The Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music

by | Dec 12, 2023 | books

The Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music
by Roberta Flack, Tonya Bolden
New York: Dial Books for Young Readers, 2023

Suggested Grade and Interest Level: Pre through 3

Topics to Explore: Community, Family relationships; Music and musical instruments

Target Skills: Vocabulary: Metaphors, Homonyms, Attributes, Prepositions; Grammar and syntax: Past tense structures, Complex structures; Language literacy: Predicting events; Sequencing events; Cause-and-effect relationships; Drawing inferences; Verbal expression; Compare and contrast; Discussion; Articulation (especially P, R, and R-blends)

Summary: A young child growing up in a segregated Blue Ridge Mountain town tells her story of how dreams, inspiration, family devotion, and hard work led her to musical fame. “I didn’t have fancy-fine clothes, high-priced toys or other rich-rich things,” she writes. But what she did have were loving parents, a community of support, and a love of music. School Library Journal writes, “A warm, soulful picture book autobiography about a living legend.”

Book Talk

Before the read-aloud, introduce the book by showing the cover. Read the title, and for younger children, point to the words in the direction in which they are read. Point out the activity going on and what is unusual about the illustration. Ask thoughtful questions that encourage children to look for the answers, as they will soon be revealed in the story. Some suggestions:

  • What is she playing?
  • What is unusual about the child at the piano?
  • Do her feet touch the pedals? What does that tell us about her?
  • What is different about the piano?
  • Have you ever seen a piano that is green?
  • Does someone you know play the piano? If so, tell something about that.
  • What do you like about a piano? Or another instrument, perhaps?

During the read-aloud, pause before turning the page and invite children to describe what takes place. Despite the child’s ability level, what constructions is the child able to produce independently? Then expand on the child’s response, using his or her own words plus your words in an extension of the thought.

For example, in the first pages, the reader sees the child’s neighborhood, environment and her playmates. When asking,

“What do you think this child likes doing?”

the child may respond ungrammatically (e.g., “she play”), in a one-word response (e.g., “play” or “playing”), or in a few words (e.g., “she jumping rope”).

Note: Even if the engagement is done simply by asking a yes/no question, you can always expand on a “yes” with additional words, so the child makes the connection. In that way, you are modeling a response. For example,

Adult: Does she look happy?

Child: Yes.

Adult: Yes, she looks happy jumping rope, or

Adult: Yes, she’s happy playing outside

Pausing for book talk doesn’t always have to be done in a question format, implying that the child must respond every time. Consider making a comment about the story before turning the page.

Restate the text and what the picture content is adding to the story. Help children connect these features, such as,

The girl’s mom and dad loved music.

They each played their own instrument.

That means little Roberta grew up hearing them make music in her home.

I can imagine that made them all feel joyful.

Point out the metaphors in the text and discuss their meanings. The book is filled with them! Then have children use them (or words that are similar) in their own meaningful sentences. For example, the text states

When I first saw my piano

I saw a miracle.

Ask children to explain what the author was saying. You may need to shape responses, such as if the child says something like,

“It was a miracle the piano.”

Shape and restate the response, as in

“Getting her own piano was a miracle.”

Another metaphor from the text:

Soon my fingers,

Longer, stronger,

Graceful,

Were sliding into songs,

  • What is a metaphor?
  • Can fingers “slide into songs?”
  • When we use words this way, how do they make your message more meaningful to your listener?

In another example, the child describes her family gatherings as musical times, when they were

singing love right into our living room.

In yet another example, Roberta describes her music as “my treasure, my gold.”

  • Why are those good word choices for her?
  • What do they say about how she felt about her music?

Metaphors are great ways to encourage children’s literate discourse. By asking children to give their own definitions for them and then relate the meaning to something in their own lives, they use language that that goes beyond that of their conversational discourse. In this way, they develop their ability to use decontextualized language, the kind of language used in school.

To work on homonyms, point out words that have multiple meanings in the text, such as:

tickled (e.g., “Mother and Daddy were so tickled by that – ”),

keys (i.e., piano keys and keys to lock/unlock doors, and

notes (i.e., musical representations of a tone or pitch, and a record of something written down).

Use the words in sentences so their meanings are understood in context. Then have children use the words in sentences relevant to their own lives.

Pause to clarify and draw inferences from what is implied in the story. Oftentimes when reading aloud, adults assume children have background knowledge from which to draw on when applying meaning. But words may be combined in ways that rely on knowledge the child does yet not have. As well, it may require an understanding that the words are not used in their literal sense.

If this is the case, children may have a difficult time connecting with the story. Anticipating these events and helping the child draw inferences about the story can be helpful, especially for the more concrete language learners.

For example, when the author describes playing the piano at age 3 or 4, she writes,

I’d use my elbows on the ebonies

because my fingers were too short.

Break down the elements so children can infer the meaning. For example,

  • First describe “ebonies.”
  • What makes the shorter, black keys create sounds on a piano?
  • Could Roberta reach those keys with her fingers when she was 4 years old?
  • What did she figure out on her own to make those keys produce sound?

Pause to encourage skills of predicting events. It’s a great way to engage children in the story and develop language literacy. Children can make predictions based on the knowledge they’ve gained so far in the story.

For example, when Daddy saw an old, ratty, stinky piano in a junkyard, before turning the page, ask

  • What do you think will happen next?

Shape sentence constructions if necessary. If the expressive formations are beyond the child’s present ability level, prepare a sentence for the child to finish using his or her own words.

After the read aloud, conclude with facts about the singer from the Author’s Note at the back of the book. What kind of girl was Roberta? What did she go on to accomplish in her life?

For older children, ask what current day female musician has accomplished this much and even more! Yes, Rihanna. Rihanna has won nine Grammy Awards, along with many other awards, and has had fourteen No. 1 songs on Billboard’s Hot 100 list. In this way, children are able to understand the significance of the story in relation to what they know about life today.

To work on sequencing skills, go back over the pages and discuss events in the singer’s life. Ask thoughtful questions such as,

  • What led to her become a world-renowned singer?
  • What things contributed to this in her early life?
  • How did she “get there?”

Construct a sequence together, such as,

First, she played with the keys of the church piano when she was very young.

Then she dreamed of having her own piano.

She told her parents what she wanted.

After that, her dad found one in a junkyard.

Then her dad restored it and mom helped,

After she got the piano, she practiced with songs she heard on the radio,

Then she took music lessons,

When she grew up, she was always grateful for the gift of her green piano.

To work on cause-effect relationships, show the connections in the sequence of events. What made what happen? How did Roberta manifest her dream?

Having music in her home caused her to __________.

When she played at the keys of the church piano, it made her __________.

Seeing her love of music caused her parents to __________.

Receiving a piano fixed up especially for her caused Roberta to __________.

As an adult, remembering her green piano resulted in her ___________.

To work on naming attributes, sentence structure, verbal expression, and skills to compare and contrast, first describe the piano as Laron saw it passing by the junkyard. The book says it was,

old, ratty, beat-up, stained, weather-worn, stained, faded, even stinky!

Then describe the piano after Laron restored it. Go back over the illustrations at the junkyard to compare it to the new, green piano. Add some of your own descriptors, such as

clean, painted, “grassy” green, pretty, attractive, restored, like-new, different, interesting, and so forth

Next, put the descriptions into sentences. Model and set it up with a “cloze” sentence, as in:

When father found the piano it was __________ .

After he restored the piano it was ____________.

For older children, work on complex sentence structure by connecting the two conditions of the piano to form one sentence. Recall the previous cause-effect relationships to form a structure, as in,

When father found the piano, it was [beat-up, broken, a mess, stinky], but he restored it to a beautiful, shiny green piano.

After father cleaned and painted the old piano, it was a beautiful green piano.

Consider holding a discussion on one of the themes in the book. For example, talk about the word practice. Give an example from the book. For example,

“Practice is what the girl did to become better at what she loved doing.”

Read the text,

I practiced for hours and hours.

Teaching myself to play songs

from the radio,

like “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!”

Ask thoughtful questions about how a 9-year-old learned to play her piano so well.

  • What does practice mean? What made her want to practice?
  • How did she select the songs she practiced?
  • What do you think happened because of her practice?

Then ask children if they want to be able to do well. These are the ways Roberta Flack got better at playing and singing.. She found ways to do it on her own.

  • What do you do that you would like to become better at?
  • Share what you like to practice.
  • What ways can you practice outside the typical ways that might be expected?

To reinforce articulation of specific phonemes P and R (vocalic, intervocalic, and R-blends), consider the following:

Use the title word Piano and its repetition throughout the story (both in text and in the illustrations) as opportunities for practice in lip closure and production of plosive phoneme P. Other words (in order of appearance) are: play (-ed, -ing), proud, tap-tap-tapped, helping, paint, painted, practice, top, and wrapped.

Use the title word Green and its repetition throughout the story (both in text and illustrations) as opportunities for various phonemic contexts in R phoneme practice. Other words (in order of appearance) are: Ridge, circle, ‘richy-rich” treasure, Father, Laron, waiter, builder, harmonica, Mother, Irene, church, organ, four, fingers, short, congregation, heard, radio, dream (-ed; -ing), sister, Star, older, started, Hightower, start (-ed), heard, Roberta, there, upright, weather-worn, ivories, treasure, replied, miracle, ratty, grassy, green, dry, fingers, hours, radio, LaRene (sister’s name), longer, stronger, graceful, another, wrapped, year, and wonder.

Additional Note: See early Roberta Flack performances on YouTube at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8_fLu2yrP4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjrcAGX-eMk

Special Note: See other books on themes of Community, Family relationships; Music and musical instruments, and a whole lot more in the Topic Exploration Index of Books Are for Talking, Too! (Fourth Edition).