Follow us:
  DR. BICKMORE'S YA WEDNESDAY
  • Wed Posts
  • PICKS 2025
  • Con.
  • Mon. Motivators 2025
  • WEEKEND PICKS 2024
  • Weekend Picks 2021
  • Contributors
  • Bickmore's Posts
  • Lesley Roessing's Posts
  • Weekend Picks 2020
  • Weekend Picks 2019
  • Weekend Picks old
  • 2021 UNLV online Summit
  • UNLV online Summit 2020
  • 2019 Summit on Teaching YA
  • 2018 Summit
  • Contact
  • About
  • WEEKEND PICKS 2023
    • WEEKEND PICKS 2023
  • Bickmore Books for Summit 2024

 

Check out our weekly posts!

Stay Current

Flying Lessons & Other Stories

4/28/2017

 
This week Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday is offering a special Friday edition. It has, in part, to the week's earlier post as it values the written and spoken words of authors. Our guest contributor is Martha Guarisco. Martha is one of the wonderful Baton Rouge teachers I met while working at LSU. Martha and I first met when we attended the Young Adult literature conference I hosted in 2014. She references a comment from Matt de la Pena's keynote address. It was a wonderful event, and all of us who attended learned from Matt and the other keynotes. Thanks goes to Martha for continuing to offer both windows and mirrors to her students.
Although it’s only been three short years since Ellen Oh and Malinda Lo sparked the #weneeddiversebooks conversation, the call for diverse literature isn’t new.  Over twenty years ago, I received a copy of Allan Bloom’s The Western Canon as a gift when I received my diploma in English literature.  The Canon Wars offered debate opportunities for my graduate school cohort. As future teachers, shouldn’t we make sure to include historically marginalized voices?  What were the costs of doing so?  What were the benefits?
​

In all honesty, I long thought myself a culturally responsive teacher because Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry was in my classroom library, and I kicked off my poetry unit with Langston Hughes.  But like all teachers, I am a work in progress.  My first “woke” moment came courtesy of Matt de la Pena, who shared his interpretation of something he’d heard Junat Diaz point out about monsters in comic books:  they can’t see themselves in mirrors.  When we don’t give our students reflections of themselves in literature, are we playing a part in creating those monsters?  I may have been offering “multicultural” texts, but there was definitely a shortage of mirrors in my classroom.
By the time I met Jacqueline Woodson, I’d kicked off my school year with The Crossover by Kwame Alexander (who I later got to invite to come meet my students), learning important truths about intentionally teaching with diverse texts. She issued this advice to a group of teachers, librarians, and academics who came together to examine diversity in YA literature: don’t relegate brown kids to the pages of historical fiction.  Her words were followed by a chorus of amens, including my own.
What’s a mirror for some may be a window to others.
One excuse I might have offered for not seeking out diverse texts is that my school setting is fairly homogenous.  Because of some collaborative work with Dr. Louise Freeman (you can read about that here), however, I came to the understanding that by not paying attention to the windows I was offering, I was depriving students. Our project measured changes in students’ empathy before and after reading R.J. Palacio’s Wonder.  To summarize psychologists’ work in this field, literature gives students a kind of vicarious experience with people different from them.  What’s particularly exciting to me as a teacher (and reader) is that this vicarious empathy extends itself to real life; it sticks.  By giving students windows into the lives of others, I could be helping them not just to expand their worldview, but also to be more empathetic in general.
Picture
Necessary classroom conversations can be difficult.
​Conversations about race, class, and gender bias aren’t easy to have with middle school students, but they are incredibly important.  Students are surrounded by examples of how not to have these discussions: shouted soundbites, gross generalizations, disrespectful discourse.  

When we shy away from difficult topics, we are covering literature’s windows with blackout shades.  These conversations remain difficult, but the following strategies help:
  • Preface the conversation with honest disclosure:  This might feel uncomfortable because we are taught not to talk about these things, but it’s important for us to do so.
  • Bring in reinforcement:  This school year, when I addressed depression and suicide in K. Alexander’s Booked, I invited our guidance counselor to teach a mini-lesson on healthy coping and available resources.
  • Give time for writing:  Writing helps us process difficult concepts, sort out our thoughts, and pose questions.
Teaching’s Harsh Reality: A Shortage of Time
Like most teachers, I have multiple initiatives vying for my time and attention: Project Based Learning, tech integration, non-negotiable skills.  By the end of the year, I feel like Jessie Spano on caffeine pills.  There’s never enough time!

Which is why I nearly wept with gratitude when Flying Lessons & other stories came to fruition.  Middle grade?  Check. Short stories?  Check.  Windows and mirrors?  Check.

My city experienced devastating flooding this school year, beginning on what was to be the first day of school.  Although we adjusted our schedule to make up some lost minutes, I’ve had that constant feeling of being “behind.”  I wanted to read another novel with students.  I wanted to spend more time on verbs.  I wanted to give time to more voices, more stories.
​
Flying Lessons & other stories, an anthology that grew from We Need Diverse Books, features stories from authors my students know and love.  At the end of the short story by Soman Chainani from which the anthology draws its title, Nani issues this truth to her grandson:  “All of us deserve something to look forward to.”  Students can look forward to beautifully crafted stories written for them, and I can look forward to giving them a few more reflections of themselves and windows into the world around them.
Stories as Mentor Texts
Even as this school year winds down, I’m thinking ahead to the writing lessons I’ll plan based around Flying Lessons & other stories.  Any one of the stories in the anthology could be explored in a stand-alone way to highlight the author’s craft.

Grace Lin’s “The Difficult Path” packs powerful verbs, similes, and passages that show, rather than tell, into just a few pages.  Kelly J. Baptist’s “Red Beans and Rice Chronicles of Isaiah Dunn” is full of personification.  “Choctaw Big Foot, Midnight in the Mountains” by Tim Tingle  and “Seventy-Six Dollars and Forty-Nine Cents” by K. Alexander feature effective repetition.
Essential Questions to Use with Flying Lessons & other stories
No way am I waiting until next school year, though, to share these stories with my readers.  Because of our time crunch, I’ve designed a mini-inquiry unit for my 6th graders this May.

We’ll start our short story unit with four essential questions in mind:
  1. How does where you live influence how you live?
  2. What does it mean to be an insider or an outsider?
  3. How are people transformed through their relationships with others?
  4. How can literature give us both windows and mirrors?
As a whole class, we’ll read Jacqueline Woodson’s “Main Street,” the story of a friendship between Celeste, a brown-skinned girl, and “Treetop,” a white one, which offers several topics for some of those pull-up-the-shades conversations our class needs to have about racial stereotypes, unspoken rules about interacting with other races, and one I’m really looking forward to: the politics of hair.

After they become friends, Celeste tells Treetop not to touch her hair. “I’m not a dog to be petted!”  There’s a wonderful chapter of Nicola Yoon’s The Sun Is Also a Star dedicated to the topic of black hair, and I plan to pull this in as a discussion starter.
Picture
After our whole-class read, students will work in small groups.  As writers, we’ve been working hard on crafting beginnings that draw readers in, so I’ll give groups a few minutes to read the opening paragraphs of the other nine stories in the collection, asking them to consider the way the author has us asking questions from the get-go.
 

Grace Lin’s “The Difficult Path” does:  “When I was sold to the Li family, my mother let Mrs. Li take me only after she’d promised that I would be taught to read.”  Why was the narrator sold?  When does this story take place?

Meg Medina’s “Sol Painting, Inc.” will also have readers asking questions from the very beginning.  “I reach inside the window of Papi’s van and yank on the handle to open the passenger door.  It’s my turn to ride in front.  Roli sat there last time.”  Who are these people?  Where are they going?

My favorite opener in the entire anthology belongs to “Choctaw Bigfoot, Midnight in the Mountains” by Tim Tingle.  “Blame my uncle Kenneth.  Everybody else does.”  Who doesn’t have a family member worthy of blame?

Students will choose one of the stories to explore in small groups and later choose from several different ways to present it to the whole class.  Based on those presentations, students will choose a third story to read independently.


As a culminating assessment, students will create something--a Padlet, a Prezi, a formal essay, a letter, really any communication strategy could work here-- to demonstrate their understanding of how at least three of the stories address one of the essential questions.
If you have plans to share Flying Lessons & other stories with your middle grade students, I’d love to hear from you! 
Reach out to me on Twitter at @marthastickle or shoot me an email: [email protected]

When We Love Books; Writers Are Our Rock Stars: Why Author Visits Matter

4/26/2017

 
It is a great pleasure to host Katie Sluiter once again. Katie posted a few months ago about YA in the middle grades classroom. It is worth a second look. Katie is one of those dedicated teachers who manages to do amazing things in the classroom while being a wife, a mother, a cub scout leader, and a blogger (you can see her brief bio at the end of the blog). This time, Katie addresses the issue of author visits. 
This past fall, I found myself star-struck surrounded by authors. I was fortunate to be at the ALAN Author Reception the night before the official conference. Once to the entrance, I took a second and just looked around the room: Laurie Halse Anderson, Jason Reynolds, A.S. King, David Levithan, Brendan Kiely, Neil Shusterman, MT Anderson, Sara Zarr, Tim Federle, Matt de la Pena. As I moved around the room introducing myself, I could hear myself fangirling, and I couldn’t stop. I told A.S. King that I identified so much with Vera Diez. I had to hold the folds of my dress so I wouldn’t try to hug Laurie Halse Anderson. I told David Levithan that he saves lives because my students finally found themselves in a book when they read his work. I gushed and I took selfies. Then I went back to my classroom and relived it with my students. To my surprise, they were fascinated that I met so many authors too. We often wonder aloud in our book talks, “how did they come up with this story?”

The auditorium buzzed with anticipation on a sunny March Monday as hundreds of eleventh grade students filled the seats, clutching their copy of All American Boys by Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely. They had all read it with their English class and were given a copy to possibly get signed. I filed in the back with four of my eighth graders who had also read the book on their own, and whom I wanted to treat with this special author visit. One poked my arm and said, “There’s Jason Reynolds! He’s right there! He looks just like he does on the book cover!”
​
This was not their first author visit this year, however. In January Gary D. Schmidt dropped by after all of our 8th and 9th graders read his newest novel,
Orbiting Jupiter. He spoke separately to our 8th and then 9th graders in an assembly and then held a smaller, more intimate 90-minute writer’s workshop with about twenty students.
Picture
Picture
Our district has been hosting authors since the 2012-13 school year. It has become a popular tradition for our 11th grade students to all read the same novel by an author who then comes to speak. Students also produce a piece of writing inspired by that year’s author that is included in a published anthology. Our junior high school, where I teach, added the yearly author visit for 8th and 9th graders during the 2015-16 school year when Jonathan Friesen stopped by to discuss his books Jerk, California and Both of Me.

While I have read the arguments discouraging whole-class novels, I’ve watched as these visits become one of the highlights of the year for many of our students, especially those who may struggle to find connection in ELA class.

I surveyed 192 students, mostly junior high school, about how they felt about the author visits. While most agreed (73%) that they didn't feel their teacher taught the novel any differently than anything else they read, 62% said they paid attention and enjoyed the book more than anything else they did all year knowing they would meet the author in some capacity. Students also commented that they felt the books we read by visiting authors were better books than anything else we read. A 9th grader commented, “We spend the rest of the year reading Shakespeare and The Odyssey so it was so nice to read a book that is new and for our own age” (about Orbiting Jupiter).
​

When asked what are the best parts of having the author come and speak, answers varied, but many agreed with what this 8th grader said about Gary D. Schmidt’s visit:  “When an author comes, you get to learn the deeper meaning of the book and where his ideas came from. I would have never guessed the characters were based on students he had in a boys [sic] prison!”
Picture
Picture
Picture
I asked six teachers many of the same questions wondering if they would be less enthusiastic since it’s never easy having someone else make decisions for you regarding curriculum. Half of the teachers admitted teaching the book a little different knowing the author would be visiting. There was more focused on the “why” of writing, as one teacher pointed out; “what might have motivated the authors” as well as discussing “more writer’s craft.” They also stressed recording all the wonderings students had while reading since they could actually have a chance to ask the author.

The teachers unanimously agreed that the author visits are a positive opportunity for our students. While one teacher voiced the concern that a few of the novels have been too easy for his/her students, it was stated that seeing and/or meeting someone who is a successfully published writer is important for students--that it made the experience of writing more real to students.

One high school teacher put it this way: “One positive impact of such visits is to encourage reading/literacy. Students tend to be more vested when they know they'll have the opportunity to meet and hear an author. They also like knowing that others are reading the same title - I see that student talk more about the book with others who aren't necessarily in their English class - it's kind of like a giant book club. Another benefit is that students are able to see that published authors are real people. When they hear their stories about writing, rejections, revisions, etc., students are more apt to believe that they could do the same thing some day.”


Teachers and students alike agree that the author visits are a wonderful opportunity. The only suggestion that came up on both surveys was whether or not it could be possible to have smaller group sessions with the authors. Most liked the assembly-style, but felt they would get more out of smaller sessions. For many of the authors, we have been able to offer one or two writing workshops that students have had to apply to be a part of. Many authors have the agendas set as part of their contracts; schools can choose from a “menu” of assembly-style or small writing workshop events.  
Picture
Picture
This is where price comes into the picture and can be one of the deterrents when districts are looking at securing authors for speaking events. Each author has their fee, but travel and accommodation expenses also need to be paid.

We have a fabulous Media Center Specialist who is not only a voracious reader of Young Adult Literature herself--and keeps both our high school and junior high Media Centers stocked with the latest and most high-interest titles--but she is also a huge advocate for literacy and writing and authentic experiences for our students. She works closely with our county’s district library to bring in talented authors once a year for the area high schools. Each high school contributes a set amount to the cost, but most are paid for by the district library. Because of that, our media center budget is able to provide a copy of the book for each 11th grader to keep for their own. Many eagerly stand in line after the author's visit to get it signed.

Our junior high visits are funded entirely through the Media Center budget and not in coordination with any other schools. This makes finding affordable authors more difficult. It also means that we can order classroom sets of the books, but not one for every student.

Even with the cost, our Media Center Specialist--backed by our administration and the teachers--believe in author visits as a powerful experience for our students. As another teacher stated, “When students get a chance to see and talk with an author, they see that they are actual people who made actual decisions in writing a text. It makes reading more approachable to them, and also encourages them to pursue their own writings.”
Picture
Past Author Visits
Junior High--
2016: Jonathan Friesen--Both of Me and/or Jerk, California
2017: Gary D Schmidt--Orbiting Jupiter

High School--
2017: Jason Reynolds & Brendan Kiely - All American Boys
2016: Jacqueline Woodson - Brown Girl Dreaming
2015: Dr. Sampson Davis - We Beat the Streets
2014: Sonia Nazario - Enrique's Journey
​
2013: Tom Rademacher - Knocking At Your Door
Katie Sluiter is currently an 8th English teacher in West Michigan. She has taught middle school, high school, and community college and has her Masters Degree in Teaching English. Her writing has been featured on BonBon Break, BlogHer, Today Moms, and The Washington Post. She has also been published in numerous anthologies, most recently Mothering Through The Darkness: Women Open Up About the Postpartum Experience. She is a member of and has presented at both NCTE and MCTE. She is a National Writing Project participant and has been published in the Language Arts Journal of Michigan multiple times. Another recent educational post by Katie can be found here.

Ideas for Summer Reading from Lisa Scherff

4/18/2017

 
It is that time of the semester when what I really would like to do it drop everything and read books from my reading list. Then,Lisa Scherff's contribution shows up in my inbox and feeds my desire to loaf.  Her summer reading suggestions make my list even more inviting. Lisa has contributed to the blog before and you can read here three previous entries here, here, and here. Lisa always has great ideas and this contribution is no exception. She offers an introduction to a few novels that shouldn't be overlooked, even though they didn't make the final cut for the Walden Award. I am looking forward to the end of the semester and indulging in a week of total immersion into self-selected reading. Thanks to Lisa we all have a few more novels to add to our pile. Be sure to chime in with your own suggestions.
Last week in our English department’s Wednesday afternoon PLC meeting, my colleagues and I started talking about the annual summer reading assignment. While we know the importance of reading to combat the summer slide, we also acknowledge the extent to which past assignments have pretty much failed (for a number of reasons). While this post is not going to tackle that issue, I would like to talk about some YA titles that you might think about, not only for your summer reading but also as possible titles for students.
 
I invited my fellow Walden Committee member Mark Letcher (Mark has previously contributed to the blog as well.) to talk about these with me as he and I discussed and debated them during the 2015-16 award. While the novels are not official runners up to the 2016 winner and honor books, they are titles we think deserve attention. What you see below are our collective reflections on these wonderful titles. My thoughts are in black, and Mark’s comments are in red.

Dumplin' (Balzer + Bray)

OMG. This book. I loved it so much I read it twice in a row. Yes, we have a lot of “fat girl” novels out there recently, some better than others (I will not name any). Julie Murphy’s novel tells the story of small-Texas town teenager, Willowdean, “fat” daughter of a former beauty pageant queen (who can still wear her gown) who does not go on some diet to lose weight and get the guy. The guy seems to like her just as she is. However, that is not to say things go smoothly. We do not always like Willowdean, which is what makes her real and likeable. Murphy transcends the weight issue to also include situations such as jealousy, body-shaming (of other kinds), family relationships, and drag queens, which add so much to what could have been a standard formula. Readers will find that Willowdean’s concerns transcend body image, and can resonate with anyone who has ever felt different. Although it could be perceived as a “girl” book, it is not. As some Walden committee members noted, boys like the book, too, and that is due to the author’s deft inclusion of the male perspective through strong characterization. There are strong, well-drawn characters throughout this book, major and minor, which can help with wider appeal. This is also a novel that deals with serious issues with a deft sense of humor.
Picture
The Unlikely Hero of Room 13B   

Let me start by saying up front that I loved this book. When Carol Jago writes about choosing novels for whole class instruction one criterion she has is the book should have places for laughing and for crying: this book fits that perfectly. Adam attends group therapy sessions for people with OCD, and then enters new member, Robyn, who he falls head over heels in love with immediately. The problem? She is even “worse” off than he is. Adding to Adam’s own problems are a younger brother who has terrible meltdowns and a mother who had it together until a divorce: now she’s a hoarder who he tries to protect. With the assistance of an eclectic support group, author Teresa Totten manages to give what could be a depressing novel lots of humor, which will keep readers interested.
Picture
The Last Leaves Falling (Simon & Schuster)

When I first read the premise of this novel, I wondered how Sarah Benwell would pull it off: a teenager in Japan suffering from ALS. Given the popularity of terminal illness novels (The Fault in Our Stars, Before I Die, etc.), I was curious to see how this tale might be different. I was pulled in immediately and kept reading until the end. I do not want to give away the exact ending, but I was impressed with how the author balanced the cruelty of this disease with a sense of optimism and joy. Although not as common among teens as cancer, Abe’s story of ALS can resonate due to the aspects of friendship—both face to face and through social media. Additionally, readers get a glimpse into another culture through the inclusion of Samurai poetry integrated into the novel. On a personal note, this story really resonated with me because a high school classmate died from ALS in his early twenties.

Picture
All the Rage (St. Martin’s Griffin)
      
VOYA’s review on amazon.com sums up (better than I can) this compelling novel: “Rape culture, class prejudice, and bullying are all handled sensitively and powerfully in this novel… Readers will definitely be compelled to find out whether Romy breaks free from her demons or implodes from the pressure.” Reminiscent of Speak, but with an added level of suspense, Courtney Summer’s novel chronicles the aftermath of rape. Set in a small town where money and power control truth and facts, Romy Grey is fighting against an entire town that does not believe she was raped. However, when a female classmate goes missing everyone is forced to face Romy’s truth. But will Romy pay an even more disastrous price? Our Walden committee found this to be a raw, unflinching novel, which does not shy away from tough topics. It’s one that should be read by a wide range of students.

Picture
The Emperor of Any Place (Candlewick)

Tim Wynne-Jones’ novel combines the past, present, suspense, and elements of horror in a most powerful way. The novel set up as a story within a story, with readers trying to solve the mystery in parallel tales. The novel opens with present day teenager Evan grieving the death of his father, whose own estranged father (Griff) is flying in—a family member that Evan has never met. While going through his father’s things, Evan finds the diary of a Japanese solider, which tells the strange tale of his being stranded alone on an island during World War II. The chapters alternate between the present and past, pulling the reader to solve the mystery of the soldier and his connection to Griff and Evan (whose meeting and interaction is another nail-biting element to the novel). Because of its setting, this book could be paired with any novel set during World War II.

Picture
The Game of Love and Death (Scholastic)

Winner of several book of the year honors, Martha Brockenbrough’s innovative novel weaves a Romeo and Juliet-esqe tale but combines it with fantasy and historical fiction. Set in Seattle during the Great Depression it tells the (tragic) love story of Flora, an African-American girl who sings in jazz clubs at night but really dreams of being the next Amelia Earhart, and Henry, a white male adopted into a wealthy family. Their fated meeting is not by chance: Love and Death, eternally in a battle with each other, are using Flora and Henry in their game. But, will Love and Death have all the control? This book blends history, romance, and magical realism skillfully, with a diverse cast of characters, and a unique prose style.
Picture
Lisa can be contacted at [email protected].
Thanks for following. See you next week.

Spring Break: Musing, Ramblings, and Updates

4/12/2017

 
Our spring break at UNLV is this week. I know a few more of you are enjoying the break this week as well, but most of you are into that last push before the end of the school year.  Often, at this time of the school year, I am reminded of the opening of T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land
​

April is the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain...

Creativity, or the organization of new thoughts and ideas has never been easy for me. I often felt I had good ideas, but the production, expression, and presentation of them was fraught with anxiety and my impatience with the process. I was a good reader and a poor speller. My writing could never keep up with my train of thought and, rather than track the idea, I found myself stuck on a word I couldn’t spell. Consequently, I frequently lost the idea. It wasn’t until much later as a teacher, that I could slow down and value the process. I taught, and continue to teach many students that are brighter than I ever was. I was probably at my best as a teacher went I could introduce an idea and then get out of the way. So, in that spirit here are some ideas.
Picture
Follow Jason Reynold in your Facebook feed (or go to his webpage) and follow his 30 days of poetry. Perhaps it isn’t exactly YA poetry, but who cares. It is national poetry month and we should read some poetry written by more than just dead white guys. His first poem of the series sunk into the center of my being and I generated a new urgency to speak to young people directly and for and behalf of young people to policy makers and gatekeepers.
YUSUF (for a young man Brendan and I met in Wellesley, MA)
 
In a crowd of his peers
Yusuf the tallest eighth grader
rose like an obelisk
stone and symbolic and
coded and misunderstood
by those that only see him
as a random spike
in the town square

he wanted to know
our thoughts on religious freedom
he wanted to know
if we’d ever had porkchops
hurled at our windows
if we’d ever had paper tacked
to our Mosque door
where the A in Allah
a tent
a home of warmth and respect
had been turned to missile-head
he wanted to know
what he should do

and I wanted to say
to Yusuf the tallest eighth grader
with legs of a grown man and
heart of anything but
​
I wanted to say to him
so much
so much
wanted to say
sweet child
sweet child
don’t cry
don’t worry
the world is yours
but I could not tell him
to just be thirteen
I could not tell him
a lie
I find this beautiful and compelling. You should start by following each poem each day. In addition, It wouldn't hurt to follow Lesley Roessing. She has been linking to YA verse novels during this month. The ones I know have been fantastic recommendations and I can't wait to read the others.
​Next, I am blessed to have been helped by so many great people in the Young Adult and English Education Community. I was tempted to point you to my favorites among those who have contributed to the blog during the last year. I couldn’t do it. I learn from each contributor. The best I can do is to remind you of the contributor’s page where you can find the name and title of each contributor over the last two years. There is a wealth of information there that can help your own teaching and research and serve as a set of ready resources for your students and the teachers you know. I would like to thank the most recent contributors. The last month of so has help us travel the world, think about libraries, and consider new ways to reach or students. Thanks once again to Katie, Susan, Joellen, Emily, Askia, and Robert. (Their names are linked to their posts.) I would also like to give a shout out to both Gretchen and Paul, my co-presenters at Kennesaw Conference. Their insight and clear thinking scholarship keeps me focused and excited about doing this work. You can find a summary of our presentation here.
Picture
​I love it when I can see the evidence that a colleague’s ideas and work are flourishing and bearing fruit. I have been following Alan Brown’s work for several years. His work connecting Young Adult literature, sports, and boys is fascinating. It would be a mistake for me to summarize it here. The only thing that would happen would be to simplify the work and the project. Recently, however, his project has received some attention through the local media near his university, Wake Forest.  It came across my Facebook feed and I was thrilled to see his research and the project associated with it getting some attention. You can read about it in an article in the Winston-Salem Journal here. The Wake Forest News discusses it here. Robert Lypsyte, the author of The Contender recently visited the area as well. I encourage you to review his work and get a copy of his book, Developing Contemporary Literacies Through Sports: A Guide for the English Classroom that he edited with Luke Rodesiler and is reviewed here by Dr. Dawan Coombs.
Running across these articles about Alan’s work heighten my awareness of some of the sports related YA novels that have crossed my desk recently. My first day of spring break I read Mike Lupica’s new novel, Point Guard. I enjoyed it immensely and can’t wait to pass it along to teacher’s classroom library. Once again, I reminisced about some of the sports books I read in junior high school. I am quite sure that reading kept me healthy and lead me to levels of empathy and engagement that have stayed with me most of my adult life.
​
Thanks for following. Until next week.

Let's Celebrate National School Library Month

4/6/2017

 
“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.” ~ Charles Darwin
One of the great people I have meet since moving to Las Vegas is Susan Slykerman. Susan is a teacher librarian at Liberty High School in Henderson, NV. I had the pleasure of meeting her when I was escorting Chris Crutcher to her school for a visit. She is also the ​President of the Clark County School Librarians Association, and Instructor for the Library Endorsement Program. She previously taught elementary students, opened a new middle school (and stayed for 13 years) as their teacher librarian. She says: "I am experiencing high school students! I am blessed to have been in my education career for 26 years."
Thanks Susan. Take it away.
In light of Nevada Senate Bill 143 requiring every public school in NV to have a library and certified librarian, submitted by Senator Becky Harris, and the decline of libraries and certified teacher librarians nationally, it is more important than ever that you celebrate National School Library Month!
 
Recently, at a Legislative Town Hall meeting promoted by the Clark County Education Association in Las Vegas, I had the opportunity, along with other teacher librarians, to promote information about what teacher librarians do,  how we aide student achievement, and the 49 schools in the Clark County School District which do not have either a library or certified teacher librarian and what individuals can do about it. People, the public have no idea what’s happening! They were surprised and discombobulated. It is evident that we need to get word to the public that teacher librarians DO MORE than check out books, read a story, have a book fair, and supply computers for research.  So, what do we, as educators, do to promote ourselves and the purpose of school libraries? Here’s a start:
Picture
Marketing & Public Relations
When you walk into a space, there is an energy you feel; make the energy in your library welcoming and helpful.
You know McDonald’s slogan, “I’m Lovin’ It”; create a branding slogan for your library.
Who doesn’t love a great commercial?  Create a commercial or segment on your school’s weekly tv broadcast.
Have humdrum announcements? Spice it up! Create an announcement for the library and add expression and music!
Reach your audience; create an: Instagram, Snapchat, FaceBook, Youtube account, website, or blog (get students to write for your blog)
Attend School Organizational Team meetings (school meetings in CCSD), PTO/PTA meetings, School Board meetings and promote the importance of school libraries and certified teacher librarians to promote student achievement.
 
Clubs
It’s not just book clubs anymore! Consider a STEAM Club, Makerspace Club, Digital Club, Fanfiction Club, or create more than one book club that appeals to: assigned reading for AP/Honors classes, genre clubs, subjects like art, music, sports, math/science and books,...
Picture
Displays
Need I say more than Pinterest or Google to find AMAZING displays to get books noticed? The more books displayed with the cover showing, the more apt they are to be checked out.
 
Infographics
Fun, colorful, announcements, on the web or printed, about what you and your school library offers. Consider using: piktochart, s’more, canva,...(?)
 
Get out of the library
Give inservices to grade levels, departments, student clubs (other than those advised by you), and parent organizations, other teacher librarian colleagues, on: the databases, literature, student achievement, learning strategies, lessons you coteach, lessons you teach, collaboration, clubs, ebooks, how you can help,...
Collaborate/Co teach
Have lesson ideas for teachers which includes co teaching! You, work with all teachers; be their learning strategist. Connect technology tools to the lessons that will help students navigate the real world. Incorporate your state standard objectives and common core. Teachers are not the only educators with objectives.
 
​School Wide Events
Promote reading through school-wide events where everyone gets to participate!
Teen Read Week, Nevada Reading Week, National School Library Month, Poetry Month, Teen Tech Week, to name a few. Bring authors to your school to speak. Have a donuts and dad or mom and muffins morning. Yes, book fairs are wonderful! Have activities that bring the community in to your library. Work with your public library to promote their summertime reading programs and other programs they offer. Work towards a goal of fundraising and include teachers and administrators to “kiss a pig”, “pie in the face”, “silly string wars”,...
 
Think Globally
With GSuite our resources continue to soar! Conduct a Google Hangout with schools throughout the world! Find out what other students are reading...GLOBALLY!  Start a novel on Google Docs and allow for sharing with editing and comments and then send it on a trip around the state, your country, your world!
Picture
Environment
Granted, budgets are often reduced if not eliminated at many schools. So, what can you do? You could write a grant, speak with local businesses, use gofundme.org, find out what talents or connections teachers, students or parents have to help you. However you get funding, bring your library up to the 21st century. Find new furniture, start ebooks, purchase databases and useful apps to service your students and teachers, decorations, signage, chromebook carts, and more. Make your library a place where students WANT to be. Remember, your personality plays a big part in your environment, too! Libraries today are not what they were 15 or more years ago. They are active learning spaces where student collaboration happens, discourse and debate, inquiry learning, media centers and reading centers emerge, makerspaces, and more. There definitely are times when quiet is appropriate, but don’t let it rule your library.
​
Professional Organization
CCSLA is our local Clark County School Librarians Association and AASL is the American Association of School Libraries. Be a part of your professional organization. Read professional journals and magazines to spark innovation. AASL has the best conferences for school libraries! Check out the AASL Conference: November 9-11, 2017 in Phoenix, AZ. Not only do they have excellent conferences, but you can also access their website for a plethora of school library information. Your local association is your opportunity to network with other teacher librarians in your area to bounce ideas off one another and advocate for your profession.
 
National School Library month is a perfect time to celebrate your library and what you do, but remember; National School Library is one month and what you do for your school community is lifelong...adapt!
Picture
​Resources
Steven Bickmore <http://www.yawednesday.com/>
"Jennifer Gonzalez" <[email protected]>
AASL <http://www.ala.org/aasl/>
Mighty Little Librarian <http://www.mightylittlelibrarian.com/>
The True Adventures of a High School Librarian <http://www.nikkidrobertson.com/>
The Daring Librarian <http://www.thedaringlibrarian.com/>
The Unquiet Librarian <https://theunquietlibrarian.wordpress.com/>
Annoyed Librarian <http://lj.libraryjournal.com/blogs/annoyedlibrarian/>

Current Young Adult British Literature: Student Choice and Engagement

4/5/2017

 
I love this week's guest post. Katie Dredger adds to a growing conversation (thanks again Emily) about teaching YA during a study abroad experience. Katie offers a great description of allowing students choice in their reading while still guiding them in a direction that helps them learn about the country they are exploring. I would love to hear from others who have used young adult literature in study abroad experiences or in settings beyond the traditional college classroom.  
“I was telling this story . . . from my point of view . . . . and then one day, my editor said, “Rukhsana, why don’t you let Rubina, the older sister, tell the story because she’s a more sympathetic character’” (Kahn, 2010, discussing the children’s book Big Red Lollipop)
These sentiments embody some of the work that I attempt to do with students who choose to take Adolescent Literature. When readers critically analyze authors’ craft, and when story tellers look at situations from varied viewpoints, we move toward a more empathetic world. Traditionally, English majors working toward teacher certification are required to pass the course at my university, but this semester I had a different experience in that I had the opportunity to teach Adolescent Literature as an elective while serving as Faculty Member in Residence through James Madison University for a semester in London. I wanted students to embrace the dispositions of lifelong readers while in a new country. Another multifaceted objective was that students examine reading choices through the eyes of a young British reader, to choose a book to read, and to explicitly reflect on the characters that the authors chose to sympathize with. I stopped into the teen section at the local library in East Finchley in the Borough of Barnet to examine the shelves. I lingered in the teen section of Mr. B’s Book Emporium in Bath. I got lost in the Waterstone’s branch, formerly Dillons on Gower Street, on the University of London campus. I found the best vantage point of the large room that makes up Blackwell’s in Oxford. I encouraged my students to explore these and other bookstores, libraries, and internet sites including Book Trust by the Arts Council England. These college students chose a variety of books to read. Some are well-known: some are not. All caught the eye of at least one American college student while living in London. 
Students chose what they read with two parameters, 1) that it might appeal to adolescents today and 2) that it had some connection to our place, England. Here are some of the stories that we explored. Noughts and Crosses, by Malorie Blackman (2005), former children’s laureate of England, flips the narrative of race. Most notable may be the chapter wherein Callum, the white character, asked why he had never heard of historical figures who looked like him as the class studied Garrett Morgan (black inventor of the traffic light and the gas masks used by soldiers in World War I), Charles Drew (who pioneered blood banks), Elijah J. McCoy (inventor and engineer), Dr. Dale Hale Williams (the first to perform open heart surgery), and Matthew Henson (the first of a pair to reach the North Pole). This popular series is also available in graphic novel format.  
Another discovery of my students was Marcus Sedgwick’s Midwinterblood (2013). Sedgwick, a British author earned the Printz in 2014 for his telling of sacrificial love in varied spaces and people. This was intriguing to readers for the fantastical elements and its link to classic visual art. American author Kimberly Brubaker Bradley’s novel The War That Saved My Life (2013) was also a hit with the students in my course this semester. This novel, set in World War II era England, explores disability, war, friendship, sacrifice, sexuality, and family in a most accessible way. While nothing in my experience this semester speaks of a complete survey course, an exploration of current fiction that appeals to the youth in England would most obviously include J.K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (2016) is a new, (if nearly inaccessible), show playing on the west end of London, so some of the students revisited their Harry Potter memories. In this depiction of the subsequent generation of Hogwarts’ wizards, Hermione Granger is cast as a black woman with Rowling’s full blessing. My students discussed race, racism, and the need for people to actively practice anti-racism. We could see ways that an author, actor, character, or director can bring sympathetic characters to an audience in effective ways. 
Other British authors that you may know intrigued these students. British author Nick Lake explores issues of race, survival, family, friendship, history, and slavery in the 2013 Printz winner In Darkness (2012).  Set in Haiti, gangster Shorty is trapped in the rubble of the 2010 earthquake as the history of a systemically racist cultural history swirls around him. On the lighter side, students discovered Cathy Hopkins’ Mates, Dates, and Inflatable Bras (2007) series for middle grade readers. Light-hearted and fun, Lucy dreams of her first snog while learning about friendship. Students also discovered Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book (2008). Neil Gaiman is quirky, mysterious, and edgy. He explores the supernatural in his appealing story modeled after Kipling’s The Jungle Book. Also in graphic novel format, reluctant adolescent readers may love the gruesome opening scene. Libba Bray examines race, class, power, sensuality, and feminism in The Great and Terrible Beauty, set in a boarding school in Victorian England. Flipping the narratives of race, sexuality, settings, and history are ways that authors today are challenging young readers to question the status quo. 
​My students certainly missed titles that I might have chosen and it was difficult to give up control. I was concerned that the reading list didn’t have enough literary merit, or wasn’t representative of the large swath of human existence. I do hope though, that these students will be readers well beyond this course, and will continue to look closely at the ways an author chooses which characters are sympathetic to readers and whose stories are being told.    
An African proverb states that “until the story of the hunt is told by the lion, the tale of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.” Asking our readers to consider the authors, the narrators, and the sympathetic characters in the texts that they read can be a path to empathy. Readers explore stories, and authors can use their characters to flip the expected narrative to one that expands a worldview. I see this exercise as one that could be used in my course next semester when I return home. What happens when I allow students to choose books on their own, instead of giving a set reading list? How can we challenge the British Literature classrooms of the traditional high school senior year with new and engaging texts, used either as ladders to more classic literature or in their own right as ways to teach the skills and dispositions that our discipline requires? 
When I fell in love with British literature as a high school student nearly thirty years ago, I was mesmerized by Tess, Catherine, Jane, Desdemona, and Elizabeth Bennett. When I began teaching, I started to see how unsympathetic these young women were for many of my students and I looked for stories that would appeal to more of them. My supervisor at the time insisted that I teach British literature, but Othello was just a start when talking about issues of otherness. Looking to what real young adults are reading today is a great way that we can be leaders with our colleagues: by following our students. Exploring universal themes and authors’ craft can be done with appealing and engaging books that real teens are picking up today. Because “no story lives unless someone wants to listen” (Rowling, 2011), we must attend carefully what our students, and the characters that they might choose to read, are trying to tell us. 
References
​

Kahn, R. (2010). Big Red Lollipop. Penguin USA.
Ratcliff, R. (2016, June). JK Rowling tells of anger at attacks on casting of black Hermione. The Guardian. Retrieved from 
https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2016/jun/05/harry-potter-jk--rowling-black-hermione.
Rowling, J.K. (2011). Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,  London Premiere.
​
Inspiring Scholarship

Buehler, J. (2005). The power of questions and the possibilities of inquiry in English education. English Education, 37(4), 280-287.
Kittle, P. (2013). Book love: Developing depth, stamina, and passion in adolescent readers. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Gorski, P. C. (2008). Good intentions are not enough: A decolonizing intercultural education. Intercultural education, 19(6), 515-525.
Hayn, J. A., Kaplan, J. S., & Clemmons, K. R. (2016). Teaching young adult literature today: Insights, considerations, and perspectives for the classroom teacher. Rowman & Littlefield.
Groenke, S. L., & Scherff, L. (2010). Teaching YA lit through differentiated instruction. NCTE, National Council of Teachers of English.
Ivey, G. (2013). Developing an intervention to increase engaged reading among adolescents. In T. Plomp & N. Nievenn (Eds.), Educational Design Research: Introduction and Illustrative Cases, (pp. 235-251). Enschede: SLO, Netherlands Institute for Curriculum Development.
Kaywell, J. F. (2000). Adolescent Literature as a Complement to the Classics. Volume 4. Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc., 1502 Providence Highway, Suite 12, Norwood, MA.
Kittle, P. (2013). Book love: Developing depth, stamina, and passion in adolescent readers. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Miller, D. (2013). Reading in the wild: The book whisperer's keys to cultivating lifelong reading habits. John Wiley & Sons.
Lesesne, T. S. (2006). Naked reading: Uncovering what tweens need to become lifelong readers. Stenhouse Publishers.
Thomas, P. (2015). Beware the road builders: Literature as resistance. Garn Press.
Wilhelm, Jeffrey D. (1997) “You Gotta BE the Book”: Teaching Engaged and Reflective Reading with Adolescents.  New York: Teachers College Press.
Katie Dredger. is an assistant professor of Adolescent Literacy at James Madison University. She spent her public school teaching career in southern Maryland and earned her Ph.D. from Virginia Tech. She can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter at kdredger.

    Dr. Steve Bickmore
    ​Creator and Curator

    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
    Co-Curator
    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and writing program administrator at Aquinas College, where she teaches writing and language arts methods.   She is also a Co-Director of the UNLV Summit on the Research and Teaching of Young Adult Literature. She lives with her four girls and a five-pound Yorkshire Terrier in west Michigan.

    Bickmore's
    ​Co-Edited Books

    Picture
    Meet
    Evangile Dufitumukiza!
    Evangile is a native of Kigali, Rwanda. He is a college student that Steve meet while working in Rwanda as a missionary. In fact, Evangile was one of the first people who translated his English into Kinyarwanda. 

    Steve recruited him to help promote Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media while Steve is doing his mission work. 

    He helps Dr. Bickmore promote his academic books and sometimes send out emails in his behalf. 

    You will notice that while he speaks fluent English, it often does look like an "American" version of English. That is because it isn't. His English is heavily influence by British English and different versions of Eastern and Central African English that is prominent in his home country of Rwanda.

    Welcome Evangile into the YA Wednesday community as he learns about Young Adult Literature and all of the wild slang of American English vs the slang and language of the English he has mastered in his beautiful country of Rwanda.  

    While in Rwanda, Steve has learned that it is a poor English speaker who can only master one dialect and/or set of idioms in this complicated language.

    Archives

    February 2025
    January 2025
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014

    Categories

    All
    Chris-lynch

    Blogs to Follow

    Ethical ELA
    nerdybookclub
    NCTE Blog
    yalsa.ala.org/blog/

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly