Rules of Summer
Shaun Tan
One
of the great delights of a job in literacy is being able to spend time with great
literature as part of a working day. A particular delight for me is exploring a
wide range of picturebooks and using them as texts to teach by. A teacher read-aloud
with these texts can, I believe, be justified to all age levels. They are a
powerful tool for creating discussions and allowing children of all reading
abilities to engage in high level thinking and talk.
Well-chosen
texts become the teacher too. An open discussion is a platform for all
participants learning from each other. As ‘the teacher’ in these discussions, I
do lead the group through the text but I endeavour to create a space where the
text and the discussion teach us all.
In
regards to well-chosen texts, I write here about my experience with using Rules of Summer (Tan, 2013) with Year 7,
8 and 9 students (11-14 year olds) in a NZ classroom. Shaun Tan is the
illustrator and author of this text and he is one who can be relied on for
books that challenge and delight. His picturebooks are complex and have a depth
that invites and promotes discussion with older students.
From the website: http://www.rulesofsummer.com.au/#!home
RULES OF SUMMER, is a deceptively simple story about
two boys, one older and one younger, and the kind of ‘rules’ that might govern
any relationship between close friends or siblings. Rules that are often so
strange or arbitrary, they seem impossible to understand from the outside. Yet
through each exquisite illustration of this nearly wordless narrative, we can
enjoy wandering around an emotional landscape that is oddly familiar to us all.
As you venture deep into the story, the poetic images become darker, more
mysterious and unsettling, drawing towards a redemptive ending that affirms the
depth of true friendship, a bond that is equally wonderful and inexplicable.
Prior
to sharing with Year 8 and Year 9 groups, I showed the students how an
illustrator creates a message using tools such as colour and light and symbol.
I chose to explain these tools particularly, because of the way they are used
in Rules of Summer. I also explained
to the students that a picturebook has two sources of meaning we need to
consider: the words and the pictures.
When
exploring a picturebook with students, I aim for a natural conversation and
discovery of the book, with me as one of the active participants. The event
becomes one of interrogating the text together rather than one of interrogating
the students for their understanding. The understanding grows as the group
engages with the book and with each other’s ideas. This is certainly true of my
experience of using this book in a classroom.
The
first reading was one of exploring and finding out as much as we could about
the story. Discussion occurred as we explored (and a second reading would add
to this).
An
exploration of the cover helped establish a thread for reading the text. We
looked for clues that we had from the cover, both front and back. Two
characters are presented on the cover, the setting (or season) is evident from
the picture and the title, and the ‘blurb’ on the back cover states: Never break the rules; especially if you
don’t understand them. A type of mystery is set up because we wondered what
these rules could be, who might make them, and what happens if you break them.
By wondering these things (or similar as the children decide), a thread for
discussions is established. I found it useful to be able to keep referring back
to these main ideas during our discussion and to look at what each page told us
about this mystery.
The
endpapers allowed us to explore further. The group I worked with noticed the boys looked
similar (perhaps brothers rather than friends) and that one boy was running
after the other. They established that the boy who was running had missed his
ride on the other boy’s plane, with the clue they used being that there was an
empty seat behind the boy flying the plane.
Each
page outlines a rule that mustn’t be broken. The students discussed a range of
ideas through their initial noticing on each page:
·
the
boys were brothers;
·
the
younger one seemed to be having trouble on each page, including:
o
missing
his ride;
o
dropping
the drum stick;
o
dropping
his jar;
o
leaving
the door open overnight;
o
ruining
the plan;
o
forgetting
the password;
·
the
older brother is in charge and more capable, shown by:
o
having
his jar tied on;
o
making
the younger brother clean up;
o
having
many robots ready for the parade;
o
being
the umpire who makes the decisions;
o
winning
the fight;
·
the
older brother is grumpy when the door was left open (eyebrows down and arms
folded);
·
a
black bird on every page;
·
the
cat has taken over the younger brother’s space; cat images everywhere;
·
the
isolation and aloneness of the younger brother once the fight is lost;
·
the
birds fly away once the big brother comes to rescue;
·
the
big brother helps the little brother up;
·
the
big brother takes the drum;
·
the
little brother gets his place back and seems bigger now;
·
the
winner’s crown has been discarded.
This
initial noticing helped the children to work out the plot and follow the story
as it unfolded. They could see that the younger brother was always doing the
wrong thing to the annoyance of the older brother. This sibling dynamic is a
thread that can be used to guide the discussion, without too many pre-planned
‘teacher’ questions. On each page, we can look for clues about the particular
event, who has broken the rule, and how each brother is feeling?
We
discussed what the black bird on each page might mean and the students thought
that it usually meant bad luck or bad feeling. The bird could be seen in a
range of ways and this symbolism is worth exploring. Is he like an accuser,
always there when the little boy is not meeting the standards?
The
children found the dark pages, where the little boy is being isolated, quite
disturbing. I talked to them about what the illustrator was helping us to feel
by using grim images. The illustrations help us to feel what the characters
are feeling. The isolation is one of emotion rather than of actually being sent away. The final pages are of hope and helping, of a sense of resolved
conflict.
One student in the group talk noticed the discarded crown at the end of the story and this started a discussion with the students about the older boy not being interested in his winner’s crown anymore. I love it when students come up with ideas I hadn't considered and when they help me to understand the story in a way I hadn't before I read it to the group.
One student in the group talk noticed the discarded crown at the end of the story and this started a discussion with the students about the older boy not being interested in his winner’s crown anymore. I love it when students come up with ideas I hadn't considered and when they help me to understand the story in a way I hadn't before I read it to the group.
Some
of the students were able to identify themselves as either the big or small
brother, in relation to their own place in a family. Those who were younger
siblings could identify with the feeling of always doing things wrong or not
being quite clever enough. One student, who was an older sibling, talked about
how his younger brothers must feel and how he might have to do what the big
brother in Rules of Summer eventually
did, helping the younger brother in various ways.
The
more I explore this text, the more I see its depth. It certainly has created
opportunity for much discussion with groups of students and with groups of
teachers.
No comments:
Post a Comment