by Carole Boston Weatherford (Author) David Elmo Cooper (Illustrator)
Four dolls.
Two psychologists.
One landmark court case.
During the first half of the twentieth century, schoolchildren in many parts of the United States were segregated--Black children and white children could not legally attend the same schools. In their so-called doll test, pioneering Black psychologists Kenneth and Mamie Clark investigated the effects of segregation by presenting children with two Black and two white baby dolls. "Show me the doll that you like best," they said. "Show me the doll that looks like you."
Their research showed that segregation harmed Black children. When the Brown v. Board of Education case came along to challenge school segregation, Kenneth Clark testified about the doll test. His testimony was compelling, and in 1954, the US Supreme court ultimately declared school segregation illegal.
Narrated by dolls, this book-length poem by acclaimed author Carole Boston Weatherford introduces Kenneth and Mamie Clark and their powerful research to young readers.
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K-Gr 4--Readers learn about the historical Doll Test from the point of view of the dolls; Weatherford first introduces 1939, when "separate but equal" was the law, leading to whites-only bathrooms, restaurants, and even schools. The dolls narrate how two psychologists, Dr. Kenneth Clark and Dr. Mamie Clark, designed a study called the Doll Test to find out how school segregation affected children. The researchers had a black doll and a white doll and then asked the children to "show me the doll that is the nice doll." Most chose the white doll. When asked to "show me the doll that looks bad," most children chose the black doll. Eventually, the laws were changed, and everyone could attend the same schools and do everything else together. Framing the heartbreaking test from the perspective of the dolls will be confusing to young children, though the rest of the text is effective. The illustrations use a variety of textures and exaggerated proportions for some of the people and angles, which seems intentional given the content. Actual questions asked in the test are used in the book, so there is a use of the N-word, making this a dramatic and great lesson for U.S. history units but too sensitive for sharing as read-aloud. VERDICT An astonishing and solid purchase for libraries looking for history books about racial segregation.--Kirsten Caldwell
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