All month, I.N.K. bloggers have explored the promise of
Common Core Standards when partnered with nonfiction books. Here I
am, on Halloween, bringing up the rear.
What can I add that hasn’t already been said?
Not much, in terms of academic prowess. I’m not a teacher. People don’t even see me as a “serious”
nonfiction writer because of the topics I tackle. They say I’m a little goofy. So I’ll
give you my goofy point of view about ghosts.
For eight years, kids have begged me to write a book
about ghosts. For seven years, I have politely
declined. Then I met a boy in New
Hampshire who changed my mind.
“Can I talk to you for a minute?” he asked. I said yes.
“A girl died in a fire in my house, and now she comes to
me at night and it scares me,” he said. “What
should I do?”
Consider that for a minute. This boy, eight going on nine, believes he’s
dealing with an apparition -- a dead girl
consumed by flames.
What kid has the tools to deal with such a vivid
imagination, much less the possibility of it being real? And what brain trust thought it was a good
idea to tell a 3rd grader a child died where he sleeps?
When I was a kid, I had night terrors – realistic bad
dreams that felt real – and I explained that to him. He said no, these were not dreams. The ghost was real, so we moved forward on
that premise. Remember, it doesn’t
matter what WE think if HE believes this is real.
“Okay,” I said. “She’s
not a dream. She’s real. Want me to tell you what I’d do, if I were in
your shoes?”
“Yes,” he said, not a flicker of nonsense in his
eyes. “What would you do?”
“If she came into my room, I’d try to talk to her,” I said. His no nonsense
look was instantaneously replaced by, are
you crazy? But he listened.
“I’d say, ‘Hey, it’s really sad that you died and I’m
sorry, but I didn’t do it. So can you
stop scaring me?”
He nodded. “What
if it doesn’t work?” he said.
“Ignore her,” I said. His hope began to evaporate. So I
pulled him back.
“Wait, hear me out,” I said. “When I was a kid, I loved to scare my sister. Do you know when I stopped trying to scare
her?”
He said no. “I
stopped trying to scare her when she stopped screaming. If she didn’t react, it wasn’t fun. If your ghost doesn’t scare you anymore,
maybe she’ll stop, too. So try ignoring
her if talking doesn’t work.”
“But how do I ignore her?” he said.
“What would you do if a zombie showed up at your window?” I asked.
He said he’d be scared, and I agreed.
“Me too, totally.”
“What would you do if it came a second night?” We agreed, we’d still be scared.
“What about the third night, fourth night, fifth? What about the sixth, seventh, eighth? What if that zombie came TEN DAYS IN A ROW?” I asked him.
“By the tenth night, I wouldn’t be scared, I’d be mad. Stupid zombie,
don’t you have anything better to do?”
He laughed and agreed, kind of annoying after ten days,
not scary.
“Great, I said. “Skip to the tenth night with your
ghost. Because, eventually, she’ll be
just like that zombie – a poor sad girl with nothing better to do.”
A thousand pound weight lifted off his shoulders. At least he had a game plan.
That’s why I decided to write GHOSTLY EVIDENCE: EXPLORING
THE PARANORMAL (Millbrook, 2014). Thousands
of kids are watching ghost shows on television, and almost no one has time to
talk with them about those shows or the fears they invoke. Most say, “Ignore it,” but they don’t say how
(or why).
And that’s where Common Core Standards come in.
When effectively implemented, Common Core Standards empower
kids, teaching them how to gather evidence of their own. With hard core evidence, kids become critical
thinks, making it harder for our multi-media world to feed them half truths and
lies. I hope books like mine help
teachers and librarians to do exactly that.
For GHOSTLY EVIDENCE, I visited three haunted houses, a
haunted prison, four haunted grave yards, two haunted hotels and a haunted
ship. I read dozens of books and
articles and interviewed more than fifteen experts on medicine, electricity,
photography, near death experiences, mediums, ghosts and skeptical
analysis.
I put eight years of hard research into my 64 page book,
hoping it would help kids challenge the information strangers will feed
them. I wrote it, hoping they’d be
inspired to do real research of their own.
When educators and authors join forces, we can teach kids
the facts, sure. But via Common Core
Standards, we can also teach them how to think – how to evaluate information
presented as facts. When we give them
such powerful skills, they have a shot at separating lies from the truth.
Did I come to any conclusions writing my book about
ghosts? Yes. I decided there was enough information to
justify further scientific study, but I doubt it will happen in my lifetime. We’re far too invested in superstition and disbelief
to move past fear toward facts.
Common Core Standards could change that. It could usher a new generation toward discoveries we have scarcely imagined, much less proven.
And that’s an unfolding mystery I can get behind.
4 comments:
What a great post and a great story. Where were you when I was sweating about what was in my closet a million years ago?
Right there in the closet with you, Susan. I was so scared of all things that went bump in the night. And no one would talk to me about it. "Just go to bed, Kelly." They say write for the kid you were. I think "they" are right.
Kelly
Great post, Kelly. You'd think that after a full month, we'd run out of new ways to discuss what Common Core has to offer and how our books can help, but we didn't. I'm so glad you ended with a focus son critical thinking. It's SO important, and your ghost book is a perfect example of why.
I love the story of that boy and his ghost. I hope he listened well to what you had to say. This is a great post. Thanks for it. I put the link up on my FB page.
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