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Who Are You?: The Kid's Guide to Gender Identity

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What do you like?  
How do you feel?  
Who are you?
This brightly illustrated childrens book provides a straightforward introduction to gender for anyone aged 4+. It presents clear and direct language for understanding and talking about how we experience gender: our bodies, our expression and our identity. An interactive three-layered wheel included in the book is a simple, yet powerful, tool to clearly demonstrate the difference between our body, how we express ourselves through our clothes and hobbies, and our gender identity. Ideal for use in the classroom or at home, a short page-by-page guide for adults at the back of the book further explains the key concepts and identifies useful discussion points.  
This is a one-of-a-kind resource for understanding and celebrating the gender diversity that surrounds us.
A much-needed non-fiction childrens book exploring gender. Who Are You? will benefit every child!
- Pamela Wool, Director of Family Services, Gender Spectrum
 
Children are teaching us that gender comes in all kinds of shapes and colors, rather than two boxes, and Brook Pessin-Whedbee has given us the wonderful gift of Who Are You? to help all little people learn just how this works and how they can know their own gender. And for the adults-Who Are You? ends with an inspiring discussion guide for parents, for teachers, for anyone who wants to support children in their gender creativity.
- Diane Ehrensaft, Ph.D., author of ‘The Gender Creative Child and ‘Gender Born, Gender Made and Director of Mental Health, Child and Adolescent Gender Center
 
Who Are You? will undoubtedly help numerous children and their communities learn about the diversity of gender experiences.
- Dr. Kristina Olson, Director, TransYouth Project, University of Washington
 
A gem that promises to make these concepts accessible to teachers and immediately useful in their classroom contexts. It will certainly become a "go to" resource in teacher education.
- Thomas M. Philip, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Teacher Education and Urban Schooling, UCLA
 
A straightforward and long overdue book for kids about the gender spectrum. We can hope that, years from now, the existence of the gender spectrum is so well understood and appreciated that a book like this is not necessary. Until then, there is an urgent need, and Pessin-Whedbee fills it with compassion and clarity.
- Ty Alper, Director, Berkeley Unified School Board
 
Brook Pessin-Whedbee brings us a delightfully creative and playful childrens book on gender... accessible to children and teachers alike. It is what those of us thinking about social issues in the classrooms of young children have really been needing!
- Anna Richert, Professor, Mills College School of Education
 
Through simple yet compelling writing, paired with the interactive gender wheel, our programs future elementary and middle school teachers will finally have an excellent resource for teaching about the gender spectrum... a touchstone resource for any school, teacher, or parent that strives to create a more inclusive world.
- Elisa Salasin, Director, Developmental Teacher Education, UC Berkeley
 
Every book for kids talks about gender, whether intentionally or not. For a variety of reasons, there arent a whole lot of teaching tools -- in books or elsewhere -- that address just what the heck gender is. Brook Pessin-Whedbee has been thinking about this a lot. Shes written a book that looks directly at gender and celebrates its many manifestations. Its pretty straightforward actually. So straightforward that its kind of shocking there arent a pile of books like this at the local library. Who Are You? introduces young people and the folks who care about them to some vocabulary to describe our varied experiences by separating our understanding of gender into our bodies, our expression, and our identities. How do we feel? How do we express ourselves? These are the kinds of questions that help people grow.
 
Who Are You? doesnt have a hint of conflict in it. Theres plenty of conflict in the world. Who Are You? is a celebration. When we read it, everything becomes instantly bigger, kinder, and more interesting.
- Jon Nichols, author of ‘Crabtree
 
How do we give young children the opportunity to think in complex ways about gender? This is a question that many teachers and parents are asking and Who Are You? provides a wonderful response... In order to create truly welcoming schools and to address the social emotional needs of our children, classrooms need texts like Who Are You?.
- Carrie Wilson, Executive Director, Mills Teacher Scholars
 
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