Questions
- Who is the main character of the story?
A: Vashti. - Where was Vashti sitting after class?
A: On her chair. - What was blank in front of Vashti?
A: Her paper. - What did the teacher ask Vashti to make?
A: A mark. - What did the teacher call Vashti’s blank paper?
A: A polar bear in a snowstorm. - What did Vashti say she could not do?
A: Draw. - What did Vashti do with the marker?
A: Jabbed the paper. - What did the teacher ask Vashti to do with the dot?
A: Sign it. - What was framed above the teacher’s desk?
A: Vashti’s dot. - What colour dot did Vashti paint first?
A: Red. - What happened when blue and yellow mixed?
A: They made green. - What did Vashti keep experimenting with?
A: Little coloured dots. - Who admired Vashti’s artwork?
A: A little boy. - What did the boy say about Vashti?
A: She was a great artist. - What did the boy say he couldn’t draw?
A: A straight line with a ruler. - Where were Vashti’s dots displayed?
A: At the school art show. - What kind of dots did Vashti make at the show?
A: Big dots. - How did Vashti make a dot without painting one?
A: By leaving it blank. - What did Vashti hand the boy?
A: A blank sheet of paper. - What did the boy’s pencil do while drawing?
A: It shook. - What did the boy draw on the paper?
A: A squiggle. - What did Vashti tell the boy to do with his line?
A: Sign it. - How did Vashti feel after seeing her dot framed?
A: Proud / Surprised. - What tools did Vashti use for painting dots?
A: Water colours. - What colour dots did Vashti paint besides red?
A: Purple, yellow, blue, green. - What did Vashti discover while mixing colours?
A: New colours. - What did Vashti realise about herself?
A: She could create art. - What was the main message the teacher gave Vashti?
A: Just start and sign your work. - What did Vashti pass on to the little boy?
A: Confidence to try. - What is the theme of the story?
A: Creativity and self-belief.
Conversations
Vashti and Teacher (Beginning of the story)
- Teacher: Why are you sitting with a blank paper, Vashti?
- Vashti: Because I can’t draw.
- Teacher: Just make a mark and see where it takes you.
- Vashti: Really? That sounds silly.
- Teacher: Trust me, try it.
Vashti Makes Her First Dot
- Vashti: Fine! I’ll make something. [jabs the paper] There!
- Teacher: Hm. Very interesting.
- Vashti: It’s just a dot! Nothing special.
- Teacher: Sign it, Vashti.
- Vashti: Sign it? On a dot?
- Teacher: Yes, it’s your creation.
Vashti Sees Her Dot Framed
- Vashti: Wait! Is that… my dot on the wall?
- Teacher: Yes, it is. I framed it.
- Vashti: But it was only a little dot.
- Teacher: A little dot can start something big.
- Vashti: Maybe I can draw after all.
Vashti with the Little Boy
- Boy: You’re a great artist, Vashti.
- Vashti: Thank you. Do you like my dots?
- Boy: I wish I could draw like you.
- Vashti: I bet you can.
- Boy: No, I can’t even draw a straight line!
Vashti Encourages the Boy
- Vashti: Here, take this paper. Show me what you can do.
- Boy: [draws a shaky line] It’s just a squiggle.
- Vashti: That’s fine. It’s your work.
- Boy: But it looks silly.
- Vashti: Not at all. Now sign it!
Textual Analysis
Here is the story of a young girl who believed that she could not draw pictures. Do you think she can draw? Let’s see.
- The art class was over, but Vashti sat glued to her chair. Her paper was blank. Her teacher smiled. “Just make a mark and see where it takes you.”
- Vashti’s teacher leaned over the blank paper. “Ah! A polar bear in a snow – storm!” she said.
- “Very funny! I just can’t draw!” Said Vashti. Vashti grabbed a marker and gave the paper a good, strong jab. “There!”
- Her teacher picked up the paper and studied it carefully. “Hm.” She pushed the paper towards Vashti and quietly said. “Now sign it.”
- The next week, Vashti walked into the art class. She was surprised to see what was hanging above her teacher’s desk. It was the little dot she had drawn – HER DOT! All framed in swirly gold!
- Vashti thought for a moment. ‘Well, maybe I can’t draw. But I can sign my name.’
- “Hmh! I can make a better dot than that!” She opened her set of water colours and set to work. Vashti painted and painted. A red dot. A purple dot. A yellow dot. A blue dot. The blue mixed with the yellow. She discovered that she could make a green dot. Vashti kept experimenting with lots of little dots in many colours.
- Vashti noticed a little boy gazing up at her. “You’re really a great artist. I wish I could draw,” he said.
- “I bet you can,” said Vashti.
- “Me? No. Not I. I can’t even draw a straight line with a ruler.”
- At the school art show a few weeks later, Vashti’s dots made quite a splash. If I can make little dots, I can make BIG dots, too. Vashti splashed her colours with a bigger brush on a bigger paper to make bigger dots. Vashti even made a dot by not painting a dot.
- Vashti smiled. She handed the boy a blank sheet of paper. “Show me.”
- The boy’s pencil shook as he drew his line. Vashti stared at the boy’s squiggle. And then she said…. “Sign it.”