Reviews

Taking turns by Lisa Kerr

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Cheeky Monkey manners. The Five Mile Press, 2016. ISBN 9781760402662
(Ages: 2-5) Recommended. This is another in the Cheeky Monkey manners series (Please, Thank you, Sorry, Excuse me, Listening) and one of many in the Cheeky Monkey series. The small board book format is suited to preschool and early childhood and is a fun way to springboard discussions about manners - what they are, and when to use them. In this title, Cheeky Monkey hasn't learned how to take turns yet. When he has his friends over to play and they ask to have a turn of his bubble toy, it is lucky his mother is there to step in. She gives him a special timer for knowing when to swap over. Later on, she helps again, giving Cheeky Monkey a painted pebble to help the friends take turns talking and listening. The colourful illustrations are large without great detail; Cheeky Monkey is the main element on each page with a secondary focus on the other animals and their facial expressions. There are, however, many additional small animals (frogs, birds, mice, butterflies, etc.) which will enable younger children to retain focus, give them things to search for and foster discussions about the illustrations.
This book is great because it doesn't just talk about the importance of taking turns; it shows how much fun the animals all have have when they take turns, gives simple strategies that children can use for taking turns and encourages children to think about what it is like for the other animals when they don't get a turn. Social skills books such as these can often be overly didactic, but this one is understanding of children and of how hard it is to take turns. It lets the child know that it is okay to have trouble taking turns sometimes, but gives strategies for improving. The text manages successfully to tell an engaging story, get a message across and remain concise. With only five double-page spreads this book will keep young readers interested until the very end. Overall, it is a fun, simple way to introduce the idea of taking turns and learn some strategies for doing so.
Nicole Smith-Forrest

When we collided by Emery Lord

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Bloomsbury, 2016. ISBN 9781408870082
(Age: Senior Secondary) Highly recommended.  Extroverted Vivi, her cheerfulness hiding her fragility and the embarrassing memories she wants to forget, arrives with her mother to spend the summer in Verona Cove, a tiny coastal town, its details 'so perfect that it feels like a film set'. It is an idyllic setting and the inhabitants are kindly, caring, considerate and gentle.
Here octogenarians enjoy a drink of coffee in Betty's Diner, their ' . . . white puffs of hair hovering like clouds over the back of the aqua vinyl booths . . . ' and the owner greets everyone with endearments.
Vivi has a summer job at the pottery shop and this is where she meets Jonah and his five year old sister, Leah.
Jonah, the third oldest of six children, must share the role of father and mother to his younger siblings following the death of his father and his mother's inability to cope with her grief. He must share the responsibility of keeping the family restaurant operating to bring in income for the family. He loved and admired his father and grieves for him and he is sure this girl 'who looks like lemon meringue pie tastes, sunny, tangy, sweet', will refuse Leah's impulsive invitation to dinner. But Vivi accepts and falls in love with not only Jonah, but his siblings as well.
Vivi declares, 'I'm not much for silence: it simply doesn't suit me', Her vitality, creativity and sense of fun, even though her emotions are sometimes too high, sometimes too low, is like a tonic for this family, helping them breathe more easily 'in the stiflingly sad house'.
Vivi has found a family who needs her and this is balm to her troubled spirit. Vivi feels that Jonah complements her 'like mint ice cream and chocolate chips' and they draw close together with Vivi forcing Jonah to rethink his plans for the future and to try new ideas in the restaurant.
But Vivi's behaviour becomes more erratic. Without her mother's knowledge, she has been throwing away one of the tablets she is supposed to take every day to prevent another episode similar to the painful memories she is trying to suppress.
Vivi discovers her father's identity and after facing him and his hostility, she spins out of control and Jonah witnesses the road accident which nearly claims her life. During her recovery, Vivi faces up to the fact that she has bipolar disorder, and she and her mother reassess their future and decide to return to their former home.
These are warm, vital characters, with genuine concern for each other. It is so easy to become involved in their story and so refreshing to read of characters who know there will be difficult weeks in their lives but who move on with courage and optimism. They reach for 'happiness even in uncertainty'.
Emery Lord closes the novel with advice about dealing with bipolar disorder. Her belief that 'maybe the path isn't perfect but you get there' reflects the feeling of optimism that floods this book.
I highly recommend this book to teenage readers of either sex, just as I would recommend Jandy Nelson's novel, I'll give you the sun, for its honesty and compassion.
Thelma Harvey

Reflection by Rebecka Sharpe Shelberg

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Ill. by Robin Cowcher. Walker Books, 2016. ISBN 9781922179050
(Age: 7+) Recommended. War, Australia's involvement with war, Memorials, Anzac Day, Remembrance. This picture book presents a different way of looking at war in the classroom. It offers an introduction to the many wars in which Australia has been represented form the Boer War in 1899 through to the Second Gulf War. It reminds students that we have been in many conflicts around the world, and are still involved in an advisory capacity.
Each double page shows a family on Anzac Day. One page shows them remembering what has happened, honouring those who did not return from war, while the other side includes a picture of the war in which Australians were involved.
The family marching to the war memorial is reflected in the marching boots of the soldiers in the Boer War, and horses' hooves can be seen interspersed with those of the men. The cold of the early morning rise for the family is paralleled with the cold and wet conditions of the soldiers hunkered down in the trenches during World War One, while the service at the war memorial is reflected with the soldiers burying their dead during a lull in hostilities during World War Two. And on it goes, one page shiws the modern family at the memorial the other page reflecting one of the wars Australia has been part of through the years; Boer War, two World Wars, Korean War, Vietnam War, Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq and Bosnia. It is salutary to realise that war continues, that these wars have not ended war, that people still resort to war to solve problems between territories. In reflecting upon war, children will come to see that war affects us all, that it is not only Australians who are affected by war.
This book adds to the range of books available to remind students about war and its cost, of the many wars Australia has been involved in and the way we remember. And the beautiful water colour wash illustrations reflect this theme to perfection. Cowcher has used pen and ink outlines to render the family and those at war. Children will be intrigued to find clues in the illustrations to work out where the soldiers are fighting, and be aware of the number of red poppies accumulating as they read. Haunting red splotches fill the endpapers making a poignant reminder of this symbol of death in war.
And the last pages gives them an outline of those wars.
Fran Knight

Mad Magpie by Gregg Dreise

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Magabala Books, 2016. ISBN 9781925360066
(Age: 4-9) Highly recommended. Stay calm like the surface of the water, yet strong like its current. Greg Dreise's third morality tale Mad Magpie is dedicated to those children who have been picked on or bullied.
In the Dreamtime, Guluu the very angry magpie would swoop down and attack the bush animals. The magpie tries to justify his own actions telling the Elders, he is reacting to the butcher birds teasing him. To protect himself, he begins to act in a tough and angry manner. Old Dinewah the wise emu offers Guluu some sage advice to stay strong inside and ignore their bad behaviour.
Guluu attempts to ignore the naughty behaviour of the butcher birds, even when he flies to the other river bank, but the bullies pursue him. He stands up for himself and calms his anger with his beautiful songs. In turn, this wisdom and life lesson help bush and all the animals to live harmoniously again.
Gregg Driesse's paintings engage the audience with their traditional and modern style. He incorporates the use of natural colours - ochres, reds, browns and blacks with bird tracks and vibrant colours in the circles of dot painting. The birds are painted with a strength of emotions, there's angry Guluu, the taunting butcher birds and wise cockatoos placed against the calm surface and powerful river currents to anchor the action.
Silly Birds, Kookoo Kookaburra and Mad Magpie are motivating Dreamtime Stories. Gregg Driesse's picture books are important resources for schools and kindergartens, useful for lessons in English, Art, Health, Wellbeing, Music and Drama. They provide wisdom, insight and offer keys to help deal with children's behaviours and difficult situations faced by them.
Rhyllis Bignell

Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo

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Candlewick Press, 2016. ISBN 9781406363135
(Age: 9+) Highly recommended. Friendship, Grief, Single parents, Aged care, Competition. When her father leaves, Raymie is distraught. She joins a baton twirling class in the hope of winning Little Miss Central Florida Tire 1975, so having her picture in the paper to lure him back home. She knows that doing a good deed will sit well with the judges and tries to find one. But her soul does not seem to be getting much bigger. At the class she meets two other hopefuls, Louisiana and Beverly, each of whom have quite different reasons for being there. Beverly is a take it as you see it type of girl, no holds barred, straight talking and often abrasive, while her cynical comments about baton twirling, cat homes, families and the outrageous Ida Nee will have the reader laughing out loud. Louisiana is an orphan but quietly determined and lives with a very odd grandmother, always on the lookout for the authorities who may take her to a children's home. All three girls are quite different but come to work together to achieve their goals.
But the class does not turn out as it should, partly because of the antics of the very odd teacher, Ida Nee, and Raymie decides to read to someone at the aged centre instead of going to class, so embroiling Louisiana and Beverly in her attempts to retrieve the library book which she loses under one aged person's bed. Beverly wants to sabotage the baton competition, while all Louisiana wants is to get her cat, Archie back. Losing any possibility of winning the money for baton twirling, the girls decide to take matters into their own hands and go to the cat shelter to get Archie, making use of Beverly's skills.
A very funny, darkly humorous episode at the end sees Louisiana in hospital with an array of parents and caregivers arriving to tend to their girls. Raymie's soul becomes larger as she develops friendships and helps solve some of their problems, while accepting that her father is not returning.
Beautifully written, this tale is most appealing in detailing the lives of three young girls who do not quite fit in and are certainly not what they seem. The story evokes understanding and pathos, sympathy and humour as The Three Rancheros set out to right some wrongs.
Fran Knight

Chasing dreams by Karen Wood

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Trickstars bk 5. Allen and Unwin, 2015. ISBN 9781743319109
(Age: Early chapter book readers) Themes: Dreams; Horse-riding; Performance. The Trickstars trick-riding triplets face a new possibility in their lives after their Aunt Zelda posts a video of their amazing skills on the internet. Aunt Zelda, a practising fortune-teller, creates a dream opportunity for the girls through this publicity which is not immediately appreciated by the girl's Grandfather. An unfortunate accident occurs that almost prevents them showing their skills, but the girls still get to perform to a talent scout for their favourite television show.
The skills of the girls as trick-riders are central to the story, but their inherited 'magical' traits from their gypsy background also influence life. The mystic factor is usually low-key in this series, but it is inherent in the story-line. The triplets overcome their struggles and demonstrate positive behaviours with the occasional influence of the visions or magical gifts from their family heritage.
Suited for girls who love horses, and enjoy a bit of daring in an early chapter book.
Carolyn Hull

The boy who could do what he liked by David Baddiel

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Ill. by Jim Field. HarperCollins, 2016. ISBN 9780008167813
(Age: 7+) Highly recommended for young readers aged 7+.
(Alfie is a little older, but the story is easily accessible for a younger reader.) Family. Rules and routines. Children's behaviour.
Alfie lives a fairly boring life; at least his classmates tell him so. At home he lives a fairly regulated life, with documented routines for every aspect of life. But Alfie is not dreadfully unhappy, or worried by this. But his normal structured existence is ruffled a little the night his parents cannot get their normal babysitter, and the new sitter injects a little magical spark of mayhem when she says, 'Do what you like!' There is a little hint of the Fairy Godmother in her ability to make significant change without doing much at all... and she is incredibly and breath-takingly ancient!
This is a charming story, without the syrupy inclusion of the 'moral of the story' type ending. In fact the simplicity of the tale and the charming way that Baddiel introduces the routines of Alfie's life will appeal to all young readers. The amusing 'fart in the bed' scenario will also entertain young readers.
Carolyn Hull

How to build a motorcycle: A racing adventure of mechanics, teamwork, and friendship by Saskia Lacey

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Ill. by Martin Sodomka. Quarto, 2016. ISBN 9781633220577
Known as 'The Marvelous Mouse Mechanic' following his construction of and adventures in both a miniature plane and a miniature car, Eli is somewhat full of himself and much to the dismay of his best friends Hank Frog and Phoebe Sparrow, he is now determined to build a miniature motorbike. However, along with the talented pit crew they band together and set to work. As they start working, they encounter many unexpected obstacles, teaching them (and the reader) about the different parts that make a motorcycle work. Through hard work and perseverance, the three friends learn about mechanics and teamwork as they work together to build a miniature motorcycle, ready for the big race.
But an accident during trials puts lives, friendships and the race on the line. Is winning everything?
This is the third in this series that weaves the building of everyday objects into a story of friendship. Detailed illustrations explain the overall functions of the engine, clutch, brakes, distributors, as well as many other parts of the motorcycle and how they all go together to make it work demonstrating the principles of movement and motion and physics in a practical way that helps younger readers to understand them more clearly. More for the independent, mechanically-minded reader, this series certainly has a place on the shelves of those with makerspaces or trying to encourage a greater interest in STEM. It fits E for Engineering very well!
Barbara Braxton

Fluff Butt's windy world tour by Susan Berran

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Ill. by Sophie Scahill. Big Sky Publishing, 2016. ISBN 9781925275483
(Age: 5-8) Young novel. Fluff Butt travels around the world using - yes - the power of farts! As he travels to many tourist spots he causes much chaos in his own unique way.
Those in contact with young children will be aware of their obsession with farting and Fluff Butt will certainly appeal to the younger reader, who will get great amusement out of Fluff Butt's gross antics as well as visit some interesting locations on his world tour.
The story is told with a great repetitive refrain that beginning readers will love to repeat and the punchline will be another one that they will remember. Large text will be helpful for the emerging reader, and the colourful graphics are appealing to a younger audience.
Pat Pledger

The narrow bed... is the waiting grave by Sophie Hannah

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Hodder and Stoughton, 2016. ISBN 9781444776096
(Age: Adult - Senior students) Pairs of friends are being murdered, each having been given a small, handmade book, empty of words but for a few lines of poetry. When comedian Kim Tribbeck hears of this she remembers being given just such a book by a man at one of her shows a year ago. As she tells the Culver Valley police investigation team, she discarded the book and can't remember the venue but, being alive, she is an important link to the killer. However, Kim has no friends, she is famous for her comedy but also for being prickly and unapproachable. Her marriage has failed and she has ended her sexual relationship with another man, why then was she given a book, and why is she still alive? The narration shifts between excerpts from a yet unpublished draft of Kym Tribbeck's memoir interspersed with dated accounts of the murder team's investigation with diversions into their everyday lives and relationships. There are also emails from Kym's publisher, journalism from the ultra-feminist Sondra Halliday and short modern day parables which hint at the killer's motivation.
Sophie Hannah has a number of novels in the Culver Valley police series, some of which have been produced for television so I may have missed some of the back story but I found the police characters a bit sketchy and Sondra Halliday more of a caricature. The main character is convincing and reminded me of the Girl on the train protagonist, damaged and insecure but with a bravery we respect and a dark, self-deprecating humour that keeps the story interesting. The killer is not hard to guess and the motivation a bit strained as is the ending but fans of this author, adults and senior students, will devour it and look for more.
Sue Speck

Dale by Adrian Beck

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Stuff happens series, Penguin, 2016. ISBN 9781760141585
(Age: 7+) Recommended. School stories. Boys. Revenge. Bullying. Drama.
The popular Stuff happens series explores how boys cope with everyday situations at school, at home, with friends, playing sports and hanging out. Monvale Primary School is preparing to perform in a new musical The Schoolyard Jungle written by music teacher Mr. Johnson. Dale has overcome his fears, taken part in the auditions and been chosen for a special role. His Gran had coached him in a song from West Side Story - 'I feel pretty'! Of course, popular boy, super soccer and athletics star, Dan was given the lead as the 'roar-some' lion. Second Monkey is a role that just requires Dale to sing and dance with the animal chorus while Miranda plays the stop sign, and Boaz is the grey papier-mache boulder.
At the dress rehearsal, Dale becomes stuck in his bright orange monkey costume and makes a grand entrance right in the middle of Mr. Johnson's speech. Everyone is flabbergasted. Of course, Dan is quick to comment that Dale's outfit and hair colour are an exact match, 'you're a real ranga now, Dale!' The timeline of feelings at the end of this chapter shows Dale at an all time low, suffering embarrassment, humiliation and shame.
Is revenge the answer, does Dan need to be taught a lesson for this verbal harassment? When Dale decides to sabotage Dan's lion costume with Velcro, is it payback time?
Another high-interest chapter book for boys, for newly confident readers, exploring the trials and triumphs of school and family life.
Rhyllis Bignell

The little giraffe who lost her spots by Jedda Robaard

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Little Creatures series. The Five Mile Press, 2016. ISBN 9781760400392
(Ages: 1-4) Recommended. This is a new title in the Little Creatures series, all of which are about an animal who has lost something and is trying to get it back. Others in the series include The little mouse who lost her squeak and The little bear who lost her way. They are all playful and enjoyable to read. In this title, Little Giraffe wakes up feeling panicked because she has lost her spots. She finds many other spots and even tries painting on some new ones... but nothing can replace those she has lost. Children will enjoy the funny ending when she realises she is still wearing her pyjamas and her spots aren't lost after all!
The flaps - some which open up to double the page height - make for an interactive reading experience for young children and the board book format and durable flaps make it suitable for independent exploration. The narrative, while kept short and simple, integrates some more interesting vocabulary, such as panicked, successful and familiar, so is wonderful word exposure for toddlers and preschoolers. The soft, watercolour illustrations by Robaard portray the cute, cartoon style main characters. The fun typeface is large and integrated with the illustrations, making it perfect for preschoolers and their developing awareness of print.
Nicole Smith-Forrest

The little elephant who lost his bath by Jedda Robaard

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Little Creatures series. The Five Mile Press, 2016. ISBN 9781760400408
(Ages: 1-4) This is a new title in the Little Creatures series, all of which are about an animal who has lost something and is trying to get it back. Others in the series include The little mouse who lost her squeak and The little bear who lost her way. They are all playful and enjoyable to read. In this title, Little Elephant wakes up feeling grouchy. He needs a swim... but he doesn't know where he will find enough water. He tries the shower, a fountain, a sprinkler, a stream, even a paddling pool... but nothing seems to be big enough. Children will enjoy the humourous illustrations showing Elephant trying to fit into a tiny pool and being chased away from the sprinkler by a hose-wielding chick. Eventually Elephant has a brilliant idea and finds the perfect place for a bath.
The flaps - some which open up to double the page height - make for an interactive reading experience for young children and the board book format and durable flaps make it suitable for independent exploration. The narrative, while kept short and simple, integrates some more interesting vocabulary, such as grouchy, brilliant and crowded, so is wonderful word exposure for toddlers and preschoolers. The soft, watercolour illustrations by Robaard portray the cute, cartoon style main characters. The fun typeface is large and integrated with the illustrations, making it perfect for preschoolers and their developing awareness of print.
Nicole Smith-Forrest

Boomerang and bat by Mark Greenwood

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Ill. by Terry Denton. Allen and Unwin, 2016. ISBN 9781743319246
(Age: 7+) Highly recommended, Aboriginal themes, Aboriginal cricketers, Cricket. Subtitled, The story of the real first eleven, a cricket player or spectator will know immediately what this is about. For others, the illustration on the front cover will be enough to pique their interest and see what the themes will be. Whatever the immediate impact of cover and title, readers will quickly open this beautiful book to read the story or an amazing group of Aboriginal cricketers who toured England in 1868.
1868. The date astonished me, after all, European settlers had only been here eighty years, and for a group of Aboriginal cricketers to take the game on an tour England is breathtaking. Initially they were not allowed to leave Australia, but their manager, Charles Lawrence, got around that problem, secretly getting them on a ship in Victoria before sailing to England aboard the Parramatta out of Sydney.
They wowed the players and spectators across England, but they played so many games they became ill and when one of their team, King Cole died, they returned to Australia, unheralded.
The detailed illustrations show the team in all its finery, playing on the fields of England, defeating the teams they played against. Some hints of racial tension are shown and the text shows the huge pressure they were under to perform, as they not only played cricket matches, but put on entertainments after the match with their boomerangs and shields. No wonder Lawrence was keen to get them to England.
But the dismay the readers will feel when they come to the end of the book and realise that this group of young men were not recognised in any way will hang heavily, particularly when compared with the money heaped upon today's cricketers. It is galling to compare the two, but that comparison came immediately to my mind.
It seems that these men simply returned to their lives on the stations from where they came, while their talented captain, Johnny Mullagh played on. Apart from the sporting theme, many discussions could emanate from this book: Aboriginal participation in sport, rewards for being top players, racism directed at Aboriginal players, the test series today and so on.
Another book about Johnny Mullagh, Knockabout cricket by Neridah McMullin (Scholastic 2015) could be readily used with Boomerang and bat. The two would make an interesting pairing of the theme offering differing styles of presentation. Both are a 'must have' for any school library giving a different view of Aboriginal participation in sport. And they sit well alongside the two published about the early days of football, Kick it to me by Neridah McMullin (Scholastic 2012) and Marngrook by Titta Secombe (Magabala Books, 2012).
Fran Knight

One thousand hills by James Roy and Noel Zihabamwe

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Scholastic (Omnibus) 2016. ISBN 9781762990750 (Age: 15+) Highly recommended. Rwanda, Civil war. Beginning with a talk with a counsellor at his school in Belgium, a young man, at first resentful and wary, tells his story. The counsellor leads him gently into understanding that he needs to tell his story as it may explain his current unacceptable behaviour. The counsellor carefully leads the non committal Pascal into telling him about his family and then school, and church, drawing out the next part of his story, the shocking tale of a boy trying to keep alive. April, 1994, saw the first sequence of events which resulted in an horrific group of years in Rwanda when genocide wiped out eight hundred thousand people in one hundred days. This book is not for the casual reader: it is a deeply moving expose of one boy's involvement in that first day of killing, exceeding anything we are likely to hear about. I read it within two days, wanting to know how it happened, wanting to know how this young man escaped the horror and was able to rebuild his life in Australia, but at the same time, I walked the house, putting the book aside and taking on any other task to break the emotional drain of reading it. It is a tale simply told. Pascal is about eleven when it all happened, and he tells of his life with his family in a small village: we hear of the daily life, school, chores at home, Sunday at church, the friends and local shop. All the while small incidents occur which alert the reader to what is beginning to happen: we are aware of tension developing in the community as machetes appear, neighbours move away, the word 'cockroach' becomes widely used to mean something other than the house bug, the Tutsi people, and their teacher cries inexplicably, sending the children home early, while the radio broadcasts are so full of hate that his parents turn it off. Violence erupts once the president is killed, and Pascal and his siblings are told to stay at home. His parents are fearful, but when Pascal's brother sneaks out, Pascal offers to go and fetch him back. Returning alone he sees piles of bodies along the road and his neighbours exhort him to return home quickly. Once home he finds his sister alone and his parents missing. They shelter in an old tank and when he hears the church bells, moves stealthily to the church for sanctuary, avoiding the men in trucks, and pacifying his sister. There he is sent away by his friend, the priest and looking back sees men with machetes close the doors on the thousand people inside. Pascal finds his sister and together they flee Rwanda, living in a refugee camp for ten years before he comes to Australia. This story is harrowing to read but equally hard to put down. Through the eyes of an innocent young boy, we see images that no child should see. In this way it has similarities to The boy in the striped pyjamas (John Boyne) and Morris Gleitzman's Once series about Felix a young Jewish boy surviving during Nazi Germany. James Roy hopes that the book will serve to create some understanding of past events to ensure that it never happens again. And although I agree with him wholeheartedly, it seems that people have not heeded the lessons of history. And this will create a whole box of discussion points with students. Fran Knight