My School Clothes

by

Illustrated by

content-image
content-image

My sister’s dress is too big for me!

  1. Do you sometimes wear someone else’s clothes? Is it fun to imagine you are that other person when you do it?
  2. How can you tell the dress and belt are too big?
  3. A rectangle is a four-sided shape like this page. Point to rectangles in the picture. Do you see any rectangles where you are?
content-image

My brother’s jersey is also too big for me.

  1. Looking at her face, how does she feel about having a jersey that is too big?
  2. Is the orange dress she has on the right size for her?
  3. Notice the new rectangles in this picture.
content-image

My bag is big.

But not too big!

  1. Is this bag too big for her?
  2. Count together the clasps on the bag.
  3. What would you put in this bag if it were yours?
content-image

This old belt is too small for me.

  1. Why might this child’s old belt from when she was younger be too small for her?
  2. What does the expression on her face tell you about how she is feeling about the belt?
  3. How many pieces of clothing has she tried on?
content-image

This is my doll’s hat.

  1. This is the fourth piece of clothing that is a bad fit for her. How does she feel about it? Do you think she is feeling discouraged?
  2. Count together the number of pieces of wood that make up the back of the chair.
  3. She has two eyes, ears, and arms, but only one mouth and nose. Where do the body parts that she has one of line up on her body?
content-image

My socks are the right size.

But the wrong color!

  1. Including her hair ties, which colors is she wearing?
  2. Do you think her socks are the wrong color?
  3. The picture of the chair is made up of several rectangles. How many can you find?
content-image

These are my new shoes.

  1. After all the other clothes, do you think these shoes will fit?
  2. Where did she go?
  3. These shoes must be in a different room – the door and windows are a different color. What colors were they before?
content-image

They fit me very well.

  1. Is her hat the same as her doll’s hat? Does it seem too small to you?
  2. Do you think she needs a belt with her dress?
  3. Is she ready for school now?

You are free to download, copy, translate or adapt this story and use the illustrations as long as you attribute in the following way:

My school clothes
Author — African Storybook, Clare Verbeek, Limbali Muyendekwa, Maureen Musale, Thembani
Dladla and Zanele Buthelezi
Illustration — Mlungisi Dlamini
Language — English
Level — First words
© School of Education (UKZN) and African Storybook Initiative 2018
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0
Source www.africanstorybook.org
Original source http://cae.ukzn.ac.za/resources/seedbooks

Prev
Page 1 of 9
Next