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Testimonials from teachers and others."Doug's sense of humor along with content made his presentations exciting"
Doug Wilhelm was great with our Fennville Middle School students. His sense of humor along with the content of The Revealers made his presentations exciting for middle schoolers and allowed him to relate to all our students. His excitement about writing inspired them to "want" to read and write. Wilhelm's writing workshop was interactive and fun for all! He is now an official honorary "Blackhawk" and welcome at FMS any time he's in Michigan!
"Giving everyone a chance to participate in our community-wide discussion" Because if his visit our entire middle school staff has since received additional training on bullying. Answers to a student questionnaire are providing the school administration with information to address the issue. I strongly recommend bringing Doug to your community-wide discussion on bullying. As one of our students said that night, "Mr. Wilhelm, you are my hero."
"What a positive impact this has had on our school!"
The students loved the book and were thrilled to be able to work with the author. Awareness of what bullying is and the effects of this behavior were increased. We saw more children becoming allies for each other as well as standing up for themselves. What a positive impact this has had on our school!
"The students were mesmerized"
Doug was just great with our students. He listened to their concerns and you could tell by his sincere conversation style that he knew what issues students face in school. Students and teachers all commented on how much they enjoyed Doug's presentation and his visit to our school.
"Our sixth graders read and LOVED this book"
Doug met with two large groups and enthusiastically answered all of their questions. Best of all, he shared his own story of being bullied. The students had really been looking forward to Doug's visit, and he did not disappoint them. Teachers as well as students enjoyed listening to the ways The Revealers came together. For the students who attended the writing workshop in the afternoon, Doug was inspiring. They were jumping out of their seats wanting to share ideas about their own writing with him. It was a great afternoon.
"You took an issue that is close to many of my students, and spoke about it in plain and real language" I appreciated how you were open, friendly and willing to answer any question my students had. You spoke to them as writers (not merely as kids trying to write), reinforcing how I want them to feel about themselves. You took an issue (bullying) that is so close to many of my students and spoke about it in plain and real language, with humility and humor. You were genuinely enthusiastic to hear their thoughts on bullying, writing and books. The fact that you wanted their opinion regarding books absolutely thrilled them. When my class set out to create their quilt depicting scenes from The Revealers, they could draw on their experience of you reading and talking with them. They could feel more a part of your book and their project because they felt they knew you now.
"This was the best unit I've ever done with kids - Kids who had avoided reading for years became immersed in this book, and then asked me what else Doug Wilhelm had written. Another thing that happened was that students started talking to their parents about the book and what they were doing in class. Parents actually emailed me and stopped me in the grocery store to thank me. "Whatever you're doing, keep it up!" one parent told me. I even had parents asking to borrow the book so they could read it. As a teacher of hundreds and a mother of five, the only other time I've ever witnessed such excitement about reading was when the Harry Potter series began. What's different about The Revealers is that not only has the desire to read increased, but my students want to write more. Several of them asked to take their writing portfolios home over the summer, so they could work on revisions and add to them. Doug Wilhelm's voice has ignited a spark in them that I've never before seen in seventh graders. Lastly, another thing that is remarkable to me is the trust that was built while working on this unit. Students began to trust each other and me, so they felt as if they could share experiences without feeling like they'd just taken a huge risk. They supported each other, and they also believe they can do something about bullying in our school and community that is positive. This was the best unit I've ever done with kids. As one of my students said, "Bullying isn't cool, but The Revealers is!"
Town librarian reports on a local reading project: By all standards this book successfully moved people to action. A group of students [eighth graders at Otter Valley Regional High School in Brandon, Vt.] formed a new school association, "The Bully Busters," focused on stopping the practice of bullying. Students I spoke with identified the book's characters, language, relationships and themes of friendship, youthful idealism, social activism, and adult hypocrisy. Students felt empowered by the book and had the courage to speak openly about their experiences, whether being bullied or bullying someone else. An eighth grade teacher has made reading this book part of every student's curriculum. The lasting effect on our community is phenomenal. Additionally, libraries across the state are replicating the project in their communities. The Revealers offers a powerful starting point to engage the issues surrounding bullying in our society, particularly the role of school in the lives of young people. This book demonstrates how literature can help us learn about our culture and ourselves.
"Every page and chapter rings true," The Revealers is just such a book. Every page and chapter rings true with the angst, isolation, drama, confusion, and humor of middle school kids trying to find their way through the cruel and complex social order of early puberty. Some bewildered kids are clueless as to how they fell out of favor; some "nerds" have simply accepted their fate and learned how to stay out of the crossfire; and the few and powerful "alpha males" and "queen bees" are already wielding their social power with diabolical and menacing accuracy. Doug Wilhelm's extensive research and work with middle-schoolers has paid off in the authentic voice of this short and powerful work. Not only are the scenarios recognizable to anyone who has suffered through middle school (or suffered through raising middle schoolers), but the technology that permeates the novel is realistic as kids post messages, use KidNet (the school's local area network), and "instant message" each other in ways my generation still can't quite grasp. We watch in awe as three kids, empowered by their intelligence, use technology to "out" the bullies in their own backyard: Darkland (a.k.a. Parkland) Middle School. Some of the sequences are horrifyingyet kids will tell you they are not exaggerated. Wilhelm artfully weaves lessons of history through his tale as students explore the story of Anne Frank in social studies class and realize that silenceeven in the face of a formidable enemyis wrong and can turn deadly. Like much of Walter Dean Myers's work, this book has a winning combination of realistic problems, ordinary kids, good values (without giving easy answers), and just enough grit to keep kids on the edge of their seats. Middle schoolers have their own little world, their own rules, and their own ways of communicating. Although there are some well-meaning adults in the book, most of the time they orbit the perimeter of this strange world rather than engage in itjust like real life. The Revealers is good and good for you; it has already been used by many schools to create a dialogue among students and with adults about a hot topic that is also a perennial problem: bullies.
"I'm amazed at the sensitivity and accuracy," There's no quick fix in this story; instead the author incorporates his hours of interviews with actual students to weave a theme of self-awareness from the vantage point of both bully and victim. Excellent for students, teachers and parents!
"After you read it, pass it on," I sat down one weekend and finished The Revealers in four hours, I couldn't (and wouldn't) put it down. It is so real as it shows the bullying kids do to each other, that it made me feel like I was back in school, which was over 25 years ago, and I could feel the pain the the victims in the book were feeling. But the way the characters react to the bullying and make a difference was inspiring. They didn't do anything extraordinary, they just worked together, reluctantly at first, to help each other out. My teenage daughter and I highly recommend this book not only for middle school students, but for parents and teachers. A true "must read" book and one on my top 10 list. My advice, after you read it, pass it on and share your feelings and thoughts with others!
"This book helped me realize I am not the only one," One day I was just going out to recess and these kids just started trying to hit me with a wall ball. They would just bounce it off a wall to hit me. They did this so quiet that the teachers did not see. Sometimes when we sled at recess this one big kid would just push you down the steepest way when you weren't even in your sled. He did that to me but he pushed me down the back way where all the big jumps are. These jumps are about four feet high. I went down and was flung off my sled and had to go to the nurse. These stories are true and are like the ones in The Revealers. This book helped me realize that I am not the only one who gets bullied. I liked the way Russell, Elliot, and Catalina tried to figure out what made the bullies do what they do.
"The story is well-written without being preachy," a teacher says I am always looking for good books to read to my fifth grade class. I purchased The Revealers because it addressed the issue of bullying. I finished it over the weekend during winter break and was excited to read it to my class. Even though anti-bullying is a hot topic today, bullying has been around for ages. I can still recall many incidents in my own schooling.This story is well-written without being preachy, and the characters are real and believable. The book lets the victims empower themselves by not having to suffer in silence. When we see and ignore bullying, it sends the message that it is acceptable. The Revealers offers a credible strategy to deal with bullying. Although the characters are in middle school, every kid can relate to this issue. I read the first chapter to my twins, who are sixth graders in Seattle, to get their perspective. Their school has a major anti-bullying campaign. My son immediately wanted to read it. He is the shortest sixth grader in his school, and could relate to this book. My class loved the characters Russ, Elliot and Catalina, but also relished the antics of the bullies, especially Richie. Most of the students cited all the rules that the bullies were breaking, according to our own discipline policy. My substitute teacher got so involved with the story that she read to the class for an hour. She even stayed late after school so she could finish reading the book. Her note said that "every fifth grade teacher should read this book to their class." I have recommended this book to our librarian, to my book club, and to all the teachers that I know.
"This book has the power to change attitudes and behavior," writes a longtime middle school language arts teacher I am a recently retired middle school language arts teacher, and now I organize reading and writing programs in my community. I've been looking for over a year for the perfect book that will spark the interest of early adolescents, speak to a topic of relevance to them yet have universal appeal to all ages, and initiate discussion and action that may bring about positive change in our school.This is a tall order! You can't imagine my excitement when I discovered The Revealers. As I began reading, I was immediately drawn to Russell's angst when he says in the second paragraph, "I wanted people to say, 'Hey Russell! Sit with us!' But I'd open my mouth and what came out would be loud and clanky and wrong. And they would give me that quick, flat, puzzled stare that is the stock weapon of the cool seventh grader and seems to ask, 'What species are you, exactly?' And I would go away thinking I was hopeless." From that first page on, I knew that this was the book I wanted to use to promote reading and discussion. Doug not only has developed a cast of characters that reflects the middle school population, but he focuses on several driving issues that face early teens every day. I see in this novel a way for students to recognize themselves, recognize others, and recognize the various reasons that a person becomes the perpetrator or victim of bullying. The plot also gives readers an awareness of how school authorities or parents can affect the school climate, and the power that students have to change this. This book has the power to change attitudes and behavior, and that is why it excites me. Our local library has written a grant to provide access to over 100 copies of The Revealers to Mill River Union Middle School [in Clarendon, Vt.]. I've been teaching 26 years, and reading and encouraging young teens to read is what I do. I predict great things of this book. (Don't laugh, I said that when Holes came out, too!)
Giving fifth graders a view into middle school life What do grade school teachers fear most? That their shining stars will burn out or be burned out in middle school. I wish I had a nickel for every time I've met a former student at Stop and Shop or Marshals, only to be told that other students are harassing my former student.Now I have a solution to this problem: The Revealers by Doug Wilhelm is one of my solutions. The Revealers gives students a view into life in middle school. We can have discussions about Russell's attitude, Catalina's will to keep the experiment going, or Elliot's protective response to the nasty note Catalina receives. Boston University believes these discussions about bullying are important, too. They have funded a grant I wrote to pay for multiple copies of Doug Wilhelm's The Revealers, so that fifth graders will have some ammunition to deal with bullying in the middle school.
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Karon Perron
middle school teacher
Bonnie Stewart
librarian
Patricia S. Worsham
high school teacher
Thomas Chamberlain
school counselor
Becky Carlson
prevention specialist
Sam Whitney
middle schooler
Dayle Ishii
elementary school teacher
Louise Duda
community reading program organizer |
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| * THE REVEALERS © 2003 by Doug Wilhelm - Used with the permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux |