Saturday, October 12, 2013

Book Analysis - We Are All Alike...We Are All Different



We Are All Alike...We Are All Different
written and illustrated by the Cheltenham Elementary School Kindergartners
published December 1991
We Are All Alike...We Are All Different is a book written for young children by young children. Scholastic Early Childhood Division invited preschool and kindergarten classes around the country to create and submit books that would allow children to learn about diversity. This book, one of the winners, was written by the kindergartners at Cheltenham Elementary School. According to Louise Derman Sparks, teacher,child-care center director, and author of Anti-Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves, by writing this book the young authors "grew in self esteem and comfortable, empathetic awareness of each other, " and, "had the chance to recognize the basic human connections in all of us." (Cheltenham Kindergartners, 1991, About This Book..., para. 2).

This wonderfully illustrated book is sure to engage it's young readers. With many photos of ethnically diverse children smiling and engaging in familiar activities we see that "We are all alike," as the title states; we all do many of the same things, such as eat and play, and "we are all different;" we look different, have different family structures, and live in different types of homes. This book is also filled with children's original artwork illustrating themselves, their homes and activities. By using accurate photos of children and their families, avoiding stereotypes, and not placing any one race or ethnicity in a more important place than another (York, 2003) this book would be a valuable choice for any classroom of young children.

The children in this book are depicted as individuals, but significant cultural information is not given; however, neither are stereotypes. These are young children just telling us about themselves. All children are represented equally. All authors/characters in this book share the power and wisdom, and are using it to educate and delight the readers.

I would strongly recommend this book to both teachers and parents. It provides a great starting point for many conversations and activities based on learning about diversity and respecting each other. The roles of all characters are accurately portrayed and shown as important: females, males, elders and various families are shown as equally important (Bliss, n.d.), children's self-images are taken into consideration (Bliss, n.d.; CIBC, n.d.), various life styles are shown (CIBC, n.d.), and there are no "loaded" words (CIBC, n.d.). This book has been positively reviewed on many websites, and there are many lesson plans and activity suggestions online to go along with it: teacherlink.ed.usu.edu/tlresources/units/monsonunits/.../lessonplan.html‎teachershare.scholastic.com/resources/10841‎, and teachertreasure.com/ to name just a few.

References

Bliss, K. (n.d.) Evaluating Children's Literature

Cheltenham Elementary School Kindergartners (1991) We Are All Alike...We Are All Different. New York, NY: Scholastic Inc.

The Council on Interracial Books For Children (n.d.) 10 Quick Ways to Analyze Children's Books For Racism and Sexism

York, S. (2003) Roots & Wings. St. Paul, MN: Redleaf Press


6 comments:

  1. Amy,
    This sounds like a wonderful book. I thought the title speaks volumes to its readers. It shows our likeness and differences in a positive light. I really loved that it encourages kids to grow in self esteem. I thought the part where you wrote about all the characters share the power and wisdom encouraging. It is nice to hear of a book that doesn't just have one hero but demonstrates we are all the hero.

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  2. One of my favorite books to read to a group of young children!

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  3. Hi Amy,

    After reading your analysis, I would definitely read this book to my students. I love that it represents numerous ethnicities and teaches children an important message. I got to check it out.

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  4. This is another book I will look for at the library next time. What intrigues me most is that the illustrations include real pictures of children of many races. In doing this I feel that it promotes a child's self-esteem and self-worth. Thanks for the analysis, good work.

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  5. Hi Amy, I love that the illustrations are done by children! It makes it so personal and every character is extremely unique. I would definitely read this to my future children because of how different this book is while also teaching children about diversity in a positive light.

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  6. The getting on the rug and stretching and getting confortable is a great idea, great information I really loved all the material

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