Mama and Papa Have a Store Grade Levels Objectives...
Transcript of Mama and Papa Have a Store Grade Levels Objectives...
“Clip, clop, clop. I hear the milkman and hismule cart. He rings our bell and leaves twobottles at the door. Clip, clop, clop. Themule goes down the street. The churchbells ring, the roosters crow. My brotherand sisters leave for school. The day beginslike this.” Amelia Lau Carling
Mama and Papa Have a Store Amelia Lau Carling HarperCollins Children’s Books 1998
Grade LevelsK-3Curriculum AreasArt • Language ArtsNational Art Education StandardsNA-VA.4 UNDERSTAND THE VISUAL ARTSIN RELATION TO HISTORY AND CULTURESGrades K–4Students know that the visual arts have both ahistory and specific relationship to variouscultures.
Students identify specific works of art asbelonging to particular cultures, times, andplaces.
Students demonstrate how history, culture,and the visual arts can influence each other inmaking and studying works of art.
National Language Arts StandardsNL-ENG.K-12.7 EVALUATING DATAStudents conduct research on issues andinterests by generating ideas and questions,and by posing problems.
They gather, evaluate, and synthesize datafrom a variety of sources [e.g., print and non-print texts, and artifacts].
NL-ENG.K-12.8DEVELOPING RESEARCH SKILLSStudents use a variety of technological andinformation resources (e.g., libraries,databases, computer networks, video) togather and synthesize information and tocreate and communicate knowledge.
ObjectivesStudents may draw upon the ethnic, popularand folk symbols and myths of their culturalheritage for their work.
To provide a range of culturally diverseliterature meeting students’ needs tounderstand themselves, understandworldviews and other cultures.
To provide opportunities to read meaningful,authentic vocabulary in a variety of contexts;language in a cultural context.
OverviewA young girl, whose Chinese immigrant familyowns a specialty store in the heart ofGuatemala City, describes a typical day. Shetells of her interest in the Maya customers whohave an affinity with the owners because of ashared sense of style and color. Thisautobiographical picture story shows culturespeacefully coexisting and enriching each other.When the Japanese invade the Pearl Riverdelta in China, Mama and Papa fled toGuatemala. In the way of immigrants, theyredid their lives. They opened a General Store;they learned to speak Spanish. Mama whoseChinese name means Lady Who Lives in theMoon became dona Graciela; Papa became donRudolfo. They had a family. This is a truestory, written by one of their daughters whotell what their days were like.
A young family comes by bus from its Indianvillage to buy thread for weaving, and theChinese bean curd seller who lived in Mamaand Papa's hometown in China stops by andreminisces over a cup of tea. This story is abeautiful portrayal of the Chinese, Spanish,
and Mayan cultures and the concepts ofimmigration and multiculturalism. Gorgeouswatercolors of abacus', brush painting, Mayanclothing and textile designs, Chinese cookingand tea parties, Day of the Dead paintings,Spanish language stores and signs, Chineselanterns, the Guatemala City skyline andcardboard roof sledding!
LOOKING EXERCISE #1:Mama & Papa Have a StoreAmelia Lau CarlingIllustration and Text Page 8
From the clip, clop of the milkman’s mule inearly morning to the clic, clac of her father’sabacus at night, a young girl tells about a dayin her family’s store and home in GuatemalaCity.
What is going on in this picture? Describeeverything you see. What are the people in thisillustration doing?
Papa at his desk adds and subtracts with hisabacus. How is an abacus used?
ActivityIntroduce the abacus. It is a mechanical aidused for counting; it is not a calculator in thesense we use the word today.
The Abacus Introductionhttp://www.ee.ryerson.ca:8080/~elf/abacus/intro.html
LOOKING EXERCISE #2:Mama & Papa Have a StoreAmelia Lau CarlingIllustration and Text Pages 11-12
Santiago and Maria and their daughter Elsita rehere today. They’ve come in a bus from anIndian village far away. I’ve hear them tellMama that they, like their parents andgrandparents before them, live on the edge ofa lake surrounded by three volcanoes.
What is going on in this picture? Describeeverything you see. What are the people in thisillustration doing?
ActivityAntigua was the nation's capital from 1543until 1776, when the capital was moved to theeast to the present site of Guatemala City. Setamid three magnificent volcanoes - Agua,Fuego and Acatenango - its sturdy colonialbuildings have weathered 16 earthquakes andnumerous floods and fires. Antigua is beautifulduring Semana Santa, when the streets arecarpeted with elaborate decorations of coloredsawdust and flower petals.
Guatemala's many Mayan ruins and colonialbuildings are its most impressive architecturalattributes and glorious landscapes has madeGuatemala a tourist destination.
One of the most intriguing cultural aspects isthe infinite and exotic variety of thehandmade, traditional clothing of Guatemala'sMaya population. The design of the women'scolorfully embroidered tunics, capes and skirtsdates back to pre-colonial days. Certain detailsof garment and design identify the wearer'sgroup and village, and can also have multiplereligious or magical meanings. Music and
traditional dance also feature in many Mayanreligious festivals.
Introduce to students that art often utilizessymbols unique to the culture, in which it wascreated, providing a way of communicating andpreserving historical events in visual form.
LOOKING EXERCISE #3:Mama & Papa Have a StoreAmelia Lau CarlingIllustration and Text Page 12
Every day customers of many heritagesspeaking Spanish, Chinese, and Maya come tobuy cloth, buttons, and thread in colors like‘parrot green’ and ‘mango yellow,” and dozensof other items.
She will weave deer, birds, rabbits, andjaguars into new clothes.
Learn about Maya weavers and the symbolsthat they use in their woven huipils.
Maya-Symbols in Maya Textileshttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/maya/maya7.htm
ActivityHere are some common colors to introduce inEnglish, Spanish and Chineseyellow amarillo huángsèorange anaranjado chéngsèblue azul boalanwhite blanco balsebrown marrón hèsèblack negro heisèpurple púrpura zisered rojo hongsèpink rosado fenghonegsegreen verde lùsè
ActivityWhile the girl’s parents and their friends talkabout their hometown in China from wherethey emigrated many years ago, she and hersiblings play games on the rooftop terrace,float paper boats, and make shadow puppetsunder the glow of flashlights. When the storecloses, the girl dances to celebrate her day.
LOOKING EXERCISE #4:Mama & Papa Have a StoreAmelia Lau CarlingIllustration and Text Page 25
Dark, dark clouds sweep in quickly, taking thesun away and letting large raindrops fall hardon the tin roof…When my brothers and sisterscome home from school, we make paper boatsand float them down the street.
Compare this painting to the painting of PaperBoats by the African American artist, JacobLawrence.
Paper BoatsJacob Lawrence 1949
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery
At the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, vibrantcolors and social overtones shade JacobLawrence's painting, Paper Boats. At firstglance, the scene appears playful - three mensailing paper boats on a street. But a closer
look suggests another scenario. The men areslumped over and their faces express sadnessor hopelessness. Lawrence grew up in povertyand was largely self-trained in the arts. But heachieved fame at age twenty-one, using boldcolors and angular forms to depict scenes ofAfrican-American history. In Paper Boats, hecelebrates familiar surroundings and routineactivities. Lawrence stated, "My picturesexpress my life…so I paint the Americanscene." [Art Treasures of Nebraska Websitehttp://mynptv.org/nat/artists/nat_lawrence_jacob.html]
Resources
Carling, Amelia Lou. Alfombras deAserr/Sawdust Carpets. Douglas and McIntyrePublishing Group. 2005.
Carling, Amelia Lou. Mama and Papa Have aStore. HarperCollins Children’s Books. 2000.
Castañeda, Omar S. Abuela’s Weave. NewYork: Lee and Low Books. 1993.
Foxx, Jeffrey Jay. The Maya Textiles Tradition.New York: Harry N. Abrams. 1997.
Montejo, Victor. Popol Vuh: A Sacred Book ofthe Maya. Toronto, Canada: GroundwoodBooks. 1999.
Sola, Michele. Abuela Weaves a Dream: TheStory of a Young Maya Artist. New York:Hyperion Books for Children. 1996.
Internet Websites
Abacus Introductionhttp://www.ee.ryerson.ca:8080/~elf/abacus/intro.html
Colors in Spanish Languagehttp://spanish.about.com/library/beginning/aa-beg-vocabulary-colors.htm
Colors in Ting Chinesehttp://hua.umf.maine.edu/Chinese/stories/xinxin/saving/colorc.html
Images of the Maya-Symbols in Maya Textileshttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/maya/maya7.htm
Jacob Lawrence Painting-The Paper Boatshttp://mynptv.org/nat/artists/nat_lawrence_jacob.html