A Little Golden Book (#28)
By Norman
Wright
Pictures by
Nino CarbeCopyright 1947
Chip Chip the Chipmunk lives in the hollow of a tree with his father and his two brothers, Chap Chap and Chop Chop. The story opens on a beautiful sunny day, with Chip Chip complaining about the need to sit in the dark school room, learning his one times one and two times two. The temptation is too much for him, and while Mr. Chipmunk is out of the room, Chip Chip slips away to play outside. Oh no! There is a hunter in the woods that day and Chip Chip is very afraid. Although he spends a whole night cold and frightened, when morning comes he finds a way to outsmart the hunter and chase him out of the woods. Now all the animals are safe. Mr. Chipmunk finds his wayward son and after hearing his story, admits pride in little Chip Chip’s bravery.
This story
is attempting to give children the lesson to always pay attention in school
because you never know when you’ll need the lessons learned there. The world is big and scary and school will
prepare you to handle it. “Now that he
had seen the dangers of the forest, he wanted to know all he could learn about
taking care of himself. He was always
the first one there when it was time for school – and he wrote his lists very
neatly, and did his one times on and his two times two, and even his three
times three. “
All I could
think of while reading this book, though, is how wrong a school system is that
forces children to sit at their desks all day long, never getting out into the
real world to have practical lessons. It
was Chip Chip, who ventured out into the woods all by himself on that beautiful
day, who saved the animals from the hunter.
So shouldn’t the lesson from this
story be for Mr. Chipmunk? Get out of that hole in the tree and show your
children how to survive in the real world!
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