Rainbow Fish is about a blue fish living in the big ocean amongst other blue fish. Unlike the other blue fish, Rainbow Fish is unique because he has shinny, colorful scales. One day, another blue fish comes up to Rainbow Fish and asks Rainbow if he would be willing to give him one of his shinny scales. Rainbow tells the other fish NO and swims away. The other fish goes to his friends and tells them that Rainbow was not willing to share. They believe Rainbow is being mean and decide to ignore him. Rainbow Fish does not understand why the other fish are ignoring him and seeks advice from an octopus. The octopus explains to Rainbow about the importance of sharing and Rainbow ends up sharing his scales with the other fish.
Rainbow Fish taught me the importance of sharing with others and showed me how respect is not guaranteed. In the beginning, Rainbow Fish thought he deserved to be respected because of his special scales. He soon realized that respect has to be earned, it is not guaranteed because of admiration; having an admired quality does not necessarily make you "more special" than others. Another lesson Rainbow Fish illustrated to me is that sharing can be beneficial to both the giver and the receiver.
It is always so interesting to think about how the use of animals as characters positions the reader, especially young children. Somehow, the use of animals gets across particular messages in a more accessible way. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI liked how you brought up that this book taught you lessons that you can still use today. It is always interesting to think about how perceptive children are, and how what they learn at a very early age will stick with them for the rest of their lives.
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