From the author to the reader:
Show-and-Tell was the very best part of school for me, both as a student
and as a teacher.
As a kid, I put more into getting ready for my turn to present than I
put into the rest of my homework. Show-and-Tell was real in a way that
much of what I learned in school was not. It was education that came out
of my life experience.
As a teacher, I was always surprised by what I learned from these
amateur hours. A kid I was sure I knew well would reach down into a
paper bag he carried and fish out some odd-shaped treasure and attach
meaning to it beyond my most extravagant expectation.
Again and again I learned that what I thought was only true for me . . .
only valued by me . . . only cared about by me . . . was common
property. The principles guiding this book are not far from the spirit
of Show-and-Tell. It is stuff from home--that place in my mind and heart
where I most truly live.
P.S. This volume picks up where I left off in All I Really Need to Know
I Learned in Kindergarten, when I promised to tell about the time it
was on fire when I lay down on it.