:
"I wondered what was the most important part of my work. Was it to get the content across, or to get out of the way of the very serious work that children do below the surface? Or were those concerns inseparable? The classroom became a laboratory for life as I perceived that what children studied and needed to know was decidedly more than the subject areas I had been hired to teach."
From the Introduction
In her third book, "Sometimes I Can Be Anything," Karen Gallas explores young childrens experience and understanding of gender, race, and power as revealed by the interactions within her first and second grade classroom. Presenting classroom research conducted over a four-year period, this experienced teacher-researcher focuses on the ways in which children collectively develop their social world. To bring that world to life, the author presents the voices and actions of specific children. The reader will meet the "bad boys," Tony and Tom; Josie, a "tom boy"; "beautiful" Dierdre; Latia and Alexis, "proud and taking no risks"; and Rachel, a "silent girl."
Because Gallas watches the same children for several years, she uncovers classroom dynamics that remain obscure in most studies of teaching and learning. For example, she has seen the effects of physical beauty on a childs behavior, has noted how some children play with the idea of being the other sex, and has tracked the alliances of silent girls. This provocative book will enable the reader to look again with new eyes at his or her own classroom.
Also by Karen Gallas:
Talking Their Way into Science: Hearing Children's Questions and Theories, Responding with Curricula
The Languages of Learning: How Children Talk, Write, Dance, Draw, and Sing Their Understanding of the World