Except When They Don’t is written by Laura Gehl and
illustrated by Joshua Heinsz. The book is about how girls always love pink and
princesses, and boys always love blue and robots…except when they don’t! In
other words, it is a book that encourages kids not to worry about gender
stereotypes and to just be themselves.
After
reading Except When They Don’t out
loud, try these writing activities with your students:
1.
Make a list of “boy” stereotypes and “girl” stereotypes. Then write a story
with a main character who does not fit with these gender stereotypes. Maybe you
will write a story about a girl who is a football star, or a boy who has the
lead role in a ballet. Maybe you will write about a boy who loves wearing
necklaces to school, or a girl whose favorite toys are cars. Remember: your character should have lots of
sides to his or her personality, just like every real person does! A girl who
loves football might also love pink and be great at math and have five pet
cats. A boy who loves wearing necklaces might also be the president of the
school student government and play soccer at recess and play the drums in the
school band.
2.
Can you think of a time in your own life when you felt like you couldn’t do something
because of your gender? Maybe you couldn’t get the sparkly red shoes at the
shoe store because they were “girl shoes.” Or maybe you couldn’t sign up for
wrestling because “that’s for boys.” Or
if you can’t think of a memory like that, imagine that you have a friend coming
to you with a secret. Your friend wants to paint his nails, but he is
embarrassed to ask his mom to borrow her nail polish, because nail polish is
just for girls. Or maybe your friend wants to cut her hair really short, but
she is worried everyone will say she has a “boy” haircut. What advice would you
give your friend? How could you help?
3.
Imagine that you are the owner of a toy store. There are dolls, tea sets,
trucks, trains, markers, robots…every toy you can imagine. What if a customer
came up to you and said, “I want to buy presents for a little girl and a little
boy. Can you give me some advice?” What questions would you ask the customer?
How would you decide which toys to recommend?
4.
Starting in elementary school, sports teams are usually separated by gender. There
are girls soccer teams and boys soccer teams, girls basketball teams and boys
basketball teams. Do you think this is a good idea or a bad idea? Why?
5.
Imagine 100 kids (50 boys, 50 girls) growing up with human parents and 100 kids
(50 boys, 50 girls) growing up with alien parents. The alien parents just
arrived on earth and don’t know about our human gender stereotypes. Do you
think the kids raised by aliens would grow up wearing different types of
clothes and liking different activities than the kids raised by human parents?
Why or why not?
Laura
Gehl is the author of picture books including One Big Pair of
Underwear (Charlotte Zolotow Highly Commended Title, International Literacy
Association Honor Book, Booklist Books for Youth Editors’ Choice); Hare and
Tortoise Race Across Israel, And Then Another Sheep Turned Up, and Koala Challah (all PJ
Library selections); the Peep and Egg series (Parents’ Choice
Recommendation, Amazon Editors’ Pick, Children’s Choice Book Award Finalist); My
Pillow Keeps Moving (Junior Library Guild selection, NYPL Best Books of
2018 selection); and I Got a Chicken for
my Birthday (Kirkus Best Picture Books of 2018 selection). 2019 releases
include Except When They Don’t (Little Bee), Dibs! (Lerner), Juniper Kai: Super Spy (Two Lions); Judge Juliette (Sterling); Always Looking Up: A Story of Astronomer
Nancy Grace Roman (Whitman); and the Baby Scientist series (HarperCollins).
Laura lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with her husband and four children.
Visit her online at www.lauragehl.com
This Article in very informative for us. Thanks for sharing with us.
ReplyDelete