Guest
Post by Debbie Levy
I
Dissent: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Makes Her Mark tells the story of Ruth Bader
Ginsburg’s life and work through the lens of her many disagreements and
dissents, ever since she was a little girl. The book illuminates this central
theme: disagreeing does not make you disagreeable, and important change happens
one disagreement at a time.
I think that RBG is such a fine
example to hold up for our children. She’s a person who has been a change-maker
and path-breaker through her disagreements. As importantly, her example shows
that one can disagree and make big change happen without resorting to personal
attacks, without insulting your opponents, and without closing yourself off to
opposing points of view.
A variation on the “I dissent” theme appears
on nearly every spread in the book:
· “She protested” (as a schoolgirl, to being forced to
write with her right hand even though she is left-handed).
· “Ruth objected” (also in school, to the rule that
required girls to take home ec, reserving shop class for boys).
· “Ruth disapproved right back” (when people disapproved
of her decision to go to law school).
· “She resisted. And persisted” (when, as a young law
school graduate at the top of her class, no one would hire her because she was
a woman, a mother, and a Jew).
And so on. Today, of course, she is
United States Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg—and she is still known
for her dissents from court rulings that she considers wrongly decided.
But simply disagreeing or dissenting,
without more, isn’t really enough if you want to change your life or anyone
else’s. On the back of book jacket for I
Dissent, there’s this, one of my favorite RBG quotes: “Fight for the things
that you care about. But do it in a way that will lead others to join you.”
Sounds simple, right? But it’s that second sentence that is so hard to pull
off. And here is where educators (and parents and other adults) can help
children discover the power of dissent and of persuasive argument.
First, we can use the language of I Dissent to broaden students’
vocabulary of disagreement. I’m talking about words like:
accept -
protest - support - disagree - object - defend - resist - approve - concur - differ
-dissent - agree
Students can start by putting these
words on a continuum—or a “semantic gradient.” (I am indebted for this idea to Myra
Zarnowski, professor in the Department of Elementary and Early Childhood Education at Queens College, CUNY, who
includes it in the I Dissent Curriculum Guide she wrote for my publisher, Simon & Schuster.)
“Agree” can be on one end of the gradient; “dissent” on the other. There is no
single correct way to array these words! But this is a good way to get kids
talking about the shades of meaning in words that we often use interchangeably,
or as opposites.
Second, we can use the themes of I Dissent to help develop students’
skills at engaging in effective and appropriate disagreement. I’ve had fun with
third and fourth graders by having them take on the proposition: You
should only be allowed to play video games after school once you’ve finished
your homework. Most kids seem to dissent! So they make their case for
taking time to relax before doing their homework. And they practice the elements
of effective arguing, like:
·
presenting ideas that
they’ve thought through—not just “because I want to”
·
having facts and
evidence to back up what they’re saying
·
disagreeing
respectfully, without attacking the person who holds opposing ideas
Third, we can use RBG’s example to
discuss—and write about—when the expression of disagreement is most important,
and when expressions of disagreement may be more hurtful than helpful. Ask
students to respond to this question:
When have you seen or heard something that
you disagreed with, that you either challenged or wanted to challenge?
The idea here is to encourage young
writers to think about speaking out when they see bullying, or when they’re
told to do something they think is wrong, or when someone says something about
another person that they believe is untrue. Let’s also get them thinking about
when a disagreement isn’t important enough to voice, especially if it might be
hurtful—such as disagreement with another’s choice of clothing or what’s in
their lunchbox.
And fourth, readers of I Dissent will notice that RBG did not
succeed at everything she tried. She has had setbacks and failures. Ask
students to think about their own setbacks, and to write about what they
learned from their failures. Everyone has them. What can young writers do with
theirs?
Debbie
Levy is the award-winning author of nonfiction and fiction books for young people,
including I Dissent: Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Makes Her Mark; We Shall Overcome:
The Story of a Song; The Year of
Goodbyes: A True Story of Friendship, Family, and Farewells; and Dozer’s Run: A True Story of a Dog and His
Race. Debbie’s next book, Soldier
Song: A True Story of the Civil War, is an 80-page picture book for older
children about how music, and one song in particular, brought the two sides of
the struggle together for one night, enabling the soldiers to see the other
side—the enemy—as fellow human beings. It comes out in February 2017. Visit her online at debbielevybooks.com
No comments:
Post a Comment