The Fantastic Binomial
During June
and July I was travelling. My last trip was to the US to
work with Dr Ingram at the University of Minnesota, advising her on possible
methodology changes in the implementation and assessment of the Neighborhood Bridges
Program used to analyse critical literacy in storytelling and drama. Here is a bit
of fan fiction to illustrate the fantastic binomial at work in one classroom I
visited during the trip.
Fantastic
Binomial
Tegan was
called up for the fantastic binomial. ‘Yes!’ she said, jumping out of her seat
and seizing the white board marker. She usually never got picked for anything.
Maria, the
Bridges storyteller, bent towards her. Tegan was instantly aware of being the
smallest in the class. ‘Choose a place where you could get lost,’ said Maria, ‘and
write it on the board.’
There was
already a list of prepositions that the class had generated on the white board.
Tegan thought of a word and began to write it carefully in capital letters to
the left of the prepositions list. Dalen had the other marker. He was writing
down an object that could be found in a classroom. He was hiding his word from
the class with both hands. Once the words were written Maria would make up a
story on the spot linking Tegan’s word to Dalen’s via the magic of a
preposition word like above, behind, between or under.
Tegan
thought that it was fun. You never knew what the story was going to be. Last
week the words were ‘Clay inside mum.’ Maria had repeated the title carefully, then
said, ‘My mum is a trickster. A trickster who is always playing tricks on me. You
might think she looks a little odd, because my mum is green from head to toe
with large eyes so she sort of looks like a….’
‘Troll!’ the
classroom called out, ‘Ogre!’
‘Yes,’ Maria
said, ‘we’re both ogres. I’ve lived under dark smelly bridges my whole life.
Life under a bridge is kind of boring so mum would play a lot of tricks on me.
This one morning, while I was sleeping, she had a great idea for a trick. She
got some clay and pulled, and pulled, and moulded, and pulled it, until it was
a giant circle full of holes. And then chuckling she painted this big holey
ball of clay. Can you guess what colour?’
‘Green!’ a
group of boys decided.
‘Yes, green.
How did you know? Because my favourite thing to eat for breakfast in the whole
world is green cheese. How I love green cheese!’ Maria rubbed her hands
together. ‘So she painted the clay green and arranged it nicely on the
breakfast table, on a plate, on a checked table cloth. While this was going on
I was peacefully sleeping, unaware of what was going on. Breakfast! My mum
called. I got out of bed and went into the kitchen and there was the largest
green cheese I had ever seen. Boy was I excited!’ Maria did a little dance of
joy. ‘Oh man, this was going to be a delicious breakfast. I took a big bite!
Urgh! It’s clay! I spat out the green painted clay and it flew across the room
into my mum’s mouth. Her mouth was open wide, she was laughing so hard, and
gulp!, she swallowed it whole. And that’s how the clay got inside my mum. And
it hasn’t been seen since.’
After last
week’s story Tegan was excited to see what would happen as she added the final
letter onto her word.
FOREST
She was still
smiling as she fell through the whiteboard and found herself in a forest.
Tegan didn’t
imagine it though. Did she?
[For more information about The Fantastic Binomial check out the book Speaking Out by Jack Zipes]
[For more information about The Fantastic Binomial check out the book Speaking Out by Jack Zipes]
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