Guest Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 I had a parent in today complaining that her child has been told by another child in a different class that he cannot play with the toys because he is black. Of course she is very concerned and so am i. I thought it would help if i could do a circle time activity using puppets to address the problem. Has anybody got any good ideas?
Guest Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 I had a similar experience and found the "Elmer the Elephant" story useful to open discussions of this. Peggy
Steve Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 Hi - We did a product review of a product which dealt with exactly this sort of scenario, you can find it here. I seem to remember the website of the manufacturers has quite a bit of content dealing with circle time covering issues like this, so if you can't afford the video package you might want to pop into the website, which is linked to from the review. They use persona dolls to re-enact scenes etc.
Guest Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 If a child in another class has said this it might be that you also want to address this through talking to your SMT. Does your whole school use the circle time model and if so could you ask other teachers to bring this issue to their circles?
AnonyMouse_79 Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 Good idea Ladybug. Rocket you do need to bring this to the attention of your head or deputy as there is probably some sort of racial incident monitoring that needs to be completed in this instance. I'd probably do a bit about we're all different but we're all special and we're all allowed to play with the toys, share, be friends etc. You could use puppets or you could just talk about this and reassert how to be a good friend and share. It does need to be something that is addressed and in a way that you feel comfortable.
Guest Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 A great book is This is our House by Michael Rosen. A little boy tells other children they can't play in his house because they have red hair, wear glasses... eventually all end up taking over the house and having a great time. Provides lots of opportunity for discussion. A really useful book to have on hand at all times for when conflicts arise in Nursery and to use alongside books like Elmer etc that value individual difference. Hope that's helpful Deborah
AnonyMouse_64 Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 Deborah, Thankyou for making your first post. It's always good to have recommendations from other members.
Guest Posted March 13, 2005 Posted March 13, 2005 Firstly can i welcome Deborah to the site and thanks for the book recommendation. I have not heard of that one. Another good bookk is "But Martin". An alien visits a school and finds out how different the children all are on the outside but are the same on the inside. Linda
SueFinanceManager Posted March 14, 2005 Posted March 14, 2005 Linda But martin is out of print I know, I tried to get it for my circle time Welcome Deborah Rocket, On the oxfam website (cool planet) there are some brilliant resources for cultural diversity topics. Recently used the my world, your world stuff with great sucess. Sue
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