Michael Clay Thompson Design
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Michael Clay Thompson not only wrote the curriculum, he designed all of
the books. And he is a genius at using design. He understands the
relationship of ideas to presentation. If you look at the first chapter
of Music of the Hemispheres, you see that the reader immediately is
imbued with the sounds of the language from looking at the book spread
out before him or her. He does not make words fit on a page. He makes
ideas and understanding fit on pages, and those ideas and understanding
are presented in ways that other publishers would find highly
inefficient. There is a lot of white space. Letters bleed off the
page. If he has a couple of simple concepts, he does not try to force
them together onto one page to squeeze a few dollars out of the cost of
manufacture. Michael Clay Thompson is concerned with making certain the child gets it and
enjoys getting it. He does not cut corners on ideas.
He tends to use a soft blue as well as various shades of gray when his
publisher will allow it. The blue and gray are calming colors, an
influence to slow down the child′s metabolism and allow him or her to
respond to the written word and presented image. Michael avoids colors like
orange that tend to raise metabolic levels and influence children toward
a more frenzied response to stimulus. A calm child is a child who can
take the time to learn, and this is the state he wants his readers. So
many textbook publishers simply splash a primary pallet across the page
as though it itself is where the child′s concentration should focus.
Their aim is to startle, and the result is that they disrupt learning
rather than enhance it.
Michael Clay Thompson uses art, not photographs or simple illustrations, to engage
children. Art is more imaginative, more opening, more welcoming, more
friendly. Art engages the imagination and encourages the child to
respond creatively. Photos and illustrations too often present a closed
reality; there is no place for the child to go once the picture has been
viewed for a few seconds. It is not so with art. When he uses
photographs (as in the Poetics Series ), they are often open-ended photos that can take the
child to worlds where the imagination can roam. He is always looking to
engage the child at the level of Socratic questions, and repeatedly he
employs art toward this end.
Sentence Island and
Paragraph Town are the ultimate in the use
of art to engage creativity and imagination in the service of learning
some of the most basic concepts of writing. They are, fittingly enough,
also the ultimate in the use of storytelling for the same purpose.
Michael Clay Thompson is able to go way beyond the concepts of more
prosaic texts because he is engaging the child at so many levels. He
has used book design just as he has used storytelling in the service of
pedagogy at a level so far beyond what we are used to that most adults
miss what is transpiring.
But so many children respond with enthusiasm!
The proof is always in the learning, and with Michael Clay Thompson the children learn
and love it.
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