

Classroom Guide for Mama's Windowby Lynn Rubright, afterword by Patricia McKissack
Reading Level *Reading Level: Grade 4 Interest Level: Grades 3-6 Guided Reading Level: S *Reading level based on the Spache Readability Formula Themes Family, Belonging, Hope, Fulfilling Dreams, African American Interest Synopsis When his mother dies, James Earle (“Sugar”) Martin goes to live with his uncle Free, a gruff crippled man who makes his living fishing in a swamp in the Mississippi Delta. At first Sugar and Uncle Free barely get along, and Sugar is afraid of the swamp and everything associated with it. He also dislikes the daily ordeal of fishing with his uncle and making deliveries to the folks in Cypress Grove. The only bright spot in Sugar’s life is the building of the new Sweet Kingdom Church, which will be adorned with a beautiful stained glass window that his mother scrimped and saved for while she was alive. As time passes Sugar slowly acclimates to his surroundings, and a budding sense of family develops between him and Uncle Free. Then one day Sugar discovers that the money for Mama’s window is being used for the construction of the church itself. Devastated but unwilling to give up on his mother’s dream, Sugar finds affirmation and support where he least expects it. In a truly heartwarming yet unexpected ending, Mama’s Window shows us all the importance of hope, dreams, and finding a place to call home. Background An Afterword by noted children’s writer Patricia C. McKissack gives some historical background about Owen Whitfield, an African American sharecropper, minister, and labor leader in Arkansas in the 1930s. Mama’s Window was inspired by episodes in the early life of Whitfield, and the character of Sugar is loosely based on Whitfield as a boy. Classroom Extensions This curriculum was designed by Mama’s Window author Lynn Rubright (Lynn Rubright Online) for the Storytelling and Literacy Project for COCA (Contemporary Center for the Arts) as an Urban Arts Program for St. Louis Public Schools, 2005–2007. Rubright presents many of these activities (and more) during school residencies across the country. For information, contact Lynn Rubright. Goals By reading Mama’s Window, and many of the related reader’s theater scripts developed by the author, students practice word attack skills and glean meanings of unknown words from context clues to increase comprehension. The activities incorporate listening, thinking, speaking, writing, reading, and creative drama exercises to help students master a variety of national standards in language arts and social studies. Reading aloud helps students become more fluent and expressive oral interpreters of literature. Many of the activities connect art, music, physical education, science, and math across the curriculum, and include drama, movement, creative writing, and poetry. Objectives Language Arts Students can:
Social Studies Students can:
Art and Math Students can:
Music Students can:
Physical Education Students can:
Interdisciplinary / Internet Research Activities Students can:
Literature Connections: Using Mama’s Window with Patricia C. McKissack’s Books The author’s long-time friend and colleague Patricia C. McKissack served as manuscript consultant during the writing of Mama’s Window and also wrote the Afterword. Because many of McKissack’s books deal with African American themes, several of her books can be used with the Mama’s Window extension activities.
About the Author Lynn Rubright is a professional storyteller who has taught many storytelling courses over the past twenty years. She is the recipient of the Circle of Excellence Award from the National Storytelling Association and was awarded a regional EMMY for her work as a co-producer of the documentary Oh Freedom After While: The Missouri Sharecropper Protest of 1939. While researching the life of Owen Whitfield for that film, Rubright came across a few details about his childhood, which ultimately served as the inspiration for Mama’s Window. Rubright and her husband live in St. Louis, Missouri. This is her first book for children. To find out more visit Lynn Rubright Online. Learn more about Mama's Window |









