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The Baton Rouge Flood of 2016. What to do? We can all help and here are some reasons why and ways to start.

8/23/2016

 
* If you want to help, respond to [email protected] and we will put you on the list.
Beginning on August 12th Mother Nature began to come down hard on Southern Louisiana. I watched the news reports carefully. I spent seven years working at Louisiana State University.  We have a daughter who still lives in the New Orleans area and we worried about her and her husband’s family. I also worried about the host of students I taught who are still teaching in Louisiana. I was rocked by all the pictures and video clips posted on Facebook.
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I began to wonder, “How bad can this get?” In reality, pretty bad.  A larger than expected rainstorm dumped about “7.1 trillion gallons of water or enough to fill Lake Pontchartrain about four times. Hurrican Katrina, by comparison, dumped about 2.3 trillion gallons of rainwater in the state (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Louisiana_floods). 
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I took this photo from a new Facebook friend. Thanks Hayley King! Before the rain fall we had two mutual friends--Mathra Stickle Guarisco and Karin Hamlin DeGravelles--both are teachers in southern Louisiana. I hope they are doing well. Hayley and her friend forging a head with an example of how to help.
I know I can’t do everything, but I can do something.

In this blog, I will try to recount how I began to think about one small part of this disaster—What is it like for a teacher to lose books?

One of the students, Sarah Batty, from my first year as an English Educator at Louisiana State University posted a picture that pushed it to the personal. She lost a annotated copy of To Kill a Mockingbird that had been passed down through three generations of teachers.
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“When I opened the book [To Kill a Mockingbird] handed down through 3 teaching generations, I saw the ink from the handwritten notes running down the pages…and I lost what little bit of composure I still had left. It was my favorite teacher possession, and there it was dripping in the remains of the river that ran through my school." ‪#‎greatflood2k16‬ ‪#‎lpstrong‬ ‪#‎louisianastrong‬ ‪#‎thegreatflood‬ ‪#‎community‬
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As I gazed at the picture, I immediately thought of books that I would miss if they were gone. I haven't taught high school for 8 years, but I still have books that I found in college. There is an argument that I don't need them anymore, but as Lear shouted "Oh, reason not the need". Lear laments the loss of his servants when he realizes that their lack of presence by his side, to do his bidding, indicates a tremendous loss of identity and purpose. For many English teachers books have been our servants, our missionaries, our inspiration, our solace and our friends. I try to understand the loss that Sara felt as she held a sodden book with annotations smeared through the pages of her lost book. ​

Sarah’s loss, which has now become symbolic (for me at least) of the loss of books by hundreds, if not thousands of teachers, throughout southern Louisiana, those I know and those I don’t, caused me to turn and stare at the books on my shelves. I have consciously kept quite a few books that serve as important markers in my graduation from college through my journey of thirty five years teaching English at almost every level from grade 9 through PhD students.
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A few books that standout are: Pudd’nhead Wilson, Cane, Their Eyes Were Watching God, The Collected Works of Gerard Manley Hopkins, Cry, the Beloved Country, Moby Dick, The Sound and the Fury, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, Little Dorrit, Bleak House, Theodore Roethke’s Straw for the Fire, The Power and the Glory, I am the Cheese, Crime and Punishment, and Wide Sargasso Sea. Each book holds special memory of my own learning or teaching experience. Both my thinking and my teaching expanded as I thought deeply about these texts and worked through them with my students.
PictureI hope no one spends to long try to decipher any of this. Just be glad that most of student write on computers with spell check.
 Pudd’head Wilson
As senior college student, I took a graduate seminar on Mark Twain from Dr. Richard Cracroft at BYU. His class was one of the most  experiences as an English major. I began to think that maybe, just maybe, I could have original ideas about a piece of literature. While reading Pudd'nhead Wilson, I had an idea for paper. In reality, I struggled to write--still do--critically about literature. (This isn't just me being modest, there are still many of my extended family members and colleagues who can verify this account.) I didn't spell well and my hand writing was horrible. We had to type papers back then on a typewriter. Do some of you need a picture of one of these beasts? Sitting in the library, I had an idea while reading the book. I was unprepared for big ideas, no paper, no notebook, just a pen. I began writing what became, after several hand written version, a 20 page paper. I turned it in to Dr. Cracroft, who was a notable Twain scholar and received a good grade. It wasn't perfect, but it let me know that I could do the work; that I could read through a text and put together ideas. i taught the book a couple of times instead of Huck Finn and it was always on my shelf. When I need a boost of confidence, it was always there and still is. If it were gone, I would surely miss it.

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Cry, the Beloved Country and Their Eyes Were Watching God
Both of these books weren't on my radar until a teacher discussed them with me. I never actually took a class from Steven Walker while I was at BYU, but he was always extremely generous with students. Some how I found out he had done work on Cry the Beloved Country and I became interested. The book was amazing and became one of the staples in my Sophomore Curriculum during the 1980's. My students generally knew next to nothing about South Africa or Apartheid. We did cross-curriculum work before I knew what to call it. My students read articles about Nelson Mandela, the African National Congress, The Boar War, Diamond Mining, and Ghandi, all before de Klerk began discussing negotiations in 1990. Some of my best teaching experiences occurred in those classes where we learned together about the racist practices in South African and how they might inform events and practices in the U.S. during the 1980s. During that period there were protests on college campuses about how their university endowments were invested in South America. In 1985, we listened to Sun City recorded by Artist United Against Apartheid. 

I first saw the title of Their Eyes Were Watching God on the list of options for the open question on the Advanced Placement Literature exam.  The following summer, I was at a NEH Summer Seminar at Auburn University and several of us began talking about which books we were using. One of the  attendees highly recommended Zora Neale Hurston's wonderful book. I continued to teach this book every year in my AP course until I left to do graduate work. My eyes were opened and I tried hard to make this book part of every students' consciousness. 

If either one of these books disappeared from my shelves I would be distraught. They represent moments when I began to think differently and my teaching changed. 

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Bleak House.
For many years, I taught a Dickens' novel in a serial format. Every other Tuesday was Dickens' day. As a kid, I struggled with long 19th century novels. They were too long, too slow, too something. I struggled the first time I had to teach A Tale of Two Cities; furthermore, I am sure that my students struggled. I wasn't as committed as I should have been. I had a hard time sharing Dickens' greatness, because I didn't quite get it myself. While reading through an English Journal I saw an application for NEH Summer Seminar about reading and teaching serialized Victorian novels directed by Dr. Michael Lund at Longwood College. 

The experience change my teaching life. I taught a new Victorian novel every year for about 15 years, generally one I had never read before. Yes, and students do read long books if we read with them. One week I would quiz them and two weeks later they would quiz me. This practice lead to a sabbatical funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and Readers Digest. Every year nearly a third of my students wrote on the current Dickens' novel on the AP Literature exam. (How do you not know a book well that you have lived with for nine months?) I point to Bleak House because, not only is it fantastic, but I taught the novel the year my oldest daughter was a student in my AP class. The book sits on my shelf as a reminder of this wonder pedagogical practice that changed my relationship with my students, Reading and discovering a novel with them throughout a school year was both challenging and rejuvenating. Many of them were better readers and writers than I was, I only kept them at bay due to my experience and the craftiness of old age. Having my daughter in the class added to the experience in immeasurable ways and Bleak House remains on the shelf as a marker. I don't think I could make it any clearer that losing this book would be like misplacing 15 years of teaching memories.

How can I help?
I am quite sure that teachers like Sarah are making memories with books. So, what can I do? I get more than my share of books. I belong to ALAN and I attend the annual Workshop, I preview books in my role as an academic and scholar of young adult literature. I try to promote and discuss the scholarship, teaching, and advocacy of this literature in this blog, during conferences, school visits, and in my courses. I read as many as I can and when I am done I pass them on to teachers, students, and other academics. I immediately realized I could help Sarah. When she is ready and has settled into her classroom, I can send her several boxes of books. She can shelf the books that are appropriate for her students and pass the rest on to her colleagues.
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I know that the local school districts will take donations, but I always worry about how that will trickle down to books on teachers’ shelves. Will they be given money for books that students might choose to read?  Unfortunately, I see institutions replacing books with anthologies, scripted curricula, and other mind numbing texts instead of novels and books for classrooms and libraries. By giving some books to Sarah, I know there is a good chance that a kid will wander over to her bookcase and take a book home that might interest them and lead them to new horizons.  At our house, we feel compelled to help. We will give generically to our church and directly to LSU colleagues who have lost their homes, but a box of books to a teacher when they are ready for them would mean a great deal to me if I were in her place. Below is a closer look at what Sarah found when she visited her classroom.
PictureThese are some of the books that are being set aside.
How can you help?
I hope that others want to help. Last week in the blog, I mentioned that I would be helping in a small way. I also offered to keep a list of people who would like to help and then, when the time is right, match them with one of my former students, their colleagues, or their schools.
​
Of course, you can help anyway you would like. I am going to suggest a couple. 1.) Start collecting books that you have on your shelves and storing books that you can ship. I might even suggest you find a partner who might not have books, but you might be able to help you with shipping costs. 2. Maybe students in your YA literature classes might want to do a joint venture. Remember, this doesn’t have to be done this week or within the next month. The inhabitants of the area will be cleaning homes and schools for quite a few weeks. 3.) If you are in a school that does a charity drive during the holidays, you might consider encouraging them to sponsor a school in one of devastated districts. You could raise the money and sent up an amazon account with each English teacher in the school. They could then buy gently used books that are appropriate for their students. I am not sure how this would work; but, again, we have time. 4.) A group of teachers could collectively visit thrift stores and buy up gentle used YA books and other titles. Then, when they are ready you can send them the books. 5.) If you are an author and have a classroom set of books you can share them with some of these teachers. Those teachers can share the books and create groups of books that students can use in literature circle assignments.

Final Thoughts for the Week
There are probably several others ways we can help individual teachers restock their classroom libraries. I will continue to build the list of people who would like to donate books and prepare to match them we teachers in need.
Please take some time to listen to the news or read some evaluations about the level of loss. The people of Baton Rouge and the rest of southern Louisiana are great folks. It won’t take you long to see how engaged they are in helping each other clear out debris, cut out sheet rock, dry out the support lumber, and prepare to rebuild. Nothing I can do here will do justice to the pain or the loss. I can, however, help one teacher. I can help other individuals connect with a teacher. Hopefully, I can be helpful in connecting larger efforts.   Thanks for listening.

Please take a moment to like this post on Facebook. It is also helpful if you share the post on Facebook or mention it on twitter. (I know that many of you have much larger networks than I do, so thank you in advance.)

Next week, we will be back to talking about developing a syllabus and preparing to share and teach this wonderful literature.
* If you want to help, respond to [email protected] and we will put you on the list. This will also let us have an email so that we can contact you directly. It will take awhile for teachers to be able to receive books. We want to provide books when it is easy for them to store them.
Kathy Erskine link
8/24/2016 09:07:18 am

Please add me to your list! I would love to send some books whenever the time is right. Thanks for doing this, Steve!

Kelly Green
8/24/2016 11:15:06 am

How about getting her Amazon gift cards? That way, when she is ready, she can buy the books that she needs.

Martha Guarisco
8/24/2016 04:21:29 pm

Thanks so much for giving attention to this need. I'm working on creating a Facebook community page so we can easily match donors and teachers/librarians.

I don't know, really, how to do this, but I also didn't know how to gut a house before last week, or how our canal connects to the bayou and to the river beyond.

Schools are just beginning to assess damages and planning for how they might resume work absent buildings, busses, and faculty. It's challenging work.

I'll invite you to like the page once it's ready, and in turn, you can invite your book-minded friends.

Rob Linne
8/25/2016 05:26:32 am

Hello. My YAL class at Adelphi University in New York would like to help a middle school or high school teacher rebuild a class library. I would really appreciate it if you could help us meet a teacher to help. Thank you. Rob
[email protected]

Lindsey Leavitt link
8/26/2016 10:19:07 pm

This is incredible. I'd be happy to donate a set of any and all of my books to classrooms impacted by the flood. Additionally, I would love to help sponsor a school or host an auction to raise funds. Please keep me posted.

Steven T. Bickmore
9/1/2016 02:26:49 pm

Hi Lindsey, send me an email so that we can chat.

Liz Schutt
8/27/2016 04:47:34 am

Thank you for offering to put us in touch with teachers who need books. I will happily send either boxes of books or gift cards.

Steven T. Bickmore
9/1/2016 02:28:31 pm

Hi Liz, please send me an email and we can work out some details

Jennifer Rossuck
8/27/2016 06:33:02 am

Please contact me when you have specific names/addresses---my school will send some books.

Steven T. Bickmore
9/1/2016 02:29:56 pm

Hi Jennifer

Send me an email so that we can discuss details.

Marilyn J. Hollman
8/27/2016 08:41:26 am

Where can I send them? Maybe I missed the address somehow.

Steven T. Bickmore
9/1/2016 02:31:04 pm

Hi Marilyn

Can you send me an email and I will give you more information.


Comments are closed.

    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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