When I sit in my fourth grade placement class during reading time and watch students delves into The Diary of a Wimpy Kid, The Tale of Despereaux, Harry Potter and Tuck Everlasting, it makes me excited to see them enthralled by great literature that can span generations. I think that these books are great opportunities for parents and children to love literature together!
But here in lies the problem. More and more of these books are being turned into major motion picture events. I just saw the preview for The Diary of a Wi
mpy Kid: The Movie. One of the greatest things about reading is that you can tell the story in your imagination. Based on the authors descriptions, you can make the characters look like anyone you want, the locations are your own and you can create a movie in your mind that is all your own. Now, with more of these books actually being made into movies, children have a cast designated for them. They can see someone's vision of Hogwarts castle or Depereaux's dungeon and are shown a casting director's image of Winnie Foster and Greg Heffley.Does this kill the imagination for these young readers? Are they still able to make their own movies or has that thrilled been taken away from them? I know that for myself, after watching a movie I see the movie characters as I read. Edward Cullen will forever take the form of Robert Pattinson no matter how hard I try to revert back to my image of the breath taking vampire from the Twilight Saga. Don't get me wrong, I have seen all of the Twilight movies and I am very excited to see the final installment of Harry Potter, but I had already completed all of the books before ever seeing these imposed images in my personal movies.
I worry that by taking so many books that are intended for young readers and making them into movies we are taking away a great experience from students. Will the Wimpy Kid series hold the same fascination for the next generation of young reader when they are able to get the movies from NetFlix? Will they have the same enjoyment I see my fourth grade boys get right now reading the series? I never think that the movie is ever as good as the book. The experience is just not the same. I worry that future generations will not experience laying in bed with a flashlight trying to read the last few chapters of a great book because they know they can just rent it this weekend.
I am all for a good movie, but I wish that some things were left to my own imagination.



These two observations make sense to me and definitely to an 8 year old. When asked what a judge does, one student told me that she thinks a judges job is to decide where a child goes when parents get a divorce. I would bet that this little girl has seen this first hand. Their answers to these questions were all a matter of perspective. How are they seeing the world at 8?




This was a photography exhibit mixed with a few artifacts including an actual flat bottomed skiff donated from a fisherman's family. As a person who loves fishing and the coast of North Carolina, this was a really interesting experience. Seeing these old boats as a piece of history as well as art showed a side of North Carolina that I feel many people do not get to see. These old boats, sometimes abandoned, are not junk, they are a piece of eastern North Carolina's history and hopefully it's future.
