Breaking the Mould – it’s child’s play
Posted on07 April 2013.
Resources for teachers and parents about children’s books that challenge gender stereotypes
The National Union of Teachers
has been working with a small group of primary schools to challenge
‘traditional’ gender stereotypes through the curriculum. As part of the
support for schools, the project team provided them with a range of
books featuring characters who defy some of the long established
typecasting of girls and boys in children’s literature. A full report
will be published later this year but the project team have already produced notes on some of these books. Launched at the NUT Annual Conference at Easter, they should help school staff, parents and carers to get the most out of reading the stories with children.
The ‘rules’ about which toys, games, TV programmes and books are “for” girls or boys are learnt early and many of the producers of such products are happy to exploit them. Children’s literature is one area where a small but significant counter movement is gathering strength. While many books still perpetuate stereotypes, there are increasing numbers of female characters who would rather do something useful than dream about being a princess or males who are more interested in singing and dancing than making the first team.
There is still some way to go. Until recently, if you could even find books featuring same sex parents, they would often be about little else – as though just having two Mums was interesting enough to be worth reading about. While some of these books were welcomed by families and used by teachers in discussions about different family structures, they still tended to affirm that, while it was OK to have parents of the same gender, it was still unusual, difficult or likely to lead to problems. Similarly, many of the books about children who challenge gender stereotypes
However, just as sexual orientation
is now being addressed more engagingly in children’s literature,
writers are also taking an increasingly subtle and nuanced approach to
gender. Anne Fine’s Bill’s New Frock
engages with a range of ways in which children of both genders can be
stereotyped – without their even realising it is happening – and Robert
Munsch’s Paper Bag Princess learns as much about the kind of relationships she wants as she does about the excessive importance many in society place on ‘appropriate’ daywear. Both
these characters have been favourites in schools for some time and they
are now being joined by other heroes (of both genders) who challenge
stereotypes and yet seem remarkably like ourselves. The message that we
shouldn’t be unkind to people who are different from us is still there
(as it needs to be) but, these stories imply, any of us could find
ourselves constrained by the ‘rules’ linked to gender – any of us could
be ‘different’.
While not all the books discussed in these notes
entirely avoid portraying children who challenge stereotypes as
‘special’, they all present them as people any of us would like to know –
or even be. The stories also help us to understand that people are
discriminated against not because they are different – but because other
people sometimes find difference a challenge. Moreover, they show how
difference – and knowing things that others don’t – can be a source of
strength as well as difficulty. Harvey Fierstein’s Sissy Duckling,
for instance, teaches us that caring about being good at what you want
to do – rather than what others think you should be good at – is one of
the key ingredients in the recipe for happiness.
As part of the lessons delivered by teachers and other staff involved in the Breaking the Mould project,
these books and others were used to help children to consider the
impact of stereotyping, the value of celebrating difference, the
importance of questioning convention and, as the children themselves put
it, of “being your own person”. The full report will appear in a few
months but, in the meantime, these notes
should introduce school staff, parents, carers and – most importantly –
children to some feisty characters whose actions contribute to breaking
the mould that many of us still feel under pressure to fit.
Mark JennettRead more about the ‘Breaking the Mould’ project and view the notes produced by the project team here
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