I'd forgotten how amusing kids can be. One little girl in the first group that came to our table informed us that she had 55 Dr. Seuss books. I was greatly impressed since Dr. Seuss wrote around 60 books for kids. A little boy in the second group exclaimed loudly, upon the receiving his lollipop, "Wow, this is my FIFTH dessert today!" (we found out later that the first group of kids at the James Marshall display had pretty much eaten a whole plate of cookies by themselves, some of them taking four or five cookies each). Another boy in the second group told me that he and his sister are Thing 1 and Thing 2. When I asked him why he said, "Because there's two of us." (Of course! Why didn't I think of that?) Then he told me his sister is older and that has always made him mad. I, assuming that he and his sister were twins, asked him how much older and he replied that she was in fourth grade. It took me a second to wrap my brain around the fact that they weren't twins and by the time I figured it out he was already off of the Thing 1 and Thing 2 subject and was telling me that the activity sheet was "soooo easy." So the kids were fun to talk to and interact with. I just hope they will actually remember one or two things about Dr. Seuss. Maybe they'll remember that his real name was Theodor Seuss Geisel or that he loved hats and had a huge, diverse collection that he wore as "thinking caps" while he was writing or that he made up another pen name (other than Dr. Seuss, which was both his middle name and his mother's maiden name), Theo LeSieg - his last name backwards. I think maybe at least one of those facts might have stuck with some of the kids we talked to, which makes me happy.
I can't even remember the last time I was in an elementary classroom. Even though I had a lot of fun visiting grade two today, I'm very glad that I'm not an elementary education major. I like kids. I'm even good with kids. But I'm not sure I would be able to think fast enough to keep up to 15 rowdy, rambunctious, rollicking grade two-ers for five days a week, 9ish months a year, much less be able to teach them all they need to learn. I'm pretty thankful I'm a journalism major. Anyway, if you care to see, here's our presentation board.
Ryan gets all the credit for making the hills and the Lorax trees and for designing the middle panel, which would mean that I get the credit for compiling and writing up all the information on the side panels. It guess this group project had a pretty equally-shared work load.
haha wow that's cool
ReplyDeletethose kids sound pretty interesting! man i wish i came up with hilarious things to say like that when i was a kid
I think you guys did an awesome job, and it sounds like lots of fun!
ReplyDelete@Johonn, you probably DID say hilarious things like that, but you probably thought they were serious, and so you didn't remember them. :-)