Rose evidently struggles with the allure of group social acceptance when Claire and Molly encounter her out with Melody’s family at the aquarium Rose’s discomfort, coupled with her weak defense of Melody, suggests that she is unsure where her allegiances lie. An example of positive peer pressure occurs when Melody arrives at school with her Medi-Talker for the first time most students don’t know what to make of her newfound ability to speak, but once Connor-a popular student-approves, others follow suit. The pressure to act in accordance with the rest of the group recurs throughout the novel, though each incidence of peer pressure comes in a different form. Whether or not a character intends to offend Melody, the character’s implicit sense of superiority comes through. Ochoa turns Melody into an object of curiosity by asking leading questions about how difficult it must have been for her to participate at the Whiz Kids competition, while Claire and Molly speak cruelly of Melody as though she cannot hear. The condescending comments and behaviors range from unconsciously ignorant to outright mean-spirited: Ms. Melody repeatedly encounters people who have patronizing attitudes toward her and her condition. When Melody rejects her quiz team’s pity, she is able to do so because she has a strong support system of people who truly care for her Melody isn’t reliant on her classmates’ superficial and patronizing gestures of friendship. Shannon are instrumental in acquiring additional support workers and providing a more varied learning environment. Melody is able to thrive with the physical and emotional assistance of her neighbor, Mrs. The difficulties of caring for a child with developmental difficulties are made clear by Melody’s parents’ frustration and exhaustion-particularly because they both work. Melody’s support system is a vital component of her existence. Ableism also pervades the physical landscape, exemplified by the lack of a wheelchair ramp at Linguini’s restaurant. Dimming’s preference for able-bodied students is made apparent when he discourages Melody from trying to join the team. Even when Melody proves her knowledge and earns a place on the quiz team, ableist discrimination guarantees that Claire and Molly don't believe her competence and accuse her of having cheated. The majority of able-bodied people Melody encounters in her life are unfamiliar with cerebral palsy, and as a result they underestimate her intelligence. Ableismīecause of Melody’s physical appearance, most people underestimate her abilities and assume she is mentally challenged. Even when Melody acquires the Medi-Talker device that allows her to communicate, she finds herself left out of after-school phone calls and genuine friendship. Melody’s physical appearance and inability to speak means she is isolated from social life on the playground, never asked to join in games. She is treated with disregard by most people in society, most of whom won’t bother to address her directly or ask her name when they meet her. Melody’s cerebral palsy paralyzes most of her body, leading people to presume that her mind is similarly disabled. Ultimately, Melody is unable to warn her mother that Penny has escaped the house: as a result, Melody’s mother backs her SUV over Penny’s leg. In class, she is unable to speak up to answer questions. Hugely’s office, she is unable to point out the flaws in his assessments of her intelligence. Later, Melody slips from her wheelchair, and is unable to call for help. When Melody is a baby, she is unable to tell her mother she likes the song “Elvira” when she hears it on the radio. Melody’s physical inability to speak leads to a number of conflicts whose importance escalates as the narrative progresses. Melody: Very smart, kind, a little funny when she wants to.Though Melody is narrating the book from a first-person perspective, she reveals in the first chapter that she has never spoken a single word aloud.Let the Circle Be Unbroken Buttered Bones.Not Quite Burned Out But Crispy Around the Edges.V their neighbor takes care of Melody and Penny after school and days sometimes on no school days also. Her sister Penney loves there dog Butterscotch but Butterscotch loves Melody because She does not ride her like a pony. Summery There is a girl named Melody and she can’t talk or walk (she was born like this). Out of my mind Melody’s pink wheelchair By: Sharon m Draper power point made by: Emma Ferguson
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