You can't say you can't play
Yesterday I finished reading the book You Can't Say You Can't Play by Vivian Gussin Paly. Now, if you are a long time reader her, that name should be a little familiar as I've been a fan of hers for a long time. If you are newer, you might have missed some of my previous posts. I wrote about her book The Boy Who Would be a Helicopter and The Girl with the Brown Crayon quite a few years ago. What I love most about Ms. Gussin's work is the respect she shows children and her willingness to look carefully at her own actions, always questioning is this is the best way to teach children. This book is no different. The book starts out with a tumultuous feeling in her classroom that leaves her unsettled. As she thinks about what is happening she begins to wonder if every child feels truly welcome and accepted or are they merely visitors to the classroom community. She notices this most strongly when children (and it is more often then not the same children) are told they cann