
The Double Digit Club
By Marion Dane Bauer
About the book:
This summer nine-year-old Sarah is dreading the first day
of summer vacation. It will be her best friend’s birthday, and stuck up Valerie
Miller will ask Paige to join her silly Double-Digit Club, a group that ignores
girls who are not ten yet. If Paige says yes, Sarah will have no friends for the
whole summer because her birthday isn’t until the end of August. Even though
Sarah and Paige have promised to be “last, best, and only friends,” Sarah is not
sure Paige will be able to pass up the chance to be accepted by the most popular
girls in school.
In this heartfelt novel, a girl discovers the meaning of
true and honest friendship and learns to face the future as a wiser and more
open person.
“Middle-graders will sympathize with how seemingly innocuous errors in judgment
can snowball into serious trouble and respond to Miss B.'s gentle but firm
guidance as Sarah learns the simple but very complicated truths about growing
up.”
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Booklist
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About this guide:
This guide includes
discussion questions and projects intended to extend the use of the novel into
classrooms, book clubs, and literature circles. It should promote discussion on
the issues and themes of the novel including friendship, forgiveness, belonging,
and growing up.
Discussion Guide:
- The Double Digit Club explores both close friendships
and small groups of girls. Do you think friendship between boys and girls are
different? How? Why? Is there anything girls could learn from boys’
friendships? What could boys learn from girls’ friendships?
- Paige isn’t upfront with Sarah about being invited to
join the DDC. Sarah isn’t honest with Paige about how she acquired the doll or
with Miss B about borrowing it. Paige also doesn’t reveal how she feels about
Sarah’s bossy behavior. Which of these untruths do you think is the most
harmful? Are there ever any good reasons to lie? When? Could honesty have
saved this friendship?
- Would you like to be a member of the Double Digit Club?
Why or why not? Why do you think girls often form these exclusive clubs? Do
you think it is more about letting people in or keeping others out? Why do you
think these clubs get started? What can you do if you’re faced with being left
out?
- Discuss these famous quotes on friendship:
"Walking with a friend in the dark is
better than walking alone in the light."
- Helen Keller
"Am I not destroying my enemies when I
make friends of them?"
-Abraham
Lincoln
"A real friend is one who walks in when
the rest of the world walks out."
- Walter Winchell
“Don't walk in front of me, I may not
follow.
Don't walk behind me, I may not lead.
Just walk beside me and be my friend.”
-
Albert Camus
- There is an old Hasidic saying that “One who looks for a
friend without faults will have none.” What could Paige have done or said to
Sarah about how she was feeling before abandoning her? Can true friends talk
about the other’s faults without ruining a friendship? How? Is it important to
know what faults you might have? Why?
- Sarah asks Miss B, “Does growing up always have to be so
hard?” Miss B answers that, “I’m afraid it does, my dear. Growing up is just
plain hard work.” (p. 112) Do you agree with Miss B? Why? What do you think is
the most difficult part of growing up? Why do some girls want to grow up and
others put it off as long as possible? What parts about growing up are
exciting? What parts are scary?
- Miss Berglund
doesn’t act like most adults. She doesn’t try to deny Sarah’s feelings,
contradict her emotions or reassure her with false hope. Instead, she is often
quiet or agrees with what Sarah has said. Why do you think most adults
(especially parents) try to deny how kids feel? Would you really like your
parents to act like Miss B with her complete honesty? What might you lose if
they did?
- Do you agree with
Miss B’s assessment that: “I guess there’s always a bit of hate in every kind
of love.” What does she mean by this statement? How is this true of Sarah and
Paige? Of Miss B and her father? Is it true in any of your own friendships?
How?
- Sarah offers to
make amends for breaking Nancy/Collette. She offers to read to Miss B or wash
her dishes, anything she wants her to do. But Miss B declines because it
wouldn’t fix the crack or change anything. Why do you think Miss B feels this
way? Do you agree? Does she want her to remember what she’s done and not feel
like it’s over? Will Sarah be able to fix the crack in her friendship with
Miss B or Paige either? Can some things never really be fixed between people?
When?
- What do you think
of Sarah’s idea to start a Growing Up Club where anyone who wanted to be a
friend could join. “You wouldn’t have to be a certain age. Or a certain
anything, for that matter. No one would have to be like anyone else or have to
do what anyone else said.” (p. 116) Do you think the idea could work? Could it
work for you? How?
Projects:
Write a classified
advertisement for a friend. You have only twenty words so choose carefully. Here
are some words you might consider for your ad: funny, silly, quiet, shy, honest,
likes to play basketball, soccer, board games, etc. loves camping, swimming,
playing outside…
Using one of the
famous quotes on friendship, or creating one of your own, develop a piece of art
inspired by it. Share it with your friend.
Write a letter to an
old or new friend.
As a group brainstorm
a list of things that friends do for one another. Using various markers let
students write their responses directly onto bulletin board or butcher paper.
When the discussion is over, add in large block letters: BE A FRIEND TODAY for
an instant bulletin board.

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