Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Importance of Stories

In November I'll be giving a presentation called "The Importance of Stories" about how books and stories can be used outside reading class. The main focus will be in content areas, but it will also include how to help students relate to characters, situations, events, and topics using books and stories.

Without going into the entire presentation, I'll just use a quote from A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness: "Stories are wild creatures, the monster said. When you let them loose, who knows what havoc they might wreak?"

And that's the gist of the presentation. If we let loose stories in Social Studies or Science class, if we allow students to experience history through narratives, if we encourage students to make judgments about a character's words and actions, if teachers can hook students on something like potential and kinetic energy through the story of two boys rolling down a hill in a barrel, then who knows what other havoc stories might wreak in our classrooms?

This is where I need your help. I want to sprinkle quotes about stories from children's books throughout the presentation. What quotes about stories (or about words or books or literature) do you know from children's books, either picture books or novels? Quotes can be funny, inspiring, hopeful, or encouraging - anything to do with stories.

Leave your favorite quotes in the comments below, email them to me at HelpReaders at gmail dot com, or tweet them to me at @HelpReaders. I will compile all the quotes I receive and put them into one post in the future.

"Stories are important," the monster said in A Monster Calls. "They can be more important than anything. If they carry the truth." So thanks, everyone, for your help, it is greatly appreciated. And that's no story. That's the truth.

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