student spotlight
By Brendan Martin
Roaring Good Books New Albany Middle School seventh-grader writes childrenâs books with grandfather
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Photos courtesy of Brendan Martin and Steve Doherty
O
livia Dybik, a pupil of taekwondo, Olivia Dybik and Steve Doherty author the can hold her own in a fight. But Little Tiger series. The duo plan on writing eight more books to teach children valuable donât worry; sheâs not flinging fellife lessons. low students across campus. Instead, she strikes at the heart of bullying. Dybik attends taekwondo class twice a week with her grandfather, Steve Doherty, at New Albanyâs Oriental Martial Arts College. While taekwondo does teach combat skills, itâs more about inner strength and self-control. âTaekwondo is a workout of the mind and body of the life principles,â she says. âSome kids, when they joined, didnât know the life principles. And our job as instructors and taekwondo students is to help them learn respect, discipline, selfcontrol, patience and many more (values).â It is these principles that inspired Doherty to start creating the Little Tiger books. Doherty had previously written four historical fiction novels, but this was his first time writing for children. One day, he asked his granddaughter to come over and take a look at his draft.
âShe turns to me and goes âPapa Steve, you canât write to a first-grader like you do to a high school student,ââ says Doherty, âand I go âOh, did I do that?â And so, I said, âCan you fix it?â⌠When she was through, I sat through and read it all and said, âYouâre my co-author,â because she just totally re-wrote them. She made them so simple and instead of four or five lines of sentences she brought it down to a sentence.â They plan to release a total of 10 Little Tiger books. The pages are filled with bright colors and friendly cartoons to capture the eyes of children. Their first book, Little Tiger â Respect, was published on Dybikâs birthday in 2019 and teaches the meaning of, you guessed it, respect. The idea was born after a real-life situation when Dybik dealt with a rowdy student who didnât understand the concept. Little Tiger - Guardian of Peace was published in December. With two down and eight to go, the duo already feels that the overall goal of minimizing bullies and showing kids different skills, such as peacefulness to stop them in their tracks, is already making an impact. âWhat it means to be a guardian of peace is to never start a fight,â says Dybik. âWhen you are a guardian of peace,
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