Thursday, May 7, 2009

Children's literature about Cancer


Children’s Literature and Cancer

Earlier this year, I became close friends with another education major that was diagnosed a year ago with adrenal cancer. I often talk with her about how ignorant other people can be about diseases and how people should be more educated about topics such as cancer. We agreed that one of the best ways that we can educate
others as teachers is through literature. These discussions sparked the idea for my topic for my final TE 448 paper: how cancer is presented in children’s literature. I wanted to find good literature that a parent could read to their child when someone their child loves is affected with cancer or when the child has cancer themselves. Before I began searching the library shelves for books related to this topic, it was important for me to read a scholarly article about how parents have coped with this topic previously.
The article I read was called “Adjustment and coping by parents of children with cancer: a review of the literature,” by Martha A. Grootenhuis and Bob F. Last. This piece described parents whose children were suffering from cancer, and how their lives were affected. Distress can occur for parents in all aspects of their lives, including their psychological wellness, marriage, and the overall functioning of their family. Parents find different ways to cope with their distress and it truly does affect the entire family. Stress has been shown to be increased especially in parents whose children are in active treatment of their cancer. Methods of coping included communication, social support, and a search for meaning (praying and religion). These parents have to cope with an extremely stressful and abnormal situation and not all tests can accurately measure their levels of adjustment and coping. Ultimately, the main point that I got from this article was that having cancer does not just affect the patient; rather, it affects their family in sometimes immeasurable ways.
By thinking about how cancer affects the entire family, I looked specifically for books that had to do with how families coped with one of their loved ones having cancer. The selection of literature at the East Lansing Public Library was fairly limited in their selection of children’s books about cancer, but I was able to find three books I thought were fairly good in terms of how they represented the different families and situations.
Review 1:
Jackson, Mikayla A. Dear Mom, I am sory that you had to get brest canser.
Beleville, Ontario: Garden Books, 2003.

Written by a seven-year-old, this story takes us on the journey that Mikayla Jackson went through as her mother becomes diagnosed with breast cancer. The text is extremely authentic and the inventive spelling would be relatable and enjoyable to young children as they are learning to read. Mikayla discusses the emotions that she felt as her mother was in pain and had to go through chemotherapy. Since it is written from the perspective of a young child, it would be an ideal book to read to a young child because they can relate to the language and emotions that Mikayla feels. Mikayla also illustrated each page, and it appears as if each drawing was done in pencil. The roughness of the pictures makes this book seem as if someone was paging through a little girl’s diary. Actual photos of the Jackson family at the end of the book show the family as they celebrate the end of the treatments and at the Race for the Cure event. It is an inspiring story that teachers the reader that having faith in the home will provide comfort during times of strife and throughout life’s changes.

Review 2:
Kohlenberg, Sherry. Sammy's Mommy Has Cancer. New York: Magination P,
1993.

Written by a breast cancer survivor, this book was written to help Kohlenberg explain to her young son what it would be like going through cancer. Written in very simple text, this book helps explain how cancer can happen to any family and that it is no ones fault. It also briefly explains some of the treatments that people go through; it is interesting to note, however, that Kohlenberg decided to refer to treatment as “medicine” rather than calling it chemotherapy. The pictures that accompany the book are drawings rather than photographs, and generally has people smiling in most of the pictures. This sets an uplifting tone for the book and will help remind children that there are still times for happiness when fighting a horrible disease like cancer. This book also gives good advice for parents with children about what to do before treatment, during treatment, and after treatment. A small glossary in the back defines such words as doctors, medicine, and sickness. Although at times it seems that the terminology in this book may be too simple, it is written from the perspective that you shouldn’t tell your children more than they ask you themselves. Overall, this would be an appropriate and positive book to read to very young children.

Review 3:
Walters, Debbie. Where?s Mom?s Hair? A Family?s Journey through Cancer. Toronto: Second Story P, 1961.
This tragically beautiful narrative is told from the voice of a boy whose mother has cancer. Real black-and-white photographs of the Watter family’s experience act as a timeline of the events that were going on for the family, and give an unbelievably vivid look at the emotions that a family feels when someone they love has cancer. The story begins with photos of the “hair-cutting party,” where Watter’s whole family obtained buzz cuts to make their mother feel more comfortable when she lost her hair. The pictures are then explained by the emotions that the boys felt: “You just don’t know how you are going to feel when someone you love is losing their hair because of cancer.” (10) The pictures are often presented in a humorous fashion; for example, the boys take the hair that was cut off their mother’s heads and put them in front of their faces to pretend they’re mustaches. Although this book is often light-hearted, it also shows the pain that someone has to deal with during their chemotherapy treatments, and how sick cancer make a person feel. One particular picture of Debbie getting her blood drawn during chemotherapy was very disturbing; in fact, maybe too disturbing for a young child to see. This book will teach a child how important it is for their family to always stick together, during the good times and bad. When one family member is sick, the whole family feels the pain, and this story was both haunting by the realness of the photographs yet optimistic in the families ultimate triumph through cancer.

Concluding thoughts:
While these three books were similar by the fact that they each dealt with families that had a parent with cancer, they were extremely different in how they were written. Kohlenberg’s story is told in the third-person (almost as if it were fiction), Jackson’s story is told from the first-person perspective of a little girl, and Watters story is told from the first-person perspective of her sons. The different perspectives in the three books made each story a completely different experience to read, even though the actual stories were fairly similar. The illustrations in the three books also made each story very different to read. The Kohlenberg book had pictures that looked as if they were painted, the Jackson book had pencil sketches done by the little girl, and the Watters book had personal photographs for illustrations. All three of these books definitely made the importance of family a major theme and I think they all ended on a fairly positive note.
Children’s books about cancer are still a developing genre of literature, and it definitely still lacking in some departments. It seems that most of the books that are out right now are about a parent that has cancer, instead of a child that has cancer. If a young child is diagnosed with cancer, they will certainly have a lot of worries and questions that could be resolved and answered from a good piece of literature. My friend with cancer suggested that we need more literature like the Kohlenberg book where the pictures are less graphic. She felt that illustrated pictures versus real photographs would be less frightening for a child, especially when showing treatments like chemotherapy. I also wonder how a child that has lost a parent to cancer would relate to books that are all about parents that have survived cancer. Ideally, more insiders like my friend will step up to the plate and write more novels that will present this topic to a broader audience, not just children whose parents have survived cancer.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Gay forced out of partner's room...

Based on what we talked about in class yesterday, check out this really distrubing article...

http://www.kgw.com/news-local/stories/kgw_042309_news_ohsu_gay_couple.10244ed9a.html

Gay man says he was forced out of partner's room at OHSU

12:03 PM PDT on Thursday, April 23, 2009

By TERESA YUAN, KGW Staff

PORTLAND -- A visit to Oregon Health and Science University hospital turned into a frustrating situation for a gay couple who said their rights as domestic partners were not honored until a lawyer got involved.
Video: Partner upset with OHSU

The domestic partner of a man who appeared to be near death was reportedly ordered to leave the room when it was time to make some major decisions about the patient.

This all started with a hospital visit. The patient, who only wanted to go by his first name of Christopher, was having trouble breathing. So his partner, Patrick took him to OHSU.

As Christopher was laying close to death, Patrick was told he had to leave the room and couldn't believe what the nurse was telling him.

"The nurse said, 'Christopher is very ill. There are some life and death decisions that have to be made and now is not the time for friends to be in the room.' I'm like, 'we don't have any friends in the room,'" recalled Patrick.

Under Oregon law, Patrick had the right to stay in the room because the pair had been legal domestic partners for nine months. Patrick found a lawyer who made a call to the hospital and after two and a half hours, he was allowed back inside.

OHSU officials told KGW this may be a case of human error.

"Truly. Every couple is welcome here. It doesn't matter what their relationship is... same sex or not. We understand it. And I'm really very sorry this happened to this particular couple," said Barbara Glidewell, a spokeswoman for OHSU.

The hospital has vowed to put staff members through additional training to make sure this doesn't happen again.

As for Christopher, his condition has improved and he was expected to go home Thursday to continue his recovery there.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

The Giving Tree





I personally am a huge fan of "The Giving Tree" by Shel Silverstein. It has never ceased to make me cry, and ponder what it means to be a good friend. I chose to use this book with my first graders in a guided reading lesson yesterday and I thought it went over very well. So why is there always so much criticism about such a wonderful story? I remember my 348 teacher had a lot of negative feelings towards this book but I couldn't recall exactly what he said because I took it awhile ago.

According to http://www.enotes.com/poetry-criticism/silverstein-shel
ome feminist critics, however, have faulted the book as a sexist parable in which the feminine tree sacrifices life and limb to meet the demands of a selfish, ungrateful male. Ellen Handler Spitz, for example, offered a harsh critique of the gender dynamics implicit in The Giving Tree. Spitz asserted that the book “presents as a paradigm for young children a callously exploitative human relationship”; Spitz continued, “It perpetuates the myth of the selfless, all-giving mother who exists only to be used and the image of a male child who can offer no reciprocity, express no gratitude, feel no empathy—an insatiable creature who encounters no limits for his demands.”

Yes, I understand where these comments are coming from. It does, however, make me question how much we are potentially over-analyzing childrens literature. Why can't you just love a book for the story? Why do you have to rip apart every minute detail and turn a beloved story into something that is sexist? I know it important to pick "good" literature, but can't something be considered good because you feel happy after you read it? I will always be a supporter of this wonderful book because it reminds me of childhood and brings a smile to my face...those initial feelings that I get after reading it is what makes literature something beautiful and happy to me.

Jobs in Michgan?!

Well some good news for the Michigan economy...finally! Check out this article about a new television and film complex opening up in the Detroit area! It's great that this State is becoming such a hot spot for film and other arts.

http://www.clickondetroit.com/entertainment/18425414/detail.html#-

Allen Park To Be Site Of New Studio
Studio Would Bring Thousands Of Jobs

POSTED: Tuesday, January 6, 2009
UPDATED: 5:28 pm EDT April 14, 2009
ALLEN PARK, Mich. -- Michigan has landed a $146 million film and television production complex.

And project spokesman Roger Martin said Allen Park residents and laid-off auto workers will get "first crack" for jobs at Unity Studios Inc.'s 750,000-square-foot facility just outside Detroit.

The project was formally announced Tuesday afternoon in Allen Park, where the complex will be built on 104 acres of land.

Mayor Gary Burtka said the "very large studio complex" would be built near Interstate 94 and Southfield Road -- right behind the Big Tire.

The facility is to provide production services, including equipment rentals, sound and music recording facilities and animation design.

"We are not only bringing new investment to the burgeoning film production community in Michigan, we are putting in place the infrastructure for an industry that will support long-term job growth and opportunity in new, creative sectors," Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm said in a statement.

Unity said the complex initially will provide 83 direct jobs. That's expected to grow.

Mayor Burtka sees the project as a lifesaver for many jobless people in the area. "What it will do is it will put people that are out of work to work and help them stay in the city." Burtka said.

Michigan has been drawing more moviemakers since tax incentives went into effect last year. Officials in February announced planned production studios in Detroit and Pontiac that are expected to bring thousands of jobs.

In addition to the studio site, other commercial, retail and residential development would occur in tandem with this development.

Forty-foot walls would be built around the studio for security.

Burtka said the Allen Park Council and the Administration have done "everything we possibly can" over the last five months to make the deal happen.

"We've already looked at every empty building in the city and what we're trying to do is get it ready so when the spin-off businesses start to come, we're able to put them into an existing building," Burtka said.

People who live and work in Allen Park are excited about the idea of new business and the prospect of having Hollywood stars drop by.

"I would like to see a different heartbeat for the city," said Dimitre Adili, who runs a restaurant in Allen Park. "We'll have to switch to red carpets for the floor instead of black carpets."

"I think this is going to open up a whole new area for the film industry itself," said Burtka.

The project is the brainchild of former Detroiter Jimmy Lifton. He is a Hollywood movie-maker who is happy to bring the project back to his hometown. But Lifton did not just come back for sentimental reasons. "Really the deciding factor besides having a soft spot in my heart for my hometown really is the workforce and I have to tell you the ability to come in and work with and develop at a quick pace the kind of talent that we need to sustain an industry, you can't duplicate that in many places," Lifton said.

Find out more at the City of Allen Park's Web site

Ferndale-based S3 Entertainment Group has also partnered with a Texas-based production company to create the first TV series to be filmed and produced in the state of Michigan.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Racism in cartoons

Found an interesting clip on youtube about racism that's been shown in cartoons. Reminds me of what we talked about relating to Disney several weeks back. Check it out...some are shocking!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gH4ivOyO0PQ

Website about visual literacy

For my TE402 class, our most recent assignment was to learn about a new "literacy" and display your new knowledge through the use of a technology that was new to you. I created a website about visual literacy. I thought I would share the link with you...who knows, maybe one of you can find it useful for one of your teaching classes!

schorr.weebly.com

Link for last post...

For some reason, the link option didn't work so just put this in your url for the last post about first impressions!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lp0IWv8QZY