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Engaging Students as Curriculum Designers: Reflections on an Insight Session at the 2016, YSU English Festival

8/3/2016

 
This week Stacy Graber reminds us of the positive literacy experiences that are provided at the YSU English Festival. This is a perfect post as we get ready to plan activities for returning students at every level. Thanks Stacy.
​The English Festival at Youngstown State University is an event arranged primarily around pleasure.  That is, middle and high school students from areas surrounding the university in Ohio and Pennsylvania come together to celebrate the enjoyment of reading and writing through 3 days of participation in games, activities, competitions, and conversations based on notable works of young adult literature (YSU English Festival, 2016).
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The rationale for Festival book selection reflects the priority placed on pleasure as evident in the following: “The Committee’s aim in selecting its booklist and in planning all Festival activities is neither to have the students accumulate a particular body of knowledge…nor to have them study the standard classics of English or American literature” (YSU English Festival, 2016).  Rather,

"The aims are to encourage students to read more, thereby improving all of their communication skills; to enhance their interest in reading, thereby building pleasurable and positive associations with reading as an activity; to indicate to students that 'literature' is not merely an academic course but can and should be an integral part of their lives; [and] to introduce students to authors and works of sufficient caliber to lead students to a recognition of and respect for writing of high quality" (YSU English Festival, 2016).   
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This rationale is important and reminds me of the expression of connoisseurship identified by Bourdieu (1984), or the deep sense of understanding and capacity for appreciation that comes from everyday exposure to beautiful things (--like good books).

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I think the Festival offers a powerful lesson here that translates profitably to education.  More specifically, in their emphasis on pleasure, it seems that the Festival creators intuited the all-important joy-factor that makes academic work possible.  As a teacher, I hold out hope that school culture is able to transmit some of the rich and seemingly effortless competencies that Bourdieu claims are acquired almost exclusively outside of the classroom, and that immersion in young adult literature contributes to this process. 

So, in planning an Insight Session for this year’s Festival (i.e., a one-hour, informal activity, generated for an audience of 30-35 students, related to one or more of the Festival books) with the relationship between academic skill and enjoyment in mind, I produced an activity that situated students as curriculum designers.  The idea behind the session was to give kids the opportunity to (re)imagine ways of teaching reading and writing through the creation of “dream units” arranged around favorite works of young adult literature. 
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The tools offered to the kids were intentionally spare because I wanted them to freely invent strategies for developing learning activities and projects based on the Festival books.  So, I compiled a brief list of organizational structures drawn from a fine methods text (Hinchman & Sheridan-Thomas, 2014), and defined a few basic models that could help students shape their ideas (e.g., interdisciplinary units, multimedia units, thematically arranged units, project-based units, research-based units, and activism-based units).  

Likewise, the instructions provided to session participants were lean in the hope that kids would feel free to create content in a way meaningful and logical to them.  For example, they were told that unit plans might contain elements such as a rationale for text selection, discussion questions, learning activities, a description of a writing prompt or project, and a list of related resources (e.g., films, websites, artwork, etc.).  Students were then invited to use or disregard these suggestions, and they embarked on 40 minutes of planning with the understanding that they would share the product of their conversations in the final 15 minutes of the session. 

The Festival booklist for senior high school students in 2016 included the following titles: De la Peña’s I Will Save You (2011) and We Were Here (2010), Quick’s Boy 21 (2013), Sedgwick’s Revolver (2011), Sheinkin’s Bomb: The Race to Build—and Steal—the World’s Most Dangerous Weapon (2012), Wein’s Rose Under Fire (2014), and Westerfeld’s Leviathan (2010).
Not surprisingly, the majority of the groups selected one of the books written by the immensely popular keynote speaker for 2016, Matt De la Peña.  Students noted that De la Peña’s stories were driven by exciting plotlines that did not sacrifice deeper meaning, and they especially appreciated the complexity of the author’s protagonists and the intensity of the situations presented. 
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The unit plans proposed by students were predominately interdisciplinary designs arranged around a relationship between ELA and Social Science, with a focus on psychological aspects of individuals, social issues concerning mental health, and sociological dimensions of friendship networks and surrogate families.  For example, one cluster of students responded with particular sophistication, reflective of contemporary theory, in designing a unit around the impact of trauma on young people.  Another group focused on the “mental prisons” afflicting De la Peña’s characters metaphoric of thoughts and beliefs that constrain individuals in everyday life.  Yet another cluster of students explored confessional forms of writing as a vehicle for therapeutic release.  

All students were invested in attempting to establish connections between themes in the literature and pragmatic applications through research and civic involvement.  In other words, students seemed to think of story as a framing mechanism for understanding social issues and addressing public needs.  In their concluding statements on the value of their plans, students appeared to avoid what might be considered more “literary” ways of talking about texts and instead argued the benefits of reading that could be generalized to problem-solution formats of research, writing, and direct action.       
Overall, the session produced an unexpected glimpse of pleasure in reading, not exclusively understood as an expression of enjoyment but as an experience of satisfaction in utilizing young adult literature as a vehicle for effecting real change in people’s lives.  At the same time, the students seemed to appreciate the reversal of roles in the session such that they were asked to design curriculum as opposed to being situated as receivers of information. 

References

Bourdieu, P. (1984).  Distinction: A social critique of the judgment of taste  (R. Nice, Trans.).  Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
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Hinchman, K.A., & Sheridan-Thomas, H.K. (Eds.).  (2014).  Best practices in adolescent literacy instruction (2nd ed.).  New York, NY: Guilford Press.
 
The YSU English Festival.  (2016).  Retrieved from http://www.ysuenglishfestival.org
 
Stacy Graber is an Assistant Professor of English at Youngstown State University.  Her areas of interest include critical theory, pedagogy, popular culture, and young adult literature.
Please address questions/comments to [email protected] 
Dr. Bickmore adds his two bits.

Attending the YSU English Festival was one of the great experiences of my professional life. The faculty was great, the teachers were fantastic, and the students were wonderful. If you live in the area you should plan on attending next April. The exact dates will be April, 26, 27, 28, 2017. While the final list of books will be announced soon we do know the Guest Lecturers. The Thomas and Carol Gay Guest Lecturer is E. Lockhart and the James A. Houck Guest Lecturer is Gene Luen Yang. 
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One more call for Book Chapters

Paula Greathouse asked me to post this blurb about a new edited book on YA Literature. This is a great opportunity.

 Attention all teachers, media specialists, reading specialists, and teacher educators! Do you use young adult literature in your classroom/course or know someone who does? We have already secured a publisher and are now seeking chapters for our upcoming book on the infusion of young adult literature in the content area classroom! Please read the call for abstracts! Contact Paula Greathouse at [email protected] with any questions. Thanks!!

Please see a pdf about the call for chapters below.

chapter_call_-_adolescent_lit_as_a_complement_to_the_content_areas.pdf
Download File
2016 Amelia Elizabeth Walden Book Award Finalists Announced
If you need a few books to read before the end of the summer, you can't go wrong by consulting this list of finalist!

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    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
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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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