Characters

Plot Points

Themes & Messages

Setting & Culture

Vocabulary & Language
100

This is the young narrator of the story.

Who is Adjoa?

100

Adjoa lives in this country.

What is Ghana?

100

Aidoo challenges these traditional expectations placed on girls.

What are gender roles?

100

The story is set in this African country.

What is Ghana?

100

The story uses this kind of narrator: first, second, or third person

What is first person?

200

She constantly criticizes Adjoa’s legs.

Who is Nana (Adjoa’s grandmother)?

200

The story is told from this point of view.

What is first-person point of view?

200

The story explores this theme related to how people view girls and women’s bodies.

What is body image?

200

Adjoa is part of this ethnic group in Ghana.

What is the Akan (or Fanti) ethnic group?

200

This is the tone of the story — a mix of innocence, confusion, and reflection.

What is thoughtful or reflective?

300

She defends Adjoa’s legs and supports her confidence.

Who is Adjoa’s mother (Maami)?

300

Adjoa wins this, proving her legs are an asset.

What is a running competition?

300

This literary device is used to contrast Nana's beliefs with Adjoa’s experiences.

What is juxtaposition?

300

The grandmother believes this body part is essential for childbirth.

What are hips?

300

The author uses this writing technique to show Adjoa’s internal thoughts.

What is internal monologue or stream of consciousness?

400

Adjoa says she wants to be like this character when she grows up.

Who is her mother?

400

Adjoa feels confused because adults say these two things are required for having children.

What are hips and legs?

400

Adjoa learns this about herself by the end of the story.

What is self-worth / confidence in her abilities?

400

In Adjoa’s community, girls are expected to grow up to do this.

What is to become mothers?

400

“The Girl Who Can” is an example of this short literary form.

What is a short story?

500

This character represents traditional values and expectations in the story.

Who is Nana?

500

The conflict in the story arises because Adjoa's grandmother is concerned about this physical feature.

What are her thin legs?

500

The story explores generational conflict between these two family members.

Who are Adjoa and Nana?

500

Cultural expectations in the story often focus on a girl’s ability to become this.

What is a wife and mother?

500

This is the main literary device used in the title to suggest empowerment.

What is irony or metaphor (the phrase implies ability beyond what is expected)?