Classroom Center [DIRECT]
The group huddled. Priya pointed at the pocket watch. “The watch is stuck at 3:17 — the exact moment they jumped through time.” Leo turned the rusty key over. “This key opens a locker at an abandoned subway station. Inside is a map with no places.” Mia picked up the conch shell. “When you put it to your ear, you don’t hear the ocean. You hear a little girl asking, ‘Where did you go, Grandpa?’” Caleb lifted the cracked magnifying glass again. “And this? It doesn’t make things bigger. It makes you remember what you lost.”
Just as they finished their six-page illustrated story, Mrs. Alvarez returned. The art center kids were smearing glue. The computer center kids were arguing over a game. But the Storytelling Corner was silent in a different way — the way a room is silent when everyone is listening to a story inside their heads. classroom center
Every morning, Mrs. Alvarez’s 24 students rushed to their favorite classroom centers: the Lego table, the art easel, the science jars, the computer screen. But the Storytelling Corner — a small rug with a wicker basket of random objects (a conch shell, a rusty key, a red marble, a pocket watch, and a cracked magnifying glass) — sat empty. “It’s boring,” said Leo. “There’s no screen,” added Priya. The group huddled