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  1. describe why they chose their job, how they dress for their job, and why their job is important. Encourage the children to ask questions about why the visitors chose their professions and what they accomplished to achieve their goal. • FASHION STATEMENT : Ask the children if they think they should dress like a boy or girl, or if they

  2. When she came by our table, I got my first good look at her face. She wasn’t gorgeous, wasn’t ugly. A sprinkle of freckles crossed the bridge of her nose. Mostly, she looked like a hundred other girls in school, except for two things. She wore no makeup, and her eyes were the biggest I had ever seen, like deer’s eyes caught in headlights. She

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  3. May 8, 2017 · scarves 4utter on our chests,” we sang over and over, trying to get the timing right. The old black pump organ wheezed and squeaked as impatiently as we did. We made another start, but Wang Dayong burst out a beat early, and the whole class broke into laughter. Just then Principal Long appeared at the door. She walked in, looking less serious ...

  4. Dress Like a . . . There are many different professions shown in Dress Like a Girl, including an astronaut, doctor, firefighter, and conductor. Draw yourself dressed as what you want to be when you grow up! Dr˛˝˙ Li a Gi Written by Patricia Toht • Illustrated by Lorian Tu-Dean I’m dressed like a

  5. Apr 19, 2023 · Victorian parents weren’t necessarily looking to dress their children in gender-neutral garb; instead, they wanted their children to just look like “a baby” ― or “a sexless cherub” as ...

  6. Jan 22, 2019 · In Dress Like A Girl by Patricia Toht, girls are encouraged to live at their fullest potential. The first page poses a big question, what does it mean to dress like a girl? As the book ends the question is answered. Each page illustrates girls proudly wearing different outfits; doctor outfits, astronaut outfits, police outfits, and scuba outfits.

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  8. Oct 1, 1998 · For three years and more than a million dollars of insurance, the problem was “treated”—with makeup lessons and instructions in how to walk like a girl. With a new epilogue by Scholinski, whose name is now Dylan and who identifies as nonbinary, this revised paperback edition of The Last Time I Wore a Dress looks back at those experiences and their life since.