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You Can't Say You Can't Play

by Vivian Gussin Paley, Harvard University Press (1993)

-- Review by Ellie Goldberg, M.Ed., for Kliatt Paperback Book Review Guide

   
You don't have to be a kindergarten teacher to see the profound wisdom and practical uses of Vivian Gussin Paley's classroom exercise in social relations.

    You Can't Say You Can't Play is an exploration of the basic underlying forces of social exclusion that makes some children feel like strangers in their own classrooms. It is two stories in one. On one level, Paley is describing her students' social development in response to a new rule that prohibits anyone from excluding anyone else. 

    There is also a parable, a story about the adventures of a magical magpie, that is a vehicle to help her students understand and voice their feelings of rejection and loneliness. Both Paley's journal-like reflections and imaginative story are deeply touching.

    We clearly see that exclusion makes everyone feel tentative and unsafe. In contrast, each time a cause for sadness in removed for even one child, the classroom seems nicer.  The result is increased experimentation and flexibility in many activities.  Everyone spends more time playing and playing with more people. There are fewer power games and arguments. Paley's classroom shows us many valuable lessons.

    Paley believes that no one has the right to make anyone feel unwanted or unliked.  School is a space that belongs to everyone. The challenge is protecting everyone's equal ownership and participation.  Paley reveals all the small but significant ways that children develop the practice of rejection. She talks us through her students' fears, objections, and mistakes as they sort out the varied dimensions of shared social responsibility and the dilemmas of the new rule.

    If schools are ever going to really value diversity and offer everyone equal opportunities, everyone is going to have to make the social and personal changes that discourage "rejection" and promote inclusive communities. It is a moral and social challenge that confronts us all.

    You Can't Say You Can't Play is an extremely important book that will engage parents, students and teachers at all school levels in much worthwhile self-reflection and social action. Highly recommended.


Paley believes that no one has the right to make anyone feel unwanted or unliked. 


 

ELLIE GOLDBERG, M.Ed. is an education and environmental health advocate for healthy children, safe schools and sustainable communities – clean water, clean air, clean energy and safe food. Inspired by the legacy of Rachel Carson, who taught that our health and security is intimately connected to the quality of our environment, Ellie is active in public health, environmental, educational and public policy organizations working to increase citizen engagement, government accountability and corporate responsibility on behalf of children and their healthy development. 

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Ellie.Goldberg@gmail.com 

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