I originally wrote this (in my now defunct writing spot, The Grind) when a woman said, very offhandedly, to me "Kids today don't read." I was furious and pounded out the piece below. Sadly, the sentiment remains.
Who says kids aren’t reading? I find myself constantly defending kids and their reading
habits to adults who seem to feel that kids aren’t reading at all, distracted
by texting, computer games, and really bad movies (really, Jackass 3D?!?!?!?).
Thirty nine years after I was
in junior high (go ahead, I’ll wait while you do the math) I am FINALLY cool to
teens BECAUSE I read their books.
I find I can talk to almost any kid because I just ask them what they’re
reading and then the conversation goes from there. I do not cut down their tastes (even if they’re reading Twilight, we are all allowed our ‘trash’ reading) and I love
to hear how they view various characters and plot.
We know the stereotype of 8th
graders: too cool for words, into
fashion, video games, boys or girls and perhaps sports. Excited about a book? Nope, that’s not what we think of. Well, let me tell you about my morning.
Today, I paid a surprise
visit to my daughter’s 8th grade Language Arts class (YES, I asked
her permission first, so it wasn’t a surprise to her, just the teacher and her
classmates). I had gone to
Kepler’s (our local, independent bookstore) to pick up Mockingjay, the final book in Suzanne Collins’ Hunger Games trilogy that was just released today (August
24).
I knocked on the classroom
door and when I walked in, I didn’t say a word, I just held up the book and
grinned. There was a moment of
silence and the room just exploded.
The kids who knew the book (about 85% of them) were going “Woo Hoo! No way!! I want it!!” as I handed the book to their teacher (it was a
gift for her) who hugged it and said, “Mine, all mine.” (yes, she’ll share, but she’ll
definitely be reading it tonight)
The kids who didn’t know it were saying, “What? What’s happening?” Guaranteed, all those kids will be
getting Book 1 today, in order to be in the loop.
Of course, I also handed a
copy to my daughter, so she can start reading it during SSR (Sustained Silent
Reading) today (why else do you think she gave me permission to come into her class
on the second day of school?).
ReplyDeletesometimes we forget how hard this can all be for a small child. Thanks for this insightful post. We have not had to move countries, but my kids do attend an immersion school.
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