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Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday's 
Monday Motivators

This blog page hosts posts some Mondays. The intent and purpose of a Monday Motivator is to provide teachers or readers with an idea they can share or an activity they can conduct right away.

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Stick Figure Snapshot: Understanding Character Identity, Motivation, and Development by Samantha Duke

7/17/2023

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My student teaching began with a challenge from my cooperating teacher. She invited me to step in at the end of a novel unit in her AP Literature and Composition class and lead the class through a review of the book. My first response was excitement. She was trusting me to take over an advanced class. And she’d given me total freedom in designing my lesson. My second response was panic. She was trusting me to take over an advanced class. And
​she’d given me total freedom in designing my lesson. 

I realized quickly that freedom meant all the decisions were mine. What to talk about? What not to talk about? And how to engage students with the chosen material?  

Oh, and the novel in question?  Jane Eyre. But how to review a novel of over 500 pages in a single 90 minute class period? 
I decided to focus on the titular character. Jane’s journey of self-realization parallels the author’s own and is what makes the book so relatable for readers. To help students better understand Jane’s growth over the course of the novel, I divided them into pairs or trios and assigned each small group a pivotal moment from Jane’s journey to study in detail. I then gave each group a copy of my Stick Figure Snapshot activity. 

While most of the character studies and body biographies I’ve seen used in the classroom offer a holistic look at each character, encouraging students to pull details from anywhere in the text to support their analysis, Stick Figure Snapshot is designed to help students analyze who a character is at a particular moment in time. Rather than simply asking students to describe a character, I ask students to answer ten questions about their assigned character within their assigned moment/page limit: 
  1. What is the character doing? 
  2. What is the character thinking?
  3. What does the character hear?
  4. What does the character see? 
  5. What does the character say? 
  6. How is the character feeling?
  7. What is/are the character’s strength/s?
  8. What does the character want/need?
  9. Where is the character going?
  10. What is the character’s greatest weakness? 

Intentionally, some of the questions are straightforward while others require the reader to draw inferences from the text in order to make claims about the character. While you could stop there, I require my students to provide a quote from the text to support their answers. Once students have completed their stick figures, I also have them present their work to the class, or we post them on the walls and conduct a gallery walk.


This activity has been a staple in my teaching for three reasons: generalizability, ease of use, and versatility.

I have used this assignment in nearly every English class I have taught, from 7th grade ELA to AP Lit. The generic nature of the questions make them applicable to any text. To name a few, I have used a Stick Figure Snapshot with Ender’s Game, The Hunger Games, Frankenstein, Macbeth, and a variety of short stories and even nonfiction texts. My students have also used this assignment with their own choice texts during independent reading projects as a way to highlight key moments in their character’s development. 

Stick Figure Snapshot is one of the lowest prep activities in my teacher toolbox. While students can be allowed to choose their own scenes to analyze, I find that the assignment works best when I choose the scenes and their page limits. The scene/page limits selection can take some time, but it is relatively quick work when you are familiar with the text, and once you have a list of pivotal scenes, this assignment becomes one that you can implement with essentially no prep at all.

Depending on the levels and needs of your students, you can easily adjust the assignment to meet your learning goals. It can be scaled down or up via text/character selection and by modifying the answer requirements for students (e.g. copying from the text, using their own words, integrating quotes into full sentence responses, etc.). You can also ask students to move beyond the literal in their responses to each question (e.g. instead of merely hearing something said by another character, they might hear a betrayal, a promise, a secret, etc.). 

Students can trace the development of one character across an entire text or analyze multiple characters in a single scene to break down interpersonal conflict and get a better handle on perspective and character motivation. This activity could be particularly helpful with understanding character development in books like Robin Benway’s A Year to the Day that employ an unusual narrative structure (in this case, telling the story in reverse chronological order) as it would allow students to reverse engineer a character’s development arc.

While initially designed as a lesson for a single class period, Stick Figure Snapshot can be customized and used as a foundation for a variety of other activities and discussions either as students are reading or after they have completed a text. I have also found it to be a great introduction to close reading and textual analysis. Its simplicity makes it accessible for students of all levels to complete independently or in groups. Just as anyone can draw a stick figure, anyone can engage in character analysis.

Samantha Duke is a doctoral student at North Carolina State University studying Literacy and English Language Arts Education. Before beginning her graduate studies, she taught English at both the middle and high school levels. 
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Barbeques, Sales, and Propaganda: Using YA to Contextualize July 4th by Ritu Radhakrishnan

7/3/2023

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As we near another 4th of July holiday, (and one that precedes a potentially contentious Presidential Election), we will be inundated by the usual rhetoric surrounding the notion of “independence” of the United States of America. Grocery stores display barbeque accoutrement, retailers detail special sales in honor of our independence, and political propaganda heightens to new levels, with some announcements not-so-deftly including all of the above.
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White House, @WhiteHouse, July 1, 2021
Admittedly, to most it is a day off, a time to rejuvenate, a time for a barbecue or a dinner with friends, or just an opportunity to “catch up” on work. The 4th of July is layered, and fraught with tensions and misinformation. It is more than barbeques, sales, and propaganda. Other than occasional think pieces and blurbs scattered across social media, the 4th of July does not offer a lot of space for reflection of what Independence Day actually means to multiple communities within America.

On July 5, 1852, Frederick Douglas gave his keynote address during an Independence Day celebration in Rochester, NY, titled  What to the Slave is the Fourth of July. During his speech, Douglas asserted,“[t]his Fourth of July is yours, not mine. You may rejoice, I must mourn.” While many Black Americans are familiar with Douglas’s words and celebrate the significance of Juneteenth, it was largely ignored and unknown to most Americans. In 2021, Juneteenth was declared a federal holiday to celebrate when the enslaved Black Americans of Galveston, Texas were freed as Union Troops arrived after the Civil War ended (Jack Miller Center, 2022; National Museum of African American History and Culture, 2023). While most Americans may not be able to provide a historical context for Juneteenth as a National Holiday, it provides a significant event in our nation’s history.

Unfortunately, the words of Fredrick Douglas  are still salient today. Freedoms exist in different ways for specific communities and populations. Existing freedoms for underrepresented and marginalized groups continue to be under attack. A 2021 article in the Journal of Democracy indicated that violence has increased in response to the tensions between the two main political parties and a “variety of social events that touch on a number of interrelated identities” (Kleinfeld, 2021). Political tensions have increased, along with hateful rhetoric and violence. As political tensions and rhetoric increases, so has oppressive legislation. In the past year, at least 17 states have enacted laws restricting or banning gender affirming care for minors. (DeMillo, 2023). Currently, 13 states have eliminated abortion services, 3 have severely restricted these services, and 9 have restricted services (Planned Parenthood, 2023). According to Mapping Police Violence, Black Americans are 2.9  times more likely to be killed by the police than White Americans. Ultimately, these tensions are about choices-who has the agency to make their own choices?
​

Our K-12 schools are a reflection of our social and political tensions. During 2022, challenges to books have taken place across all 50 states (ALA, 2023). The reason for these challenges are clear: our young learners continue to hold the power to change to and make changes for the future. More recently, Young Adult (YA) literature has been reimagined by multiple voices and communities. Adolescent readers have learned to turn to books to be seen, to be heard, to have a voice, to inspire change, and to get and give ideas. YA books have the power to challenge our institutional structures, and that seems to scare those who challenge books. The choice to read a book should belong to the reader.  

Most schools are out for the summer; however, there are myriad opportunities to share the power of YA literature with your students and young readers. It may be in the form of an email to former students or incoming students, or a shared book list with the school or local library or a simple recommendation. One may choose to join a summer program at a local child care center or community center, or simply publish book choices on social media. The important thing is to share literature that continues to inspire our young learners and future leaders to enact social justice. While there are many reasons to continue to champion YA literature and the freedom to read, one of the most crucial ones is to sustain our democracy.

Inspiring Civic Action and Civil Disobedience
The following books are books that inspire and challenge readers. Some of these books have been challenged, but they all provide a context for understanding how crucial civic participation and engagement is for our adolescents. Each book has created a context for how choice may exist differently for different individuals. These books provide context for how there are different Americas for different communities and individuals.

The Book of Unknown Americans (2015) by Cristina Henríquez
Henríquez threads multiple stories of documented and undocumented immigrants. She highlights the Rivera family’s desperate move from Mexico to the United States in hopes of receiving medical care for fifteen-year-old Maribel. The stories of the Riveras and their neighbors highlight the true stories of immigrants that the media, and politicians, do not promote. Each story highlights the tension that comes with making the choice to immigrate to a new country, and the  experiences of a new culture, language, and customs surrounded by hostility and fear.
  • Teaching activities: All states have a social studies unit on immigration. Many of the states limit it to the Irish and Italian immigration of the 1800s. It’s important to contextualize immigration, and the choices that immigrants faced and continue to face. Teachers can use resources like the Zinn Education Project, the Library of Congress, and the Immigrant Learning Center to provide a more realistic context for immigration.

Gender Queer: A Memoir (2019) by Maia Kobabe
As the most challenged book of 2022, Kobabe’s book is probably well known to most. However, the choice to read this book may have been removed from many students. This book is Maia’s autobiography, and eir story. E wrote this book to provide a venue for nonbinary and asexual stories to be shared in the conversation around gender identity. Kobabe’s gender identity is not a choice, but finding a way to share eir story was an important one.
  • Teaching activities: While it may be difficult to integrate as a whole class reading, the book does need a place in a classroom library and the school library. In order to build a classroom community. The format of Kobabe’s comic style could provide a non-threatening way to introduce students’ identities and backgrounds into the classroom. Teachers should also use the Human Rights Campaign Glossary as a resource.

Internment (2019) by Samira Ahmed
Another work of speculative fiction, Ahmed creates a horrific setting for internment camps created for Muslims. Layla Amin and her parents are forced into an internment camp under the guise of Muslim terrorism. Layla leads a revolution within the camp, and Ahmed describes conditions of the camps that are reminiscent of the Holocaust and Japanese Internment camps. Ahmed’s story provides a context for complicity in the face of the hatred, and what happens when freedom is dismantled little by little. 
  • Teaching Activities: It’s crucial that students are able to trace the anti-Muslim rhetoric and Islamophobia that stems from September 11, 200. Students should examine stories of Muslim Americans, Sikh Americans, and South Asian Americans who all experienced hate crimes in the wake of September 11, 2001. 
    • Teachers can also examine Executive Order 13769 and 13780, signed in 2017 by then-President Donald J. Trump.
    • In January 2021, President Joseph R. Biden revoked Executive Order 13780 citing religious freedom, however, students can examine the timeline of the Executive Order 13769, which is still in partial effect.

Kneel (2021) by Candace Buford
Russell Bordeaux is a Black football player, and the star tight end on the school's varsity football team. He is trying to keep his head down, get a scholarship, leave his racist small town, and help his family. But, his best friend is unfairly arrested and removed from the team. In protest, Russell kneels during the National Anthem before the next football game. While the topic of kneeling is timely and highly politicized, Russell’s story clarifies that sometimes the “choice” to protest, is not a choice at all. 
  • Teaching activities: This topic lends itself well to debates and evidence-based persuasive essays. There are ways to differentiate the arguments surrounding the topic of kneeling by examining political cartoons or satirical responses to the freedom of expression demonstrated by Colin Kaepernick or Megan Rapinoe.​

The Marrow Thieves (2017) by Cherie Dimaline
In this work of speculative fiction, Indigenous people of North America are being hunted and killed again-this time for their bone marrow. Diamline echos the horrors of the past genocide and the resilience of the Indigenous people. The book illustrates how the characters have to constantly fight to be agents in their own lives. 
  • Teaching Activities: This book lends itself to naturally understand the truth surrounding the genocide of the indigenous groups in North America. Teachers can use lesson plans from Zinn Education Project, and the American Indian History from the Organization of American Historians.
    • Teachers can also use We Are Still Here, an interview with Debbie Reese
    • Teachers should use resources from Indigenous Organizations
​​
Unpregnant (2019) by Jenni Hendriks and Ted Caplan
The ultimate choice, Unpregnant explores how college-bound overachiever, Veronica Clarke discovers that she’s pregnant. The only place for her to get an abortion is over nine hundred miles away. Veronica embarks on a road trip with her former best friend, now enemy, to exercise her right to choose. This is a must read for all students, particularly those who are preparing to vote for the first time. Also, the book is better than the movie.
  • Teaching activities: Supreme Court case, Roe vs. Wade Overturned (Friday, June 24, 2022)
    • Consequences of healthcare for individuals with reproductive organs
    • Implications for contraceptive access, same-sex relationships, and future health care obstacles for gender affirmation

Voting Booth (2020) by Brandy Colbert
This book takes place in one day, Voting Day, and demonstrates the difference in political tendencies among 18-year old high school students. Duke Crenshaw is turned away from voting and Marva Sheridan witnesses this voter suppression in real time. While it is a cute love story that involves a hunt for a cat, the core of this book is about how democracy is messy. Voter suppression is a reality, and it’s illustrated well for future voters and activists. 
  • Teaching activities: Students can engage in local voting drives; offering registration for local elections. Classroom activities can also provide a segue into researching the history of voter suppression during units on Civil Rights.

​We Are Not Free (2020) by Traci Chee
Chee provides a collective account of young Nisei, second-generation Japanese American citizens who are incarcerated in internment camps during World War II. While in the land of freedom, over 1000,000 people of Japanese descent were removed from their homes and forced into desolate internment camps. Chee’s grandparents, who were teenagers at the time and American citizens by birth, were also incarcerated for three years. While Chee uses 14 different stories to provide a larger context for experiences in the internment camps and how the horrors of the camps have never really been acknowledged. 
  • Teaching activities: There are multiple resources available to contextualize the horrors of the internment camps. The following resources provide stories from the camps, primary documents, and educator resources for developing learning opportunities to provide the true history of our nation’s history during World War II.
    • Densho: Preserving the Japanese Americans Stories of Past
    • Library of Congress: Behind the Wire
    • National Archives: The Japanese Internment Camps
    • National World War II Museum: The Japanese Internment Camps
    • PBS: Children of the Camps

Nelson Mandela once said, “May your choices reflect your hopes, not your fears”. These books inspire hope for the future as our students engage with literature that inspires change. While each piece of literature addresses difficult topics and current tensions, these stories provide the nuances that are missing from the hateful rhetoric surrounding controversial issues. YA literature  is revolutionary, and books provide salvation. The current political tensions and increased attack on individual liberties and libraries is frightening, but not new. The struggle to control thoughts and choices is not a new fear in our democracy (see: Orwell, George). However, the voices and the stories are different; the fears are different, and the Americas we live in are different. YA literature offers young readers from all the Americas in the United States to participate in democracy.

References
American Library Association. (2023). Attempts to restrict books during 2022. Retrieved from: https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/by-the-numbers

Jack Miller Center. (2022). Juneteenth. Retrieved from: 
https://jackmillercenter.org/juneteenth/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwtO-kBhDIARIsAL6LordpjKGX8bu3N8LV3Im_iLN6gopPNb7ybDosVUVPIQy4-NslIFIRrNQaApdQEALw_wcB

Kleinfeld, R. (2021). The rise of political violence in the United States. The Journal of Democracy, 34(4), 160-76.
Mapping Police Violence. (2023). Retrieved from: https://mappingpoliceviolence.org/

National Museum of African American History & Culture. (2023). The historical legacy of Juneteenth. Retrieved 
from: https://nmaahc.si.edu/explore/stories/historical-legacy-juneteenth

​Planned Parenthood. (2023). Is abortion still accessible in my state now that Roe v. Wade was overturned? Retrieved from: https://www.plannedparenthoodaction.org/abortion-access-tool/US
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    Curators

    Melanie Hundley
    ​Melanie is a voracious reader and loves working with students, teachers, and authors.  As a former middle and high school teacher, she knows the value of getting good young adult books in kids' hands. She teaches young adult literature and writing methods classes.  She hopes that the Monday Motivator page will introduce teachers to great books and to possible ways to use those books in classrooms.
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    Emily Pendergrass
    Emily loves reading, students, and teachers! And her favorite thing is connecting texts with students and teachers. She hopes that this Monday Motivation page is helpful to teachers interested in building lifelong readers and writers! 
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    Jason DeHart
    In all of his work, Jason hopes to point teachers to quality resources and books that they can use. He strives to empower others and not make his work only about him or his interests. He is a also an advocate of using comics/graphic novels and media in classrooms, as well as curating a wide range of authors.
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