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Keep Your Ear on the Ball Genevieve Petrillo Illustrated by Lea Lyon Publication Date: August 2007 Hardcover, $16.95; 978-0-88448-296-3 9 x 10, 32 pages, color illustrations |
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CHILDREN'S BOOKS:AMADI'S SNOWMANNewGIVE A GOATNew UNDER THE NIGHT SKYNew CARPET BOY'S GIFT, THE EVERYBODY'S SOMEBODY'S LUNCH GIFT FOR GITA, A GOAT LADY, THE HEALTHY FOODS FROM HEALTHY SOILS JUST FOR ELEPHANTS KEEP YOUR EAR ON THE BALL LIFE UNDER ICE LIGHTS FOR GITA LUCY'S FAMILY TREE MUSHROOM MAN, THE MUSKRAT WILL BE SWIMMING OPENING DAY OUR FRIENDSHIP RULES PLAYING WAR PROJECT PUFFIN ROSES FOR GITA SARAH'S BOAT SAVING BIRDS SAY SOMETHING SEA SOUP: PHYTOPLANKTON SEA SOUP: ZOOPLANKTON SHELTERWOOD SHY MAMA'S HALLOWEEN SPIRT THAT MOVES US, THE (VOL.I) SPIRT THAT MOVES US, THE (VOL.II) SPIRT THAT MOVES US, THE (VOL.III) STONE WALL SECRETS TALKING WALLS TALKING WALLS: THE STORIES CONTINUE THANKS TO THE ANIMALS TRAVELS WITH TARRA VERY BEST BED, THE WELCOMING BABIES WHEN THE BEES FLY HOME WHO BELONGS HERE |
Davey is blindand he is perfectly capable of doing everything on his own. His well-meaning classmates stop offering help when they see how able Davey is. They respect his self-reliance—until he tries to play kickball. After several missed kicks and a trampled base keeper, no one wants Davey on his team. Working together, the children figure out a way to offer help that respects Davey's unique abilities and his desire for freedom. In this seamless tale, based on a true story, the children realize that interdependence can be just as important and rewarding as independence. Genevieve Petrillo has been teaching elementary students at School Ten in Belleville, New Jersey, for thirty-four years. David DeNotaris was in her classroom many years ago, and Keep Your Ear on the Ball is a true story. She tells us: "David DeNotaris was in my class after I'd been teaching for about four or five years. The NJ Commission for the Blind offered a one-day summer “training” session, which I attended, as had his kindergarten, first-, second-, and third-grade teachers before me. I learned a lot that day, but I had no idea how much more I was about to learn. For one thing, after an art project, when I was telling the children, “No, you may not wash the paste off your hands. Just rub them together and the paste will come off,” I certainly didn’t expect this little firecracker with the funniest smirk on his face to come to my desk and say, “I HAVE to wash my hands. This is the finger I READ with!” The New Jersey Commission for the Blind provided us with all of David’s textbooks done in Braille, and a few other accommodations including a kickball with a bell in it, which David didn’t feel he needed. They also sent a Braille teacher, who came to school to work with David a few times a week. I lost touch with David for a while, when he was in high school and college. We reconnected when I wrote an article about him for the End of the Day page in Instructor Magazine. Since then, we have stayed in touch and he has visited my classroom a few times to talk to the kids. There are many surprises in my job, every day. One of the things I enjoy most is watching kids learn to cooperate, care for each other, solve problems, and devise a Plan B if the problems come back. It’s a universal concept in elementary school, always the same, but always different, and it feels just as wonderful every time it happens. Lea Lyon is an illustrator who lives in Richmond, California. She has also illustrated Say Something and Playing War for Tilbury House. Lea juggles her work in the business world with her love of painting, takes numerous painting and drawing classes, and even meets with a group of five women every week to paint and talk about their work. Lea enjoys working with area students on her book-illustration projects. She visits a classroom to read aloud and discuss a book manuscript, shows the students sketches she's made for a "book dummy," and asks them to model some of the scenes while she takes reference photos for her paintings. She visits again while the work is underway, to show the students the progress she's making with her paintings, and then comes back with a finished book, to thank them for their help! TEACHERS TAKE NOTE The story Keep Your Ear on the Ball offers a great opportunity for exploring a variety of ideas surrounding raising awareness of different abilities. Discussion Points
Here is an activity Genevieve Petrillo uses in her classroom. It will engage the students in the successful use of listening in place of their sense of sight.
Through Grandpa's Eyes by Patricia MacLachlan. Mom's Best Friend by Sally Hobart Alexander, about a guide dog. Please Note: Author, Carol Castellano (Making it Work: Educating the Blind/Visually Impaired Student in the Regular School, Information Age Publishing, Inc., 2005) urges teachers to resist blindfolding students to simulate blindness. She says: "Wearing a blindfold for a little while might show what it would be like to suddenly lose vision, but it certainly does not show what it is like to be blind. If children are blindfolded but are not taught any of the skills that real blind people use, they are likely to emerge from a simulation experience feeling that blindness is scary, sad, and difficult. Instead of fostering acceptance, understanding, and respect, these exercises engender sadness, fear, and pity. Instead of thinking of their blind classmate as a potential friend, students can end up feeling more distant from their blind classmate and feeling sorry for him or her. A better way to foster understanding and promote friendships is through a presentation that will promote respect for the blind student and the skills and tools she will be using." Castellano encourages teachers to invite a blind guest to the classroom to share first-hand experience. She also suggests these activities: 1. Point out that the number five on a phone pad usually has a tactile marking that blind people use as a reference point when dialing; let students try to find the marking using their sense of touch. Some might then want to locate the other numbers. 2. Children often wonder how a blind person can eat without being able to see. Put several plastic forks and spoons in a bag; have the students reach in the bag and retrieve either the spoons or the forks. They will see how easily they were able to discern which was which. Then have them close their eyes and see if they can get a spoon to their mouths. Point out that they probably brush their teeth without looking. 3. Set up role play situations in which one child closes her eyes and a partner tries to "show" her an object. Students will soon see that using words and putting the object into the blind child's hands will be effective. 4. Brainstorm ways to get a blind child into games (just like Davey's classmates did!).
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