The course taught through experience is usually a course that sticks to the life of a child. In "The Lesson" of Toni Cade Bambara, Miss Moore, one of the stellar figures, taught lessons to poor children raised in Harlem. The work of Bambara is expressed as "drawing the story of a woman who suffers from problems and learns." Regardless of social status, pursuit of ideas of social inequality and personal desires.
In "The Lesson" by Toni Cade Bambara, Miss Moore took several children from a low level community to F.A.O. Schwartz, a toy store. In today's lesson, Miss Moore, educated at the university, will teach the children about various social and economic courses. Children will soon understand that these toys are far beyond their abilities and parents' wishes, and to buy these toys someone must be rich. When the children leave the store, you can see that the children are affected by the course. Is Miss Moore's lesson useful for children or is it harmful? Perhaps this lesson will be better studied as children are too young to master all aspects of the curriculum being offered.
Toni Cade Bambara's "Course" is a short story about the turnkey moment in young girls' lives. Silvia vividly reminds me of the day I learned the life course that Miss Moore started. The core idea of this story is that the actual life experience is the most influential experience. Silvia remembered the spiritual state of the day and she thought rather than Moore's educational tour trip, "I go to the pool to see cool performances." As you enter the city, Silvia will notice the economic wealth of the people living there and how much they possess. Silvia was shocked by an expensive toy shop. There was a place where Sylvia was angry and the headwheel began to rotate. On my way home, Sylvia thought how her mother reacts when Sylvia asks her to see the clown inside the store.
Toni Cade Bambara's short story "The Lesson" was held in downtown New York. Sylvia, the hero, is a 14 year old African-American girl who tells stories in the first person's story. Sylvia mentioned Miss Moore, a teacher who believes her responsibility to help lesson children learn. Miss Moore felt lessons learned from a very expensive luxury toy store in FAO Schwarz, at the heart of Manhattan. Moore took her children to FAO Schwarz for symbolism by Bambara. Miss Moore uses FAO Schwartz's toys to convey the position of children in social ladders.