You Matter

by | May 30, 2024 | books | 0 comments

You Matter
by Christian Robinson
New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2020

Suggested Grade and Interest Level:  Preschool through 2nd

Topics to Explore: Feelings and emotions; Perspective-taking; Science and nature; Self-esteem; Shapes and visual Images

Skills to Develop: Concepts of print; Vocabulary: Beginning concepts (i.e., spatial; sizes, colors, and shapes), Part-whole relationships, Synonyms, Antonyms, Idioms; Grammar and syntax: Two- and three-word utterances, Present and past tense constructions; Morphological markers; Language Literacy (a.k.a., Literate Discourse): Cause-effect relationships, Relating personal experiences, Giving explanations, Answering why questions, Verbal expression, Discussion; and Fluency.

Summary: Christian Robinson’s illustrated stories are those of few words and big messages. His drawings in bold, cut paper style have a child-like, endearing quality that enhances the meaning of each short line of text. In this book, the audience (and reader as well) gets a sense of how we all are an important part of one fascinating, interconnected universe. No matter how big, busy, or complex a place you inhabit, what your ethnicity, or state of being you are now be experiencing – you matter!  The message is affirming, validating, and comforting. Children have lots of opportunities to engage with you in this story by explaining what transpires in the illustrations. There is much to interpret that provides avenues for a child’s verbal expression.

You Matter earned the Best Book of the Year award from several organizations and publications such as Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal.

Before the read-aloud, take the opportunity to work on Concepts of Print. As you show the book’s cover, run your finger under the title, in the direction the words are read, and read aloud, “You Matter.” Ask children to be on the lookout for those words as they will appear again in the story.

Then, throughout the read-aloud, see if children recognize the words, you matter, where printed. Point to them in the same way you showed the title and read it aloud. Have children say the words along with you as you discover them.

 

Verbal Expression

Extend the front and back covers so that both parts are visible simultaneously. Show how the canopy of the parachute is held down at its handles by different children. Each child is joining in, doing their important part in spreading it out for us to see. Each child matters. Ask thoughtful questions, such as –

  •      Why does it matter that each child holds on to the ties of the canopy?
  •      Could one child alone extend the canopy?
  •      Could two children do it by themselves?
  •      Or does each child have a part to play?

 

At the book’s open, see the inside jacket cover, and read  –

Near or far.

Big or small.

First or last.

You matter.

Ask children to share how those words make them feel.

Play with the opposite pairs by asking questions such as,

  •      “Do you matter if you come in first?”
  •      “Do you matter even if you come in last?”

 

Throughout the read-aloud, ask similar questions using the context of the scene. Encourage children to share what it means to them.

 

Shapes and visual images

Show the inside cover of an aerial view of a city. Ask children to find an image within the big city that looks the same as the front cover. As they identify another image of children around the canopy of the parachute, elicit picture descriptions.

Talk about the busy world surrounding the scene, portrayed through colorful geometric shapes children can relate to and identify.

  •      What is it that the children are circled around? (parachute, umbrella, canopy)
  •      Where does this scene take place?
  •      What other things are in the city? (buildings, freeways, cars, and so on)

 

At the page turn, read aloud the dedication, written above the stars.

For anyone who isn’t sure if they matter.  You do.

Point out the stars in colorful shapes and the circle image of the world.  Ask children what shapes and colors they see. Or name them for early language learners to repeat.

As colorful shapes and familiar objects appear in the story (e.g., tree, sun.), point them out for children to name and identify.

 

Perspective-taking

Pause at the dedication page and ask children to stand back for an astronaut’s view of the world from space. Imagine all the people – together under those stars. Imagine what the author is saying. They all matter. Promote more interest by saying –

     Let’s see how the author wants to show us that.

 

During the read-aloud, pause to share talk about the meaning in the illustrations. Help the child draw connections from one page to the opposite or following page. If necessary, interpret the meaning of the images and draw connections between the meaning of the text and what’s happening in the illustrations.

The story opens to a child peering through the lens of a microscope. Shapes representing the microscopic world are seen on the opposite page. The text reads,

The small stuff too small to see.

               

Vocabulary

Introduce new vocabulary. Ask the child to tell what the girl is doing. Explain the meaning of microscope. Ask questions that require the use of the word in the response, such as –

  •      What is the girl looking at?
  •      What is she using to look at them?

 

What kinds of things can be seen under a microscope? (e.g., cells, microbes, microorganisms, viruses, tiny creatures)

  •      What is “stuff too small to see” called?
  •      How is she able to see them?

 

Explain that microbes are found all around us and are too small to be seen with just our own eyes. They are, as the author says, “the small stuff too small to see.” They live in the water, soil, and air. They also live in our bodies.

Encourage children to make the connection between the girl looking into the microscope and the objects in the circle on the opposite page. If necessary, explain that it shows what she is looking at from the lens of the microscope. Ask questions such as –

  •      Who sees these shapes and forms?
  •      What are the shapes and forms called? (specimens)
  •      How is she able to see the specimens? (through a microscope)

Point out the eye of the green creature seen from the microscope to indicate they are living specimens “too small to see.”

 

More Perspective-Taking

Reinforce the concept of perspectives with questions that include from whose perspective and from what perspective the specimens are viewed, such as –

  • From what perspective does she see the specimens? (e.g., from the perspective of the microscope, or through a lens)
  • If you were the girl looking into the microscope, what might it look like?
  • From whose perspective does she see the specimens? (e.g., her perspective)
  • If the girl is curious about tiny cells, how might she be feeling?
  • If she is feeling wonder and awe, could we understand her feelings? Her perspective?

Consider demonstrating magnification with a magnifying glass and a tiny object, such as a child’s fingernail. Show the object from the perspective of a magnifier.

 

More Vocabulary

Introduce more vocabulary. Show where specimens are placed on the microscope. Explain that the flat surface is called a plate or stage. Notice that there doesn’t appear to be anything on the stage of the girl’s microscope.

  • Why is there nothing there?
  • What does magnify mean?
  • Why might she want to see a tiny speck enlarged with so much detail?

 

Suggestions:

  • To discover what is there but cannot be seen with our eyes?
  • To see “the stuff too small to see?”

 

Vocabulary for this page can include:

  • microscope
  • microbe
  • specimen
  • cells
  • viruses
  • enlarge
  • magnify
  • lens
  • stage
  • plate
  • discover

 

Language Literacy (a.k.a. Language Discourse)

Encourage children to relate the story with cause-and-effect relationships. Model with words so and because, as in –

  • The girl is looking through the microscope so she can see “stuff too small to see.”

 

Or start a sentence for the child to complete, as in –

  • The girl is looking through the microscope so she can see _______ (e.g.,  specimens, tiny cells, “small stuff too small to see,” etc. ).
  • The girl is able to see the specimens because ________.

 

At each page turn, take the opportunity to structure sentences with a cause-and-effect relationship scenario.

For example, when the girl and boy reconnect with their dog after losing their grip on its leash in the big city rush, see them walking through the park with the dog on the next page. Demonstrate an understanding of what transpired in the story by setting up a sentence such as –

  • The children found the dog on the busy street so now _____. (e.g., the dog is back on its leash)
  • The dog is back on its leash because_______. (e.g., the girl and boy were able to find it in the busy city)

 

On a page turn, when one of the two men on the park bench sprinkles food on the ground, the picture shows pigeons flocking to the morsels. One pigeon arrives late to the scene. The text reads –

The first to go and the last.

Share talk about how all the birds matter. All of them get to eat the treats, even the last one to arrive at the feast.

Then use the opportunity afforded by the picture to elicit sentences that connect events with so and because, such as –

  •      The pigeons come to eat the food because the man is feeding them.
  •      The man drops the food (on the ground) so the pigeons can eat it.

 

Grammar and Syntax

For early language learners, the text is ideal for facilitating two-and three-word utterances. Model (say for the child to repeat) with the words of the text. Use both Adjective + Noun (i.e., “Small stuff”) and Verb + Noun (i.e., “See small stuff”) constructions.

Then, recast the response to provide new wording or use more words to expand the utterance with present tense structure (i.e.,“She sees small stuff,” or “The girl sees tiny things”). Encourage the child to repeat a portion of your modeled sentence if possible.

It is validating for children to hear their words spoken aloud in expanded forms and helps them develop fuller sentence constructions.

At each page turn, the consistent story structure allows you to follow a pattern. After discussion about the meaning of the text, elicit target structures (e.g., present, and past tense) to communicate about what is happening (or happened) in the scenario.

 

Vocabulary, Idioms, and Morphological Markers

On a page turn, target vocabulary as you reinforce meaning. For example, look at the picture of tiny sea creatures floating inside a cresting wave. Describe the microorganisms in the wave, as microscopic, so tiny they can’t be seen with our eyes. It takes a microscope to see them. They are also called microbes.

Show the microbes in the sea floating about together in the tide (or wave). They are also called plankton. They all swim together. Then read the text –

Those who swim with the tide and those who don’t.

On the opposite page, see one tiny creature, going “against the tide,” or in the opposite direction.

Talk about idioms, or expressions of speech. When someone “swims with the tide” it can mean that they go along with what everyone else is doing or thinking.  It doesn’t really mean swimming in those situations.

So, when they don’t go along with what everyone else does, like the little plankton in the picture, we say they don’t “swim with the tide.” Give children examples of situations they can relate from their own experiences or ask them to think of something from their own experiences.

Ask questions about the meaning, such as –

  • What is this one plankton doing?
  • Does one little creature who does not “swim with the tide” (or swim with the others) matter?
  • Does that one plankton matter, even though it doesn’t go along with all the others?

Talk about how tiny creatures, so small we can hardly see them, like plankton, look beautiful and colorful under a microscope.

 

To work on morphological markers, ask what microscope, microscopic, microorganism, and microbe all have in common when you listen to the words. Explain that other words also have this prefix, such as

  • microphone
  • microchip
  • microfilm
  • microclimate
  • microcosm

In each of these words, the prefix means very tiny, such as “the stuff too small to see.”

When you add a “marker” at the end of a word such as microcosm, you add a suffix.  The word microcosmic, then means a miniature version of something.

Throughout the read-aloud, continue to reinforce the story’s message with book talk that adds meaning to the story’s message. Then elicit language targets such as vocabulary and verbal expression.

 

Expressing Part-Whole and Cause-and-Effect Relationships

On a page turn, see a mosquito in action, stinging an unidentifiable subject. On the next page turn, see a huge dinosaur grimacing at the sore on its tail. Ask children to express the meaning through causal effects and make the connection to the part-whole relationship.

  • Where was the mosquito in the first picture?
  • What part of the dinosaur was it on?
  • What caused the dinosaur to feel uncomfortable?

Encourage the use of so and because in expressing the relationship.

 

Another idiom

Discuss the dinosaur’s predicament and encourage expression of the problem.  The text reads –

when something is just out of reach

Pause to help to clarify and ask questions such as –

  • Can the T-rex reach its tail to scratch the bite?
  • What does it mean when something is “out of reach?”
  • What is “out of reach” for the dinosaur?

 

If needed, explain that the dinosaur’s front legs (or arms of a quadruped) are too small to get to the mosquito bite at the end of its tail. Use the moment to help the child express the T-rex’s predicament.

Talk about idioms, or expressions of speech. When something “is just out of reach” it can mean that something we’re trying to do isn’t quite yet possible.

So, even though things may be too difficult, and you can’t get there yet, you still matter. No matter what!

Ask children to talk about similar situations and relate their own experiences.

 

Even More Perspective-taking

On the last page, a boy looks out at a cityscape from an airplane window.  Encourage book talk with a discussion about what the boy sees from his perspective.

We can take perspective from the two standpoints. In one, we talk about one’s senses (e.g., a visual perspective). In the other, we talk about perspective from a conceptual standpoint (e.g., understanding another’s thoughts and feelings).

Ask perspective-taking questions using both aspects, such as  –

 

  • From what perspective does the boy see the city? (from inside the airplane)
  • Where might he be when viewing the bridge, freeways, and skyscrapers?
  • What clues make you think so?
  • If the boy is leaving to go somewhere new, how might he be feeling?
  • If he is feeling sad to leave, could we understand his sadness?
  • If he is interested in what the city looks like from the air, can we understand his curiosity?
  • If the boy is arriving somewhere new, how might he be feeling?
  • If he is feeling a little scared, could we understand his fear?
  • If he is feeling excited, could we understand his excitement?
  • With a world so vast, do you think the boy believes as the story says, You matter?
  • Do you hope that he does?
  • Why is it important that he believes that he matters?
  • Is it important that we all believe that we matter?

 

At the end inside cover is another aerial scene of the city. Again, ask the child to can find the parachute’s canopy in the city scene with the children holding it down by the ties. Underscore that in that huge bustling city, even the smallest child matters.  This is the author’s sincere message to every one of us.

 

After the read-aloud, you may want to hold a discussion and talk more about the meaning of the story. Or, you may want to revisit the pages in order to define more of the book’s meaning. You may also want to take advantage of more opportunities for skill building. Here are a few ways:

 

 Synonyms

Play a word game by thinking about the words of the story and naming other words that mean the same thing. Ask, “What’s another way to say _______?” Some ideas to start you off include –

  • You are important.
  • You count.
  • You mean something to the author.
  • You mean something to me.

 

Synonyms and Antonyms:

Revisit the inside jacket cover and read the text:

Near or far.

Big or small.

First or last.

You matter.

To work on synonyms, ask, “What’s another word for ______?” Look for words or concepts from the book, such as –

  • near
  • small
  • last
  • big
  • young
  • old

To work on antonyms, ask, “What’s the opposite of _____?”   Look for words or concepts from the book, such as –

  • near
  • big
  • stuff
  • first
  • far
  • light
  • round
  • loud
  • clear
  • soft

 

Relating personal experiences

In reviewing the pages of the book, re-read the short lines of text.  Help children relate personal experiences with the concepts presented on the pages. For example, when the pages of the text state –

When everyone is too busy to help.

If you fall down.

If you have to start all over again.

Ask children if this has ever happened to them.

  • Have you ever felt this way?
  • How did it make you feel?
  • What’s a good thing to remember?

 

Fluency

The book can be an excellent resource in working with young children who stutter. It can help to open up their feelings around experiences of being dysfluent. It can also be used to hold conversations about avoidance and self-advocacy.

As you interact about the story, use discretion when asking the child to relate his or her experiences. Possible ways to initiate a discussion may include –

  • Has something like that ever happened to you?
  • Have you ever started to talk and felt you couldn’t finish?
  • Have you ever had to repeat yourself because someone didn’t understand?

Affirm the child’s feelings and give empowering feedback.

Children who stutter often withhold participation in groups or avoid speaking in certain situations.  Teach them to self-talk and remember the words of the story. Instill in them that they can “talk back” fears about stuttering during those situations.

Help the child self-advocate. There are many misconceptions about stuttering and people who stutter. It is important to teach these children about being straightforward with others. Letting others know what you need is important. For example, the child is able to let others know they don’t need them to finish their words and sentences for them. In these instances, as in all instances –

  • Your voice matters.
  • What you say matters.
  • However you speak, you matter.

 

____________ # # #  ____________

 

Note: With so many opportunities for book talk that this selection provides, it is one you can read again and again. You’ll find new avenues to create a meaningful exchange and new skills to target with each new read-aloud that will continue to build the speech-language-literacy connection.

 

Also Note: This is a popular book found in most school and local libraries. It is also on Amazon, listed for less than $10.00. It is well worth the price, as it can be used for more than one read-aloud. It is also available on Kindle.

 

Also Note: Find more books on the concept of self-esteem and the topic of perspective-taking in the Topic Explorations Index of Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth Edition).

Among more than 260 book entries in the catalogs, you’ll find an equally fascinating book by Christian Robinson titled Another Find it in the Grades 1-5+ Catalog of Picture Books, with a format that contains information similar to this page. Find Books Are for Talking, Too! (4th Ed.) on Amazon at –

https://a.co/d/efcKFw6

 

Suggestion:  Learn more about Christian Robinson and his popular books on his website, The Art of Fun: www.theartoffun.com

Another Suggestion: Be sure to watch author Christian Robinson reading You Matter. You’ll get even more great ideas for sharing this book on PBS Kids YouTube:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltOaIsWXpHA

Other Languages: You Matter is also published in Spanish (Tú Importas); French (Toi aussi, tu comptes); Chinese and Korean editions are available through BooksAreMagic at: https://www.booksaremagic.net/item/71jvBPJQdu22URVxtKgM8w