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Reading Representation:  Examining Different Abilities in Middle Grades Novels by Rachael R. Wolney and Ashley S. Boyd

5/24/2023

 
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Rachael R. Wolney is a third year Ph.D. candidate in the Department of English at Washington State University. Her research interests include Disability Studies, Young Adult Literature, and Education. She teaches using disability studies pedagogy in a range of literature and writing courses, but specifically enjoys working with preservice teachers and practicing teachers in learning about disability.

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Ashley S. Boyd ​ is an associate professor of English education at Washington State University where she teaches courses on English Methods and Young Adult Literature and researches practicing teachers’ social justice pedagogies as well as avenues for cultivating students’ critical literacies. She is author of Social Justice Literacies in the English Classroom and co-author (with Janine J. Darragh) of Reading for Justice: Engaging Middle Level Readers in Social Action through Young Adult Literature.

Reading Representation:  Examining Different Abilities in Middle Grades Novels by Rachael R. Wolney and Ashley S. Boyd
The notion that Young Adult Literature (YAL) serves as a mirror, window, and sliding glass door has been well established in the literature (Bishop, 1990; Möller, 2016; Waller & Sullivan-Walker, 2023).  Students need to see themselves represented in the texts they encounter, especially in classrooms, but they also need invitations to learn about youth and worlds that are different from them.  These reading experiences can be transformative, helping students develop empathy, learn more about cultures they may be less familiar with, or even break down stereotypes and counter negative perceptions of marginalized groups.  For these varied reasons, we feel strongly about the use of YAL that centers on different abilities in classrooms.

As teacher educators, however, we regularly encounter able-bodied preservice teachers who feel underprepared to work with students with disabilities and have many, many questions. They worry about saying or doing “the wrong thing,” about knowing how to best serve students’ needs, and about the laws, policies, and standardized measures that might impact their capacities to meet students where they are. Although they will have coursework in their teacher preparation programs to assuage their concerns and help develop their knowledge, we find that a personal, humanizing encounter strengthens their understandings. And thus, we draw on YAL as a way to cultivate deeper interaction with youth with disabilities and different abilities and as a way to encourage our pre-service teachers to use such texts in their future classrooms.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (2022), there were 7.2 million students, aged between 3 to 21 years, receiving special education services under the Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) in the academic year 2020-21 (para. 1). The highest disability type reported among disabled students was a learning disability, at approximately 33 percent (Table 1). NCES (2022) also reports an increase in the percentage of hours students with disabilities spend within the general classroom, documenting that in 2020, 66 percent of disabled students spent 80 percent or more of their day in general education spaces alongside their able-bodied peers. Trends suggest that the number of students with disabilities will continue to increase each year and alongside this so will the number of disabled students participating in general education spaces (Table 3, para. 5). It is imperative that diverse representations of different abilities exist within the classroom to give students with disabilities agency and spaces for self-reflection. However, we insist that diverse representations of abilities are not meant for only students with impairments but can create spaces of learning about differences for all readers (Bishop, 1990).

As disability is increasingly present within classroom environments, we still find representations of different abilities, discussion, and critical engagement with these topics is often disregarded or deemed unnecessary (Erevelles, 2000, p. 32). In response, and as part of our larger focus on social justice and engagement with topics of race, class, gender, and sexuality, we offer a unit within our YAL courses that specifically includes representations of disability. Pre-service candidates often begin discussions of ability differences with apprehension and timidity and are encouraged by our inclusion of disability-focused readings and respond quickly with interest, sharing personal stories and engaging critically in discussions and activities. Throughout our unit, we offer candidates a space to engage in textual analysis of disability representation using disability studies as a framework for study, and we invite them to apply these lenses to their worlds, current and future.

This post offers a snippet of the foundational work we utilize for teaching about ability differences with pre-service candidates in our YAL courses. We offer a brief overview of disability studies and discuss traditional stereotypical representations of disability. Current depictions in YAL offer new perspectives on disability identity and ability difference, which is to be lauded. However, we also note that not all representations of disability are equal and discuss the dangers of “inclusive” representations that can potentially promote continued discrimination against people with impairments. We provide teachers with ways to choose YAL texts that illustrate ability differences that disrupt stereotypical representations and offer possible ways to engage students with these selections to create moments for social justice or action. We focus specifically on YAL for pre-teen and young teenagers, those typically considered middle school aged, as we promote the inclusion of disability and ability differences at early stages of learning in the hopes that disability and identity difference will become normalized through educational practices of inclusion (Landrum, 2001, p. 252). We offer three texts: Charlie & Frog: A Mystery by Karen Kane (2018), How to Become a Planet by Nicole Melleby (2021), and Forever This Summer by Leslie C. Youngblood (2021). Each of these texts depict characters with ability differences which include representations of physical and mental impairment.

Disability Studies

Disability studies is a field of study that situates disability as a social construct. The social model of disability teaches that disability does not occur because of impairment but because of an unaccepting society which excludes disability from participation. In contrast to the medical model of disability, which promotes curing, fixing, or restoring the body to a normalized state, the social model accepts impairments and differences of the body and questions how society responds to these differences (Shakespeare, 2017, p. 13). Disability studies questions what it means to be human, how to ethically respond to difference, and interrogates the answers to these questions in any given moment of history and time (Kudlick, 2003, p. 764). This approach maintains that disability identity does not exist on its own, but is complicated by political, social, institutional, and cultural definitions of the body. According to Subini Ancy Annamma, David Connor, and Beth Ferri (2013), disability is created from “interpretations of and responses to specific differences from the normed body,” and that constructions of disability historically shift based on context (p. 3). A great example of this is the IQ test. There have been multiple changes to the score on the IQ test that supposedly determines intelligence (Annamma, Connor, & Ferri, 2013, p. 3). Currently, many scholars view the IQ test as unable to accurately determine intellectual capability, and as we continue to understand that testing can be affected by multiple factors of oppression, it continues to be questioned for its credibility.

Differences from the norm can include measures beyond the presence or lack of impairment. Categories and assumptions about age, strength, endurance, health, weight, independence, and both physical and mental capabilities can all be used to label the body as impaired, incapable, or disabled (Kudlick, 2003, p. 769). Disability studies questions, “What is normal?” and “How is normal constructed to privilege some while oppressing others?” Dolmage (2017) writes, disability is always present because there are no normal or ideal bodies, and as “the world is built to accommodate the normal body and mind, we all experience some degree of discomfort due to these limits” (p. 62; p. 123). Disability studies and disability representation is not solely for the impaired body. Instead, this framework requires the unaccepting majority to critically examine and change any overarching assumptions about ability and act against ableism, the favor of able-bodied individuals.

Disability Representation and Choosing Texts
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Disability representation in texts, film, and media impacts social views of disability and ability differences. Representations are constructions that reflect current dominant views; however, reading texts that include new and informed views of ability differences gives readers a space for questioning the dominant structures that govern the body experienced both narratively and in reality (Quayson, 2007, p. 15). Historically, disability representation was constructed in a stereotypical and damaging way, often following a prescriptive and boring portrayal of something to be pitied or cautious of. Ability differences were often only included to highlight main character growth or used for didactic messages, and rarely did disabled characters survive with impairment throughout the entirety of a story (Mitchel & Snyder, 2017, p. 209). Also, disability is often equated with inability (Kudlick, 2003, pg. 769). Within this framework, stories of disability are often narrow and formulaic, making it even more difficult for readers to create meaning from their inclusion.
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To identify if a text is perpetuating harmful stereotypes about ability differences or is offering a new perspective of disability, we offer pre-service candidates in our YAL courses resources that list both good and bad qualities of representations. To begin, we offer Patricia Dunn’s (2015) text, Disabling Characters: Representations of Disability in Young Adult Literature. This text offers ways for students to think critically about the representations of disability in YAL specifically and gives clear examples of how a text can either break down barriers, myths, or stereotypes and inform new perspectives of ability differences, or depict disability as pitiable, as needing rescued, or as “othered” (p. 2). Additionally, we offer pre-service candidates the guidelines outlined by the Anti-Defamation League (2013) in Evaluating Children’s Books that Address Disability. This article is easy to reference and outlines several ways to avoid texts that depict disability as tokenistic, deficient, or burdensome, but instead, as including full, multi-dimensional characters who lead productive and engaging lives with impairment or ability differences.

Additionally, to support selection of YAL depicting disability, the American Library Association (ALA) (2023) chooses a text for primary, secondary middle age, and secondary teen age to win the Schneider Family Book Award each year, which honors authors or illustrators who capture the disability experience for adolescent readers (para. 1). YAL selected based on age group and grade level appropriateness, these texts praised by the ALA serve as highly recommended texts to add to the curriculum or provide in classroom libraries.

We offer pre-service candidates these materials to help them evaluate representations of disability during text selection and we ask them to remain critical of these representations. Impairment is often a personal experience and even though two people may share the same diagnosis, their own lived experiences will often be different (Garland-Thomson, 2017, pg. 15). Because of this, we advocate that there is not a single narrative of disability or ability difference. We ask students to consider authenticity in representation with questions such as: Is the author closely related to disability or disabled themselves? If not, have they conducted enough research to portray disabled experiences accurately and discuss a community that they may not belong to? Finally, we ask students to consider the differences between ‘inclusive’ representations of disability or ability differences that are superficial and texts which include disability representation as central to understanding different identities and experiences of difference, inquiring: What is the difference between inclusion and representation? We task them with applying these questions to specific texts and have rich conversations as they engage in the personal narratives offered by the authors.

Three Texts with Different Abilities

The questions and resources above guide our students in a deeper examination of representation and offer multiple stories of ability difference. In what follows, we describe three novels that we draw on for middle grades education, hoping that engaging our teacher candidates with these will encourage them to use them in similar ways with their future students. As we know middle school is a time when students are developing their own identities, building their worldviews, and learning about those different from them, we feel this is a crucial time to introduce such works and ideas.
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Charlie & Frog: A Mystery by Karen Kane is a wonderful text that emphasizes, “Deaf can.” Charlie, a newcomer to Castle-on-the-Hudson, feels abandoned by his parents to the care of his grandparents who only enjoy watching television. Meeting Frog, aka Francine Castle, Charlie finds himself wanting to belong, but Frog, along with a majority of the town are Deaf and only speak American Sign Language (ASL). While Charlie is hearing, he knows how to sign the alphabet, and learns that ASL is more than just signs, but includes body gestures and facial expressions for communication. As Charlie and Frog set out to help Agnes, a woman who distressfully signs the word “dead” to Charlie, they find themselves helping each other solve a mystery. Charlie asks, “Can people change?” and throughout the text he realizes that they can. His parents can learn to care for him, his grandparents can do more than just watch television, and Frog can be his friend even after they solve the mystery to help Agnes. This text offers readers an introduction to learning ASL as each chapter begins with a depiction of a new word and the actions to sign, including the full ASL alphabet. As Charlie learns to communicate in ASL and learns about the Deaf community, so can the reader.
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Nicole Melleby’s novel How to Become a Planet follows Pluto, who has recently been diagnosed with depression and anxiety. We learn that Pluto was named after her mom’s favorite planet. However, in 2006 a committee of astronomers decided that Pluto the planet was no longer considered a planet and Pluto, herself, also feels like she is no longer the same after her diagnosis, her label. Meeting Fallon, a new girl who moved to the pier and who becomes a new, after diagnosis friend, gives Pluto someone to be herself around as she embarks on understanding how to navigate the good and bad days associated with her diagnosis. Fallon understands not feeling like herself and the two bond over helping each other complete lists they have made for themselves. For Fallon, her list is about her identity. She wants short hair, doesn’t want to wear a dress to her brother’s wedding, and wants to be able to communicate to her mother that she just doesn’t feel like herself when she looks in the mirror. For Pluto, her list is less about her new identity, but is centered around her returning to her normal, old self. Pluto believes that if she finishes her list, she will be like she used to be, before depression, before her diagnosis. As Pluto and her parents help her through her ups and downs, Pluto learns from her psychologist, her tutor, and her mom, that just like the planet, Pluto, who she thought she was and the definitions of herself may have changed but her overarching qualities remained the same. Pluto’s list doesn’t work. It doesn’t make her better or change her back into Pluto before depression. Instead, she learns that she is the same person she always was, feeling the same feelings before and after her diagnosis. The diagnosis didn’t change her but helps her navigate the complexities of who she has always been and will always be.
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Finally, Forever This Summer by Leslie C. Youngblood, is about identity formation within family and community. A call-to-action novel for young people, this story follows Georgie, an almost 6th grader, who travels from Atlanta to Bogalusa, Georgia to help her family care for her Aunt Vie who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Georgie quickly finds Markie Jean just days into her summer and the two become friends. Markie is in the foster system, a year and a half older than Georgie, but Aunt Vie had been one of the only people who really looked out for her. Georgie learns that Markie has had a different life from her own and despite her mother, Katrina, warning her not to befriend Markie, she persists in understanding who Markie is and helping her in any way she can. Markie, who has a disability, believes that she will never have a forever home due to her differences and is in search of her birth mother. Georgie offers to help Markie try to find her mom and Markie promises to help Georgie create a community talent show to raise funds for Alzheimer’s research. In their efforts, with the help of Nikki, Georgie’s friend from Atlanta, they find more than anyone expects. They find family, friendship, community, and belonging.

Selection of YAL that depicts ability differences in new and informed ways such as the three texts outlined above can help students develop critical literacy skills, offering spaces to “interrogate the roles of power, agency, and identity” in complex systems of power (Curwood, 2013, p. 18). Each of these three texts can encourage informed conversations about difference, offer spaces for students with impairments agency, and can create possible moments of action that potentially help break down barriers for marginalized communities, such as the disabled community.

Reading and Acting with Students
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When we read texts such as those above with students, we ask them to apply the criteria from Dunn (2015) and the ADL (2013) to evaluate the representation of different abilities in them. Our students note the affirming stance taken toward characters without falling into the “hero” discourse (lauding people with disabilities as being heroes) or “overcoming narratives.” We ask them to highlight specific scenes or dialogue in which the author achieves positive representation according to the criteria provided and we also task them with cataloging specific word choices and language used to refer to disability and ability (Wolney & Boyd, 2021). They evaluate the main characters and supporting roles (who is in which role) and elements such as the character’s independence, diversity, and relationships with others. And of course, we invite any critiques or questions they have as well, opening space to show that sometimes narratives can do both. Finally, we return to the author’s position and look for information about them to determine their connection to the topic.

We want students to do more than read and evaluate, however. We see the issues of ableism and respecting different abilities as related to social justice and in need of public attention. Each semester in our YAL course, we assign Social Action Projects wherein students use a novel we read in class as a springboard to identify an area of injustice and to take action on our college campus to address the problem. Using the model COAR (Boyd, 2017), students undergo a process of narrowing from topic (e.g. mental health) to problem (e.g. lack of awareness of mental health services on campus) and then follow a series of steps: contextualize, organize, act, and reflect. Based on our work around disabilities studies and texts such as the three detailed above, students might decide to create an awareness campaign around stereotypes and misconceptions of disabilities in general or of a specific type, using what they learned while reading to prompt additional research. Many groups have used social media to advertise their campaigns or have even built websites. Inspired by Frog and Agnes in Charlie & Frog: A Mystery they might debunk fallacies around Deafness. Other students have also hosted film screening nights of movies with problematic representations and led a critical dialogue after the viewing. With regard to characters like Fallon and Pluto in How to Become a Planet, students might promote strategies for boosting confidence and positive identity development, such as daily affirmations and ways to spread kindness. Students are often very creative when allowed the space to design and develop their own projects and the inspiration they draw from the texts helps them determine avenues to follow.  And, these projects can be implemented across grade levels, from middle school (Boyd & Miller, 2020; Boyd & Darragh, 2023) to universities (Boyd & Darragh, 2019).  

Closing Thoughts

As educators passionate about social justice and young adult literature, we feel that drawing on novels that showcase different abilities is a crucial way to engage students in learning about humanity and in taking action for a more just world. For our pre-service teachers in particular, reading these novels has multiple benefits: It helps them envision the varied needs of youth with whom they will work, and reading such texts through the lens of representation adds an additional layer to facilitate their evaluation of potential classroom tools.  By examining types of representation, they can draw on novels as a means of promoting positive messages about disability and different abilities.


Starting at “A” to Develop an Explorer’s Mindset about Unveiling the Effects of Climate Change on Antarctica by Dr. Becki Maldonado

5/10/2023

 
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​Dr. Becki Maldonado graduated from the University of Oklahoma with her doctorate in Instructional Leadership and Academic Curriculum with a focus on English Education. She is a committee member of the Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children. Her scholarship and research focus on arts integration, nonfiction text, text selection, and developing and exercising teachers’ critical consciousness, along with the use of critical dialogue to develop social awareness in education and the community. She is also the editor of Arts Integration and Young Adult Literature: Enhancing Academic Skills and Student Voice and Increasing Visual Literacy and Critical Thinking Skills Through Graphic Novels.
Starting at “A” to Develop an Explorer’s Mindset about Unveiling the Effects of Climate Change on Antarctica by Dr. Becki Maldonado
My mom loves penguins. Growing up it was really easy to buy her gifts for any holiday; I just got her something with a penguin on it. Also growing up in Southern California with a mom who loved penguins meant going to SeaWorld in San Diego, CA every year to see her penguins. As a child I also ended up watching a number of penguin documentaries and learning fun facts like killer whales (orcas) eat penguins and that penguins fly through the water when they are swimming then pop up on the ice when getting out of the water. Oh and the other big and probably most important fun fact I learned was that penguins live in the Antartic and polar bears live in the Artic - two opposite ends of the world. 
As for formal education about Antarctica or any creature that lived on or around Antarctica, I learned that Antarctica was one of the seven continents, but that was it. In third grade, my teacher had a penguin race for learning your multiplication tables. We colored our penguins, and every time we could tell her one number of multiplication facts, we then could move our penguin to the next number. I can remember how fun it was at the time. My mom probably still has my third grade multiplication penguin somewhere. 
 As an educator when I reflect back on my childhood, I find it concerning that (1) I was as content as could be knowing the least amount about Antarctica as possible and (2) no adult ever sparked curiosity in me about Antarctica. No one ever said to me, “Becki I wonder why there is so much ice in Antarctica?” or “Do you think killer whales only eat penguins? What else could they eat?” In defense of the adults in my life, they probably didn’t know the answers and probably were not curious about Antarctica themselves. 
Leslie (2014) explains that curiosity is something that is nurtured in a child through the child’s culture. If the culture encourages children to be exploratory, then their curiosity will thrive. If the culture promotes an environment where children are not to question, yet instead to be content receiving the knowledge provided to them, then their curiosity will shrivel like an untended plant. The attitude of being curious is vitally important because from curiosity stems critical thinking (Leslie, 2014). 
Anyone who knows me and is reading this is probably thinking, “But Becki you are an explorer of knowledge, who is curious and a critical thinker.” This is true; however, it took a rebellious nature, getting out of my childhood culture, and a lot of unlearning to fully accept my natural explorer mindset and to learn that it is okay to be curious and a critical thinker because in my childhood culture, questioning any adult or any knowledge was bad. If you sought out other knowledge other than what was provided, it meant getting into a lot of trouble. Now as an adult I know we have to do better for the next generation, which as an educator that means helping other educators foster a culture of being an explorer to develop the necessary critical thinking skills to navigate the world. 
The Need to Be Curious about Antarctica
Growing up in the 80’s and 90’s, there was very little talk about climate change, even though in 1993 Al Gore did start to begin to use the media to public warn people and the government about the devastating effects to come from climate change in the upcoming decades (Sarlin, 2022). Now 30 years later climate change is more widely understood and accepted, along with being a regular topic in mainstream media and on social media. While there are many different aspects of climate change to study and be involved in, the most difficult to prevent and reverse is the melting of the ice in Antarctica and the melting of the ice in Antarctica is one of the most contributing factors to sea level rise (IPCC, 2023). When people can better understand and connect to Antarctica and how and why the ice is melting, it will allow people to take informed actions about how to help slow the ice melt and to make better necessary decisions about adaptation to sea level rise.
National Geographic’s The Explorer Mindset Framework
In June 2022, National Geographic released “The Explorer’s Mindset” framework. Through this mindset, students will learn develop their attitudes, skills, and knowledge (ASK). Figure 1.1 is part of a PDF provided for free by National Geographic. If you click on the “The Explorer’s Mindset” framework link, scroll about three-fourths of the way to the bottom of the webpage, and in the “Download” section, click on the button that says, “Explorer Mindset Framework.” This will download an eight-page PDF that has easy to read slides with competencies and descriptors. 
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Attitudes are Important
With climate change being at the forefront of media and social media, students are curious and asking questions about climate change. Being empathetic or not will influence how they respond to the answers they find to their questions. If someone from a non-coastal area is curious about sea level rising, when the student finds out that “Over 410 million people are predicted to be at risk from rising sea levels by 2100” (Masterson and Hall, 2022), their response to that knowledge will depend up their level of empathy. At the same time being curious about climate change is not for the faint of heart and can be overwhelming, sometimes causing climate anxiety. This is why it is important for students to be empowered with the skills and knowledge to know that they can make a difference. 
All three attitudes, being curious, empathetic, and empowered, are vitally important to the students’ well being and mental health. Without curiosity, nothing will improve. If they are curious and empowered but lack empathy, it could lead to an imperialism mindset and making decisions that are not in the best interest of other people or nature of the area. If a student is curious and empathetic but is not empowered, they can develop climate anxiety, which can then lead to other mental health issues. When using “The Explorer Mindset” framework, it is important to be mindful of the attitude of the students while exploring new information. 
Working Together to Come to a Solution and Take Informed Action
English educators frequently teach the skills of collaboration, thinking critically, and communicating, which is another reason why the Explorer’s Mindset framework is excellent for the English classroom. Let’s take a closer look at the other three skills:
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To apply geographic perspectives just means that educators need add a step into their curriculum beforehaving their students find solutions to problems. Before students dig into the problem solving stage, educators need to ensure their curriculum incorporates information about the place, people, animals, and other aspects of nature that are being affected by the problem. It also means that while in the problem solving stage and while students are collaborating and critically thinking about solutions, educators need to ensure the information learned about the place, people, animals, and other aspects of nature are being taken into consideration. 
 Using geographic practices is where this framework takes a turn towards a more scientific stance. The great thing about citizen science is that there are no degrees necessary to participate; therefore, all people are citizen scientists. There is no way for scientists to collect all the data they need for projects about the planet by themselves. Scientists and massive science research institutes have regular everyday people, like you and I, collect data for them through specified scientific methods usually inputting data through an app or via email. There are even grants available for citizen science projects. If you google “citizen science,” a vast array of projects for every major scientific research institute will appear. The “using geographic practices” also opens up the opportunity to collaborate with other educators who are more familiar with these practices.
 Taking informed action is one of the most important parts of the Explorer Mindset framework. So how are your students taking the information they found out and their solution outside of the classroom? In the English classroom, it could look like writing letters to an elected official, creating an art display, making digital story telling posts for social media, putting on a play or having an informative event for the community. The possibilities are endless. Taking informed action gives your students an audience beyond the classroom. This increases the buy in to the project, and it also empowers them to make a difference in the world. 
Knowledge and Connections
 The skills above will be developed as students begin to acquire knowledge and make connections. English educators are expert knowledge acquirers and connection makers. My two favorite young adult nonfiction books for beginning to study Antarctica are The Call of Antarctica: Exploring and Protecting Earth’s Coldest Continent by Leilani Raashida Henry (2022) and Antarctica: The Melting Continent by Karen Romano Young (2022). Reading both books through a geographical lens will give students a sturdy foundational understanding of the past, the present, and the future of Antarctica.
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In The Call of Antarctica, Henry (2022) begins with the first expeditions to Antarctica, including a useful geospatial map of the routes of each of the expeditions. She then highlights an expedition focused on George W. Gibbs, Jr., the first black American to go to Antarctica. Henry goes on to acquaint the reader with the spatial and geographical layout of Antarctica, along with how the layout connects to the plants and animals there. The last third of the book is dedicated to the future of Antarctica and the effects climate change is having on the continent. 
While Henry (2022) focuses on the history and geographical perspective of Antarctica, Romano Young (2022) hones in on what it is like to do modern research on Antarctica. Romano Young is a polar explorer and highlights current research and scientists, including two tweeting glaciers (@AntarticPIG and @ThwaitesGlacier). This book helps students make connections to the nature of Antarctica and the importance of the scientific research being done in Antarctica. 
Gaining More Knowledge and Making More Connections
The two books mentioned above will help students gain a basic geographic perspective of Antarctica. Here are more multimodal resources to help expand their knowledge and make connections:
Expanding Knowledge Resources
  • Dr. Steve Emslie. (2023, March). All about Antarctica. https://open.spotify.com/show/0A2BpvLhGngLjH7Lh6yvmR
  • NASA. (2023, January 16). Influencing factors: Satellites help decipher the fate of West Antarctica. https://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/article/influencing-factors-satellites-help-decipher-the-fate-of-west-Antarctica/
  • BBC Earth. (2022). Filming Antarctica’s underwater secrets. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtQhb8sWJNw
  • PBS News Hour. (2022). Scientists measure how quickly crucial Antarctica glacier is melting. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JvFkLWHRUwo
Making Connection Resources
  • Consider This From NPR. (2023, April 19). Why melting ice in Antarctica is a big problem for coastal Texas. https://open.spotify.com/episode/7MOicXkdbtyBsIbB0o0ln6?si=EXFdiddySg2rckLJ9Ns9Eg
  • NOAA. (2023). Sea level rise viewer. https://coast.noaa.gov/slr/#/layer/sce/8/-8727403.099684313/4602140.349421124/7/satellite/18/0.8/2050/interHigh/midAccretion
  • Blue OceanFilmFest. (2015). Two Min on Oceans w/ Jim Toomey: Adaptation to Sea Level Rise - BLUE 2014: Short Shorts Finalist. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqgGA7XQhJ8
  • ABC News. (2022). Can New York City adapt to rapidly rising sea levels?. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1Mn3STcam8



References
Henry, L.R. (2022). The call of Antarctica: Exploring and protecting Earth’s coldest continent. 
Twenty-first Century Books.
International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (2023). AR6 synthesis report: Climate Change 
2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/syr/
Leslie, I. (2014). Curious: The desire to know and why your future depends on it. Basic Books.
Masterson, V. and Hall, S. (2022, September 29). Sea level rise: Everything you need to know. 
World Economic Forum. 
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2022/09/rising-sea-levels-global-threat/#:~:text=Over
%20410%20 million%20people%20are,when%20people%20started%20burning%20coal.
National Geographic. (2022). National Geographic explorer mindset framework. 
https://www.nationalgeographic.org/education/about/explorer-mindset/
Romano Young, K. (2022). Antarctica: The melting continent. What on Earth Publishing.
Sarlin, B. (2022, July 27). MTP flashback: In 1993, Al Gore warned about climate change as 
U.S. temperatures soared. NBC News. 
https://www.nbcnews.com/meet-the-press/meetthepressblog/mtp-flashback-1993-al-gore-warned-climate-change-us-temperatures-soare-rcna40221

"Food, Glorious Food!"  by Dawan Coombs and Sarah Petersen

5/3/2023

 
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​Dawan Coombs is a former high school English teacher who works as an associate professor of English at Brigham Young University. Her teaching and research focus on adolescent readers and young adult literature. In 2023 she and Jon Ostenson published
Using Young Adult Literature to Work Through Wobble Moments in Teacher Education, which explores the use of YAL teacher stories to help new teachers navigate challenges they encounter. She has also written about YAL in The ALAN Review, SIGNAL Journal, English Journal and in various edited volumes. 











Sarah Petersen is an English teaching major and YAL enthusiast in her junior year at Brigham Young University. She currently works as a research assistant for Dawan Coombs in the 7th grade reading course mentioned in this article and helped develop and teach the texts and activities described. She is the current president of the BYU student chapter of the National Council of Teachers of English. This is her first published piece, but as she continues to research and write about adolescent readers, she hopes there will be many more to come.   


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"Food, Glorious Food!"  by Dawan Coombs and Sarah Peterson
Did you know that…
  • the earliest hamburgers trace their origins back to the military exploits of Genghis Khan?
  • the Aztecs used cacao beans as money? 
  • Alexander the Great enjoyed slushie treats that resembled modern day snow cones?

​In her 2021 trade book
There is No Ham in Hamburgers: Facts & Folklore About Our Favorite Foods, author Kim Zachman shares these facts and others as she details the history, science, religion, and culture behind some of the most popular items teens consume today. 

Whether the featured foods include ice cream or cookies, peanut butter or breakfast cereal, Zachman introduces each of her ten mouthwatering chapters by sharing surprising details or little-known facts about the fare of focus. These introductions hook readers and then lead them into the folklore associated with the food itself. Subsequent sections are denoted by questions and attention-grabbing titles that explore the various people competing for credit as the modern-day creators of these foods. Other sections share interesting facts about the who, what, when, and whys that catapulted each food into fame.
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In addition to the clever voice and interesting research that drive the narrative, stories, facts, and speculation, each chapter also includes text features that capture readers’ interests. Text boxes inserted throughout share historical or scientific information related to the narratives; in other places, facts, recipes, and science experiments supplement the content, complemented by Peter Donnelly’s green and blue illustrations. The backmatter includes an index for searching the book as well as selected sources for each chapter that provide a catalyst for future research.
Savory Selections for the Seventh Grade Readers & Writers
    Anyone who has spent time in a junior high cafeteria could guess that the topic of food appeals to the tastebuds of most 7th grade readers. But even we were surprised at how many students at a nearby junior high found There is No Ham in Hamburgers hard to resist. But perhaps we shouldn’t have been; studies show that nonfiction itself motivates students to engage in literacy practices. Research suggests that some readers–including those who struggle most–often prefer nonfiction (Moss, 1998; Young & Brozo, 2001). For these students, incorporating nonfiction into the classroom increases both interest and engagement as they read for authentic purposes and engage with texts they enjoy. 
In January of 2023, NCTE published their Position Statement on the Role of Nonfiction Literature (K-12), emphasizing the value of nonfiction in reading and writing instruction. We initially chose this tantalizing piece of nonfiction for this particular group of readers because of many of the reasons delineated in the NCTE position statement. In terms of reading, it provides students with an engaging and interesting grade level text to practice reading strategies and skills. Each chapter follows a similar format and incorporates text features that highlight the different elements of the text, helping them learn how to navigate this text and nonfiction more generally as they apply reading strategies. 
As we worked with these 7th graders and their teachers, we found a number of engaging opportunities to apply reading strategies. Students practiced identifying key information and writing summaries as they participated in a “Read, Talk Write” strategy where they worked with a partner and took turns reading portions of the text, then summarizing what they read, and writing down key details. Some sections of the text presented various perspectives that required readers to make inferences about the people and events involved in the creation of certain foods. Students also identified key vocabulary that played an important role in understanding the chapter. 
 The text also provided multiple opportunities to facilitate students’ development as writers by inspiring students to do their own writing. For example, some students conducted research and represented their findings in the form of infographics that showcased the food facts and content they learn from the chapters. This semester other students are using the book as a mentor text to study voice, style and craft. Students will then research the history, folklore, and appeal of a food important to their families and cultures and write their own chapters. 
In addition, pairing nonfiction with fiction allows readers to engage students in inquiry into concepts and ideas that reinforce their learning and comprehension in each genre (Duke & Bennett-Armistead, 2003; Vasquez, 2003). For this reason, whether it’s as literature circles or independent reading, we recommend serving up There Is No Ham in Hamburgers alongside one of the many fantastic pieces of high-interest YA fiction that invite readers to savor the intersection of food, culture, and history around the world. We recommend considering pairing it with any of the following texts:
With the Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo (2019) Emoni Santiago is a gifted seventeen-year-old cook navigating her senior year in Philadelphia, life as a teen mom, and her Afro-Puertorican and African American heritage. Little does she know that signing up for a Spanish cooking class will lead to an unusual whirlwind romance and culinary adventure across the ocean.
The Surprising Power of a Good Dumpling by Wai Chim (2020). Life isn’t easy for the Chiu family and oldest daughter Anna feels like the glue keeping them together, taking care of her younger siblings as their mother struggles with mental illness and while their father runs the family restaurant. Throughout this story Anna faces traditional challenges of teenage life as well as the struggles that come with keeping a family together. 
Somewhere Between Bitter and Sweet by Laekan Zea Kemp (2021). When their lives intersect at Nacho’s Tacos, the tension builds between Xander, the new hire hungry for a future, and Penelope, the owner’s daughter who wants to take over the family business. This book tells the experiences of these two teens as they try to navigate challenges with family, mental health, undocumented immigration, and the uncertainties of their futures. 
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A Pho Love Story by Loan Le (2021). Linh Mai and Bảo Nguyễn grew up on the same street, but rarely interact because of the feud between their family’s competing phở restaurants. But when Bảo comes to Linh’s rescue, the two begin a star-crossed relationship with the potential for love and the unraveling of family secrets. 
Donuts and Other Proclamations of Love by Jared Reck (2021). Ever since he was four-years old, it’s been Oscar and his grandfather who raised him. The two work together, running the family Swedish food truck that Oscar dreams of taking over one day. But when an unlikely romance develops between Oscar and Lou–who seems like Oscar’s overachieving academic opposite–Oscar finds himself contemplating a future he didn’t anticipate.
The Confectioner’s Guild by Claire Luana (2018). This murder mystery fantasy begins with Wren’s acceptance into the Confectioner’s Guild. But when she becomes the prime murder suspect as well, she must clear her name and work through political rivalries while also navigating the challenges of falling in love. 
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Sometimes finding a text that works for a whole class of 7th graders is a tall order to fill, but There’s no Ham in Hamburgers is an engaging piece of YA nonfiction that will engage even the most hangry or reluctant reader. Bon appetit and happy reading!

Works Cited
Duke, N., & Bennett-Armistead, V. (2003). Reading and writing informational text in the primary grades: Research-based practices. Scholastic.
Moss, G. (1998). The fact and fiction research project. Interim findings. University of Southampton.
Vasquez, V. (2003). Getting beyond “I like the book”: Creating space for critical literacy in K–6 classrooms. International Reading Association.
Young, J. P., & Brozo, W. (2001). Boys will be boys, or will they? Literacy and masculinities. Reading Research Quarterly, 36, 316–325.

    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

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    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.

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