Anonymous wrote:I'm one of the moms who wouldn't let her kids read these books. The brattiness is a significant reason, but not the only one.
I think kids absorb a lot as they read and while the grammar in a book doesn't need to be perfect, I don't want the books to go out of their way to introduce bad habits. It doesn't help that our schools (MCPS) didn't focus on grammar instruction. As it was, I think that one of my kids managed to mangle every irregular verb in the language at some point all on her own.
The grammar is less of an issue. Her behavior is flat out unacceptable. She doesn't listen to her parents, she doesn't listen other teachers. She treats her classmates poorly. She is not a brat, she is a badly behaved kid that everyone simply rolls their eyes at. We read the Hawaii book and I could feel the pain of the adults sitting in front of her on the plane as she kicked their seats, threw toys around and was loud and poorly behaved. Her parents did little to nothing to correct her behavior but I am suppose to find it funny?
We read the books, my son commented that she was not being nice. He was confused why she was allowed to call people names.
I am fine with books were kids push limits, I love me some Ramona. I am fine where kids act like kids. But I would prefer the parents and teachers not just roll over and let the kids behave like kids. Heck, We really like Captain Awesome. There is some name calling between two of the characters but there are plenty of times where the two begrudgingly admit the other one is ok and helps the other. I am thrilled that my little dude can read Captain Underpants, an entire series based on two kids pranking everyone and a ridiculous "hero" they created.
But Junie and the Weird School books treat the adults as if they are non-entities and simply allow the kids to behave in a way that anyone of us out in public would be pissed if we saw a child behave that way. She is the kid that threads are started about.