found their way into the stories. Even though the children knew they were creating a fairy tale, their hero for example, instead of looking for a diamond or a ring, was searching for his stolen iPod and communicating with a police using his cell phone.

Another surprise was the fact that the children at that age were not interested in a generic “happily ever after” ending in the stories. They would bypass the girl/boy union altogether and were interested in justice being done instead.

I worked with hundreds of students in different schools and various demographics. In each class, the students would create their own amazing stories, reflecting places and communities they lived in, and what mattered to them. Even the difficult-to-reach students, such as those with autism, were drawn in and participated.

Q: Then what, after the children create their story?

A: Well, now the teacher regains her/his authority. She/he can show the students what they had accomplished in their story - that they created characters, setting and so on. That can move them into language arts and they can start to work on descriptions, metaphors, search the Internet for images, and use Smart Board technologies for example. The point here is that it becomes much easier when the children write from images they created in their heads. Oh, I could go on forever about this …

Now, research had shown that knowledge tied to a story is remembered better. Some teachers and librarians successfully use a traditional fairy tale as a base story from which they branch out into knowledge acquisition in teaching social science, geography, etc.

In my research, I discovered children remembered twice as many details from the stories they participated in and worked with hands on, than from the story I merely read to them. They were also more enthusiastic to talk about their stories and remembered them longer.

My overall philosophy is that if knowledge is attached to those stories that children make and own, they can remember it better for a longer time.

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Thanks for sharing, Veronika!

Fairy Tales in the Classroom: Teaching Students to Write Stories with Meaning Through Traditional Tales by Veronika Martenova Charles


Fairy Tales in the Classroom: Teaching Students to Write Stories with Meaning Through Traditional Tales by Veronika Martenova Charles was released earlier this month. I received a review copy late last week and haven't had time to read it all the way through, but am impressed so far with its depth and thoughtfulness. This isn't a simple collection of hand-outs and independent exercises, but a well-thought out and explained system for classroom application. It's not complicated, but it is thorough. It's also inspirational. I highly recommend it for teachers looking for ways to integrate story writing into their curriculum. Charles aptly demonstrates that fairy tales make an excellent tool.

Also, watch for a guest blog post by Charles later today...

Here's the publisher's description:

This ground breaking book by renowned children’s author Veronika Charles provides teachers in the early grades with the background and practical approaches they need to maximize the potential of traditional tales with their students.

Charles outlines the contributions to our understanding of the fairy tale genre by Bettelheim, Favat, Rodari and Jung and then builds on the pioneering work of Vladimir Propp to create an easy to use symbol system which guides students to tell - orally, pictorially and in writing - their own stories based on archetypes that are fully developed in the book. Her approach has been tested in numerous classrooms with wonderful and often surprising results.

The book is heavily illustrated with full-colour examples of student work and contains appendices of stories to be read and a full set of reproducible action symbols.

Fairy Tales In The Classroom contains all the tools, suggestions and stories that teachers need to give their students life transforming experiences and a solid background for all their future writing.

The book's foreword by Betsy Hearne is also available for reading on the Fitzhenry and Whiteside website. (Hearne is a well-known voice, but her favorite work of mine remains her Beauty and the Beast: Visions and Revisions of an Old Tale.)

And because we all know I like to include the Table of Contents:

1 “What can I write about?”
My own journey
Using fairy tales in the classroom

2 Why Fairy Tales Are Still with Us
What are fairy tales?
What is the significance of the tales?
Mining the potential of fairy tales

3 Going through the Fairy-Tale Woods
Fairy tales are good for children
Finding the real world through the magic realm
Why children are interested in fairy tales
Fairy tale form
Exercising creativity and imagination
How children respond to stories

4 My Work in the Classroom
A classroom approach
Advantages of symbols of Propp’s actions
Complete set of symbols
Sample action-symbol maps
The classroom procedure
Expressing response through drawing
Selecting stories

5 Tale Type: The Children and the Ogre
The story “The Black Geese of Baba Yaga”
The actions in the storyline
Action-symbol map
Creating a new story
Discussion of results
Making magic
Back to the real world

6 Tale Type: The Animal Bride
The story: “The Farmer's Boy and the Orange Cat”
The actions in the story
Action-symbol map
Creating a new story
Discussion of results

7 Tale Type: Magic Objects
The story: “The Magic Soup Pot”
The actions in the story
Action-symbol map
Creating a new story
Discussion of results
Sessions with older students
Recollections

8 Expressing Response through Drawing
Same story, different interpretations
How children portray stories
Recollection through visual expression
Right-brain and left-brain modes

9 Summary: Where to Go from Here
Integration into curriculum expectations
Sample follow-up initiatives
Sample individual student stories
Follow-up ideas

10 Putting My Approach into Practice
General description of my approach
Preparation for class work with a story
Steps to follow during the activity
Some practical concerns

11 Teacher Materials
Anthology of Tales

Master Set of Symbols

Appendix A

Appendix B

Bibliography

Notes to Chapters

Acknowledgements

Finally, the book is receiving great reviews from many sources, including Resource Links Magazine (scroll to bottom of the page), CM Magazine, and Canadian Teacher Magazine. There is also a review by Jack Zipes on its Amazon page.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Fairy Tales in the Classroom: The Fairytale Museum


This week will be devoted to fairy tales in the classroom. Since I am starting this on Sunday, still technically the weekend, I wanted to share a find I've been saving for months. This week is the perfect theme and this is a great way to start it off. Lighthearted or more serious as inspiration, whichever you choose.


In the UK, Hillside Primary & Nursery School has a fairy tale museum which displays fairy tale "artifacts" and other materials made by the students. The following are the only details which are provided, but I imagine this is an ongoing project with student contributions since the site implies it is open for viewing.


From the site:

Year 2/3 have been working hard with Creative Partnerships to produce artefacts to go in our wonderful Fairytale Museum. Please call in to have a look around.


I am sharing my favorite images, but there are more on their site. I love the concept of building a museum and the hands-on approach with the students, from creating printing plates to make a Cinderella book to making masks to magic bean boxes to having more elaborate pieces for the students to enjoy.


Per usual, I won't label these but let you guess. They are labeled on the school's site so you can see them there along with the other ones I didn't include.


The plates for the Cinderella book are pictured above and the final book below...


There is also a display of cross stitch projects, but they aren't clearly visible.


Consider me enthusiastic and impressed. I want to be at this school!

I have two lists of education related books, many of which will get further discussion this week, on Amazon at Fairy Tales in the Classroom and Fairy Tales in the Classroom: Math Applications.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Princess Cupcake Decorating Kit


These little bits of whimsy arrived in an email from Williams Sonoma. The pictures that is. They are available on the website at Princess Cupcake Decorating Kit. I'm a fan of novelty cake pans and while these don't qualify, I was surprised I was delighted by these despite my usual near aversion to "princessy" things. I love the old-fashioned whimsy and non-branding element of them. And they aren't Barbie pink either. Nothing wrong with those for fans, but a change is quite nice!


SurLaLune is not affiliated with Williams Sonoma. These links are provided for information and convenience simply because I liked them.

Fairy Tale Poetry Week: Questions of the Hour by Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt


Today's offering for Fairy Tale Poetry Week in honor of National Poetry Month is below. Do read all the way to the end and consider the date this was written, 1878. That makes it all the more interesting to me on several levels.

Questions of the Hour
by Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt (1836–1919)

“Do angels wear white dresses, say?
Always, or only in the summer? Do
Their birthdays have to come like mine, in May?
Do they have scarlet sashes then, or blue?

“When little Jessie died last night,
How could she walk to Heaven——it is so far?
How did she find the way without a light?
There wasn’t even any moon or star.

“Will she have red or golden wings?
Then will she have to be a bird, and fly?
Do they take men like presidents and kings
In hearses with black plumes clear to the sky?

“How old is God? Has he gray hair?
Can He see yet? Where did He have to stay
Before——you know——he had made——Anywhere?
Who does He pray to——when He has to pray?

“How many drops are in the sea?
How many stars?——well, then, you ought to know
How many flowers are on an apple-tree?
How does the wind look when it does n’t blow?

“Where does the rainbow end? And why
Did——Captain Kidd——bury the gold there? When
Will this world burn? And will the firemen try
To put the fire out with the engines then?

“If you should ever die, may we
Have pumpkins growing in the garden, so
My fairy godmother can come for me,
When there’s a prince’s ball, and let me go?

“Read Cinderella just once more——
What makes——men’s other wives——so mean?” I know
That I was tired, it may be cross, before
I shut the painted book for her to go.

Hours later, from a child’s white bed
I heard the timid, last queer question start:
“Mamma, are you—my stepmother?” it said.
The innocent reproof crept to my heart.

from A Woman's Poems (1878)

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See a list of more Cinderella poems at Modern Interpretations of Cinderella. See the left hand column for links to full text poems.

For a list of fairy tale themed poetry collections, I have a Fairy Tale Poetry list on Amazon. There are also many poems scattered throughout the SurLaLune website...

The illustration is by Herbert Cole.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Book Cover Art & Everlasting by Angie Frazier


As I was browsing Amazon yesterday, this book--Everlasting by Angie Frazier--popped up for the first time as a recommended read. I hadn't seen it before, I know, because the cover caught my eye immediately and made me click through to read more. I learned that this is a historical fantasy for YA, a debut novel by Frazier. With a gorgeous cover. Even if you aren't as romantic in taste as this cover, it makes you look at it because it stands out from the crowd. I haven't had a cover catch my eye so wonderfully since Esperanza Rising many years ago now. I worked in the library then and that book was picked up and handled by many people on the rare occasion it wasn't checked out.

Here is the description for Everlasting:

Sailing aboard her father's ship is all seventeen-year-old Camille Rowen has ever wanted. But as a lady in 1855 San Francisco, her future is set: marry a man she doesn't love in order to preseve her social standing. On her last voyage before the wedding, Camille learns the mother she has always believed dead is in fact alive and in Australia. When their Sydney-bound ship goes down in a gale, and her father dies, Camille sets out to find her mother and a map in her possession - a map believed to lead to a stone that once belonged to the legendary civilization of the immortals. The stone can do exactly what Camille wants most: bring someone back from the dead. Unfortunately, her father's adversary is also on the hunt for the stone, and she must race him to it. The only person Camille can depend on is Oscar - a handsome young sailor and her father's first mate - who is in love with Camille and whom she is inexplicably drawn to despite his low social standing and her pending wedding vows.

With an Australian card shark acting as their guide, Camille eludes murderous bushrangers, traverses dangerous highlands, evades a curse placed on the stone, and unravels the mystery behind her mother's disappearance sixteen years earlier. But when another death shakes her conviction to resurrect her father, Camille must choose what - and who - matters most.

So it appears to be going against the trend of most of the recent YA fantasy and further catches my interest. Then there's the whole Australia thing which I'm a sucker for. Her next book, Susannah Snow and the Mystery of the Midnight Tunnel, is also set in New Brunswick, another sucker setting for me. That is not slated for release until Spring 2011 according to her website.

Anyway, the cover got me thinking about book covers again and their importance. Even people who know better than to literally judge a book by its cover, like supposedly me, are influenced. I'm still rather amazed that blue isn't used more considering it's a favorite color of so many people. I know the psychological implications are used in making those considerations, but an attractive cover that stands out from the crowd is a marketing advantage. I wonder how tempted Scholastic was to use a sepia toned version of this cover instead? With the ancient map theme, it must have been a consideration, but I'm glad they chose to avoid the cliche.

So what are your favorite book covers of all time? Or recent years? My favorite in the fairy tale realm in the last few months is Mirror Mirror: A Book of Reversible Verse which I raved about last week. This week my husband spied it on the stack and picked it up to browse, so I'm not the only one drawn to it.


Finally, another question: Are the readers here interested in other fantasy reading popping up on this blog, since it is usually in the same realm of interest? There are many books I debate sharing here. I try to stay with the fairy tale and folklore theme overall, but I have many interests and things to share. I imagine no one really minds. Some of my slightly off topic posts receive the most comments and reactions online and by email, so I think I will offer some up every so often...

Fairy Tale Poetry Week: What the Wolf Really Said to Little Red Riding-Hood by Bret Harte


Today's offering for Fairy Tale Poetry Week in honor of National Poetry Month:

What the Wolf Really Said to Little Red Riding-Hood
by Bret Harte (1836–1902)

Wondering maiden, so puzzled and fair,
Why dost thou murmur and ponder and stare?
“Why are my eyelids so open and wild?”
Only the better to see with, my child!
Only the better and clearer to view
Cheeks that are rosy and eyes that are blue.

Dost thou still wonder, and ask why these arms
Fill thy soft bosom with tender alarms,
Swaying so wickedly? Are they misplaced
Clasping or shielding some delicate waist?
Hands whose coarse sinews may fill you with fear
Only the better protect you my dear!

Little Red Riding-Hood, when in the street,
Why do I press your small hand when we meet?
Why, when you timidly offered your cheek,
Why did I sigh, and why didn’t I speak?
Why, well: you see—if the truth must appear—
I’m not your grandmother, Riding-Hood, dear!

from Argonaut Edition of the Works of Bret Harte, V. 8 (1882)

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See a list of more Little Red Riding Hood poems at Modern Interpretations of Little Red Riding Hood. See the left hand column for links to full text poems.

For a list of fairy tale themed poetry collections, I have a Fairy Tale Poetry list on Amazon. There are also many poems scattered throughout the SurLaLune website...

The illustration is by Ethel Franklin Betts.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Fairy Tale Poetry Week: Rapunzel by Louis Untermeyer


Today's offering for Fairy Tale Poetry Week in honor of National Poetry Month:

Rapunzel
by Louis Untermeyer 1885–1977)

Let down your hair,
That cloudy-gold lure,
The delicate snare
That holds me secure.
Delight and despair
War with me now--
Let down your hair.

Shake out each curl
Swiftly, and be
Like Spring, a wild girl
With her hair flying free.
Bury me there,
And be buried with me...
Let down your hair!

from The New Adam (1920)

Louis Untermeyer was an American poet and anthologist, best known for his work as an anthologist.

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See a list of more Rapunzel poems at Modern Interpretations of Rapunzel. See the left hand column for links to full text poems.

For a list of fairy tale themed poetry collections, I have a Fairy Tale Poetry list on Amazon. There are also many poems scattered throughout the SurLaLune website...

The illustration is by A. H. Watson.

Fairy Tale Poetry Week: Goblin Fruit


The newest edition of Goblin Fruit is out with serendipitous timing for this blog's Fairy Tale Poetry Week.

Goblin Market is an online zine and publishes strictly poetry, mostly inspired by fairy tales, myths, folklore and fantasy. I won't list the entire contents of the new issue here, but be sure to read "Ever After Variations" by Seanan McGuire. McGuire has grown in fame recently with the success of her first novel, Rosemary and Rue: An October Daye Novel, which was just followed by the second in the series, A Local Habitation.

Be sure to explore the archives, too, for there are many gems to be discovered there.

PS: The zine's name is inspired by one of the most famous fantasy poems from the Victorian era, The Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti. The poem is too long to publish here today, so I am just providing the link. You can read more about the poem on Wikipedia.

Heston's Fairytale Feast

For those living in the UK, the series Heston's Feasts recently aired an episode devoted to fairy tales. I haven't seen this series stateside, alas, but there are images and descriptions to taunt us.

Here are three of the five images with text from Heston's Fairytale Feast. You can click through to see the other two but be aware that the language and imagery may be offensive to some but will amuse others no end.


1. Once upon a dine...

"These are some of the greatest, weirdest stories ever told, full of the most mesmerising ideas for food," announces Heston, leafing through a copy of Grimm's Fairy Tales.

Hailing from the opulent and indulgent Regency period, when dining was so fine, the greedy Prince George gorged himself to till he weighed 17 stone, fairytales like Cinderella, Snow White and Hansel and Gretel reveal an age inspired by extravagant foods.

So Heston's getting his magic wand out to create a four-course meal dishing up childlike wonder to the stars, including exploding pumpkins, Jack's beanstalk and an enormous gingerbread house.

"I have butterflies in my stomach where I should have hunger," says TV presenter, Caroline Feraday.

2. The fiery fairy

Like a proper fairy godfather, Heston brings his guests to the banquet using a pumpkin.

But plain old squash in a bowl isn't worthy of Heston's table, so his amusing amuse bouche is introduced by a fire-wielding fairy who torches papier mache carriages to reveal a pumpkin puree with langoustine tails, pumpkin seeds and gold leaf fairy dust.

"It's the most delicious thing I've ever put in my mouth," coos Fay Ripley.

5. Pudding time

"It's the biggest dish of my career and every child's dream," grins Heston, "an edible Hansel and Gretel house."

The master bakers at the Cake Store make edible witches and sugar princesses so have just the right credentials to advise Heston on his fairytale finale.

Heston's house is so big his guests are able to get inside their pudding. There are sticks of rock for girders and chocolate for concrete, marshmallow bricks and melted sugar stained glass windows and for the roof – tiles made of millionaire's shortbread.

"Who wants some window?" asks Hardeep.

"Who wants some drainpipe?" asks Faye.

"I've found some cake on the doormat!" cries Catherine.

"It actually sounds like they are on drugs," laughs Heston.

Watching the celebs demolish the tasty house, Heston is satisfied it's been another fantastic Feast.

Don't miss my previous post about fairy tale recipe books: Fairy Tale Feasts.

Quolls and Little Red Riding Hood

This is totally random, but was an example of just how wide ranging fairy tale influences and inspirations can be.

From Trained quolls reject tasty toads on Science Alert:

In their new study - inspired by children's fairy tale 'Little Red Riding Hood' - Professor Rick Shine, Stephanie O'Donnell and Dr Jonathan Webb from the University of Sydney tested whether quolls could be taught to avoid eating cane toads through "conditioned taste aversion" (CTA).Cane toads are highly toxic when eaten and have driven the northern quoll (Dasyurus hallucatus) - a cat-sized marsupial - to extinction in many parts of northern Australia. Cane toads are continuing to spread and will soon invade the Kimberley, one of the quoll's last strongholds.

The main problem for predators like the quoll is that they eat large toads, which usually kill the quolls rather than merely making them feel nauseous. Consequently, most predators do not learn to avoid toads as food.

According to Dr Webb: "I was reading a modern version of 'Little Red Riding Hood' to my kids, and in that story Grandma sews raw onions into the wolf's stomach, so when the wolf wakes up he feels sick and refuses to eat another Grandma again. It dawned on me that if we could teach northern quolls to associate sickness with cane toads, we might have a way of conserving them."

How about that? And there is a picture of a quoll on the article's page or you can read a little more about them on Wikipedia.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Fairy Tale Poetry Week: Fairy Tale by Robert Desnos


Today's offering for Fairy Tale Poetry Week in honor of National Poetry Month:

Fairy Tale
by Robert Desnos (1900-1945)

Many times upon a time
There was a man who loved a woman.
Many times upon a time
There was a woman who loved a man.
Many times upon a time
There was a man and there was a woman
Who did not love the ones who loved them.

Once upon a time
Perhaps only once
A man and a woman who loved each other.

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I'm not necessarily trying to share "disillusionment" poems this week, but so many of the fairy tale influenced ones are.

For a list of fairy tale themed poetry collections, I have a Fairy Tale Poetry list on Amazon. There are also many poems scattered throughout the SurLaLune website...

The painting is The Symbol by Sir Frank Dicksee.