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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.
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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]
William A. Dalton
9/27/2017 09:29:01 pm

I completely agree that helping children learn how to hold civil conversations on the "flammable" topics we have these days are important. I've had several close calls at my college were students have misunderstood my archaic vocabulary as bias commentary. The word "black" for instance. I had mentioned a friend "blacking out" and I can tell you that word garners far too much anxiety these days as I was informed, with much hostility, that the proper term was "passed out"

Janice Johnson
6/1/2018 09:54:28 am

Thank you for your insights. We have a group of teachers gathering to prepare instructional units using Flying Lessons.

Dena Greene
8/18/2018 03:02:10 am

Could you please share these instructional units or a link to them? I love the anthology and hope to share some stories with my 8th graders.

Cherie Boss
9/20/2018 11:16:11 am

Hi Janice,
I would love to see the lessons you created for this book! If you feel comfortable sharing your ideas, please let us know how to find them. Thank you so much!

Carmen Stephen-Patel
9/27/2019 01:54:04 pm

I would also love to see the unit/lesson plans! I just found the collection in my school library and plan to use "The Difficult Path" next week.


Comments are closed.

    Dr. Steve Bickmore
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    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.
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    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.

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