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<h1>CHILDREN'S CLASSICS IN DRAMATIC FORM</h1>
<h3>A READER FOR THE FOURTH GRADE</h3>
<h3>BY AUGUSTA STEVENSON</h3>
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<h4>TO MISS N. CROPSEY</h4>
<h5>Assistant Superintendent<br/>
Indianapolis Public Schools</h5>
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<h2>FOREWORD</h2>
<p>This book is intended to accomplish three distinct purposes:
first, to arouse a greater interest in oral reading; second, to
develop an expressive voice—sadly lacking in the case of most
Americans; and third, to give freedom and grace in the bodily
attitudes and movements which are involved in reading and speaking.
The stories given are for the most part adaptations of favorite
tales from folklore,—Andersen, Grimm, Aesop, and the Arabian
Nights having been freely drawn upon.</p>
<p>Children are dramatic by nature. They <i>are</i> for the time
the kings, the fairies, and the heroes that they picture in their
imaginations. They <i>are</i> these characters with such abandon
and with such intense pleasure that the on-looker must believe that
nature intended that they should give play to this dramatic
instinct, not so much formally, with all the trappings of the
man-made stage, but spontaneously and naturally, as they talk and
read. If this expressive instinct can be utilized in the teaching
of reading, we shall be able both to add greatly to the child's
enjoyment and to improve the quality of his oral reading. In these
days when so many books are hastily read in school, there is a
tendency to sacrifice expression to the mechanics and
interpretation of reading. Those acquainted with school work know
too well the resulting monotonous, indistinct speech and the
self-conscious, listless attitude which characterize so much of the
reading of pupils in grades above the third. It is believed that
this little book will aid in overcoming these serious faults in
reading, which all teachers and parents deplore. The dramatic
appeal of the stories will cause the child to lose himself in the
character he is impersonating and read with a naturalness and
expressiveness unknown to him before, and this improvement will be
evident in all his oral reading, and even in his speech.</p>
<p>The use of the book permits the whole range of expression, from
merely reading the stories effectively, to "acting them out" with
as little, or as much, stage-setting or costuming as a parent or
teacher may desire. The stories are especially designed to be read
as a part of the regular reading work. Many different plans for
using the book will suggest themselves to the teacher. After a
preliminary reading of a story during the study period, the teacher
may assign different parts to various children, she herself reading
the stage directions and the other brief descriptions inclosed in
brackets. The italicized explanations in parentheses are not
intended to be read aloud; they will aid in giving the child the
cue as to the way the part should be rendered. After the story has
been read in this way, if thought advisable it can be played
informally and simply, with no attempt at costuming or theatric
effects. It will often add to the interest of the play to have some
of the children represent certain of the inanimate objects of the
scene, as the forest, the town gate, a door, etc. Occasionally, for
the "open day," or as a special exercise, a favorite play may be
given by the children with the simplest kind of costuming and
stage-setting. These can well be made in the school as a part of
the manual training and sewing work. In giving the play, it will
generally be better not to have pupils memorize the exact words of
the book, but to depend upon the impromptu rendering of their
parts. This method will contribute more largely to the training in
English.</p>
<p>The best results will usually be obtained by using these stories
in the fourth grade. In some schools, however, the stories in the
first part of the book may profitably be used in the third
grade.</p>
<p>The author has been led to believe from her own experience and
from her conversation with many other teachers that there is a
pronounced call for this kind of book. She therefore hopes that in
the preparation of this book she may have been of service to the
teachers and children who may be led to use it.</p>
<p>A. S.</p>
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