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Unleashing the Possibility Through Inquiry and the Color Blue by Dr. Becki Maldonado

1/25/2023

 
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Dr. Becki Maldonado is a ninth-grade English teacher at Parkside High School in Salisbury, MD. She is a committee member of the Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children. Her scholarship and research focus on arts integration, nonfiction text, text selection, and developing and exercising teachers’ critical consciousness, along with the use of critical dialogue to develop social awareness in education and the community. She is also the editor of Arts Integration and Young Adult Literature: Enhancing Academic Skills and Student Voice.
Unleashing the Possibility Through Inquiry and the Color Blue by Dr. Becki Maldonado
As a Marvel enthusiast, I tend to make a lot of connections to Marvel comics and the Marvel Cinematic Universe. When I received this book, my first thought was, “Wait! The heart-shaped herb is real?” In Black Panther only the royalty, who were destined to be the Black Panther, could drink the indigo liquid from the heart-shaped herb. Publishers were sending us what were supposed to be nonfiction books to read and deliberate about for the Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children; yet, there on the cover of the book sat a girl grinding a blue-purple substance in a bowl with dark indigo iris in the background. Honestly, I was really hoping the publisher accidentally sent me a Shuri picture book, but that wasn’t the case. It ended up being a book more valuable and important than anyone would imagine. But before I get into that, let me give you a brief historical run down about the Orbis Pictus Award.
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A Brief Histography of the Orbis Pictus Award from 1658 - Present Day
In 1658, John Amos Comenius, a Czech educator and social reformist, wrote the first children’s textbook with pictures – Orbis Sensualism Pictus, “The Visible World in Picture.” Having lived under the oppression of the German feudal lords, Comenius believed “all the knowledge and all the scientific achievements belong to all people and all nations, and that everybody should be enabled to get to know them, and in this way, by possessing knowledge, have the power” (Lukaš & Munjiza, 2014, p. 34). From this belief he advocated for children, holding fast to the understanding that students “were born with a natural craving for knowledge and goodness, and that schools beat it out of them” (Moravian University, n.d.). While his pedagogical influence grew in Europe, his influence did not span over the Atlantic Ocean until the early 20th century when Orbis Pictus and the Great Didactes hit the shore of the United States. 

In 1989, NCTE created the Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children, named after Comenius’s Orbis Sensualism Pictus, credited as the first picture book written specifically for children. This award “promotes and recognizes excellence in the writing of nonfiction for children” (NCTE, 2023). Each year one nonfiction children’s book, written for the K-8th grade audience, is granted this prestigious award. The Great Little Madison by Jean Fritz was the first Orbis Pictus Award winner. Over the decades a diversity of nonfiction books have been given this distinguished award: Through My Eyes by Ruby Bridges (2000), Quest for the Kangaroo Tree: An Expedition to the Cloud Forest in New Guinea by Sy Montgomery (2007), The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia by Candace Fleming (2015), and Between the Lines: How Ernie Barnes Went from the Football Field to the Art Gallery by Sandra Neil Wallace (2019). 

The 2023 Orbis Pictus Award winner embodies Comenius’s belief that all people should be able to have knowledge and scientific achievements through exploring the history of the color blue. Blue: A History of the Color as Deep as the Sea and as Wide as the Sky by Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond takes the reader on a journey through time, traveling throughout the world to rediscover the rich history of the color blue. From the discovery and use of the rock, lapis lazuli, in Afghanistan, to the squeezing of snails and the growing of Indigofera, the reader gets to relive the innovations used to harvest the coveted blue dye, including an inventor being awarded the Nobel Prize for creating a blue chemical dye. From reading this book it is easy to see the impact, for better or for worse, the color blue has had on every society throughout the world. ​
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Brew-Hammond (2022) concludes:
Maybe because blue has such a complicated
history
of pain,
wealth,
invention, 
and 
recovery,

it’s become a symbol of possibility,
as vast and deep as the bluest sea,
and as wide open and high as the bluest sky.

Unleashing the Possibility Through Inquiry and the Color Blue

While the book may not be the next Shuri picture book, the book holds the possibility for students to learn about their own culture and others’ cultures through inquiry and the impact the color blue still has in society today. Responding to questions through words and images, students can discover unknown facts about themselves and others that can lead to the celebration of similarities and differences found within different cultures. ​

After reading Blue as a class or individually, have the students respond to the following instructions on one paper in both written words and drawings:
  1. Describe what you think of when you see the color blue.
  2. What are two ways the color blue is used in your everyday life? What does the blue represent? If you do not know what the blue means, you can use your resources to research and discover what the blue means.
  3. What are two ways in your home is blue used? What does the blue represent? If you do not know what the blue means, you can use your resources to research and discover what the blue means.
Once the student has answered the question for themselves, have the students use these three questions to interview a classmate and a family member, using a separate paper for each interview. Students should then compare and contrast the possibilities found in the color blue from the three interviews. 

This is also an fun exercise that can be done with educators to build a positive community within schools and districts. When a positive community is built, unknown possibilities are released, allowing both students and educators to thrive. 
“The classroom remains the most radical space of possibility in the academy” 
- bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom


References
Brew-Hammond, N.E. (2022). Blue: A history of the color as deep as the sea and as wide as the 
sky. Alfred A. Knopf.
Lukaš, M., & Munjiza, E. (2014). Education system of John Amos Comenius and its 
implications in modern didactics. Život i škola: časopis za teoriju i praksu odgoja i 
obrazovanja, 60(31), 32-42.
Moravian Univeristy. (n.d.). John Amos Comenius. Moravian University. 
https://www.moravian.edu/about/college-history/john-amos-comenius
NCTE. (2023). Orbis Pictus award. National Council  of Teachers of English. 
https://ncte.org/awards/orbis-pictus-award-nonfiction-for-children/


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    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
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