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About the Author

Katie Kissinger is an educator, author, and activist for social change. She has been teaching children and adults from an anti-bias/anti-oppression perspective for 30 years. She works as an Adjunct College Instructor and an Education Consultant for Social Justice. She is the author of the show more bestselling children's book All the Colors We Are: The Story of How We Get Our Skin Color. show less

Works by Katie Kissinger

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1975
Gender
female
Education
University Of Nebraska At Lincoln (M.Ed Urban Diversity and Multicultural Studies/Curriculum and Instruction)
Occupations
author
Arts Coordinator
Organizations
Majority Minority Schools
Short biography
Katie Kissinger, M.A., lives in eastern Oregon and works as a college instructor, a Head Start teacher, and a trainer in anti-bias and diversity issues. http://www.redleafpress.org/contribut...
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Boring, Oregon, USA
Lincoln, Nebraska, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

11 reviews
I had mixed feelings about the book “All the Colors We Are”. One reason that I liked the book was because it was very multicultural and answered a question that many children have- “How do we get our own special color of skin?” The book includes photographs of people that have all different shades of skin and includes text in Spanish, as well as English. The book explains how our skin color is determined by our ancestors, the sun, and melanin, which was meant to celebrate the essence show more of one way that we are all special and different from one another. However, I think that this book might lead children to believe that a lot of focus needs to be put on skin color and sounds a bit racist in parts. For instance, “Even though we often say the words, ‘He is black,’ or ‘She is white,’ all of us have skin that is a different shade of brown.” Some children may have been taught that it is rude and inappropriate to describe someone by saying “white” or “black” so this may confuse or offend them. Another instance is when the author writes, “What color is your skin? What name would you like to give the color of your skin?” I don’t think this is a good message to pass on to children, that you must name the color of your skin. While this book tackles an important issue, it seems to me that the book insinuates that our skin color is a defining factor of our person when we often try to teach children the opposite of this. The big idea of the book is to teach children why everyone’s skin is a different color. show less
Great, informative look at melanin and ancestry and the roles they play in shaping skin color. Nice photographs of kids of different races.
This book is bilingual (English and Spanish) and uses simple but accurate science to explain how we each get our own skin tones; your family/ancestors, the environment, and melanin, the special chemical in your skin. The colorful photographs of real people help children see that though we look different, our skin is special and created in the same way.
This is a great book to read to younger ones. The pages are full of photographs of children with all different skin color. It's really cool because it actually teaches you how our skin color is determined. If you want to teach your child about how diverse our world is and the importance of it, this book would be a great start!

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Statistics

Works
2
Members
579
Popularity
#43,292
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
11
ISBNs
13

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