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Dr. Bickmore Comments on the Great American Read

5/30/2018

2 Comments

 
I admit it. It is easier being a grandparent than a parent. Even so, every once and awhile I am not just cool and permissive, but I hit one out of the park. About a month ago, our oldest grandson had a birthday –he was going to be 11. It is amazing how fast it all happens. I am a book guy. A new book for Christmas or a birthday was a score. Book nerd that I am, I still realize that not everyone feels the same. I consulted with my daughter. Deacon is into skateboarding, building with Legos and reading up a storm. Well, I like the fact that he is outdoors, but I wasn’t sending a skateboard and we have sent our share of Legos.

Didn’t I just get permission to send a book? Well, yes I did. He is getting to the borderline adolescent/young adult stage. Shouldn’t Grandpa use his expertise to provide some landmarks? I picked a book about skateboarding and two books that I felt every young boy should at least try. In fact, I have anecdotal information that Paulsen’s Hatchet and Wilson’s Where the Red Fern Grows are nearly universally loved. In fact, I had a pre-service English Teacher tell me Hatchet was his favorite book in middle school and maybe the only book he voluntarily read during those formative years. I placed the order and waited for the feedback. 
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Deacon loved them. He yelled, when he opened the package, that Hatchet was the best book ever. He had read it, but didn’t own it. (Shouldn't we own our favorite books?) If Grandpa knew enough to send this one then Where the Red Fern Grows might be great. His mother had fond memories of the book and offered to read it will him. Yip, score one for grandpa. 
It is nice when your family thinks you have made a great decision, but when all of America agrees with you that is something else again. Yes, I scored and Meredith Vieria and the rest of America’s readers agree with me.

Like many of you, I tuned in to The Great American Read a couple of weeks after my big birthday win. I wanted to see what was up and add a few titles to my never ending list of books to read. Frankly, I didn’t count on finding many children’s or young adult titles on the list. I was pleasantly surprised.
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Of course, both Hatchet and Where the Red Fern Grows were on the list. But wait there is more good news. By my count, there are 23 titles on the list, nearly a quarter of the 100 books that could be classified as children’s or young adult. Let the arguments begin. 
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First, take a look at the slide show to see the 23 books I place in this group. 

Group 1

Below, I place the books in three groups: 1.) Books written before 1900. 2.) Books written before 1967—the commonly accepted date that marks the birth of young adult literature. 3.) Books since 1967, 

The first group includes only three books. Technically, all three might be considered classics of children's literature. We have to remember that the concept of the adolescent post dates all of these titles. While they are still read by young people, I would like someone to provide some data about at which ages kids start reading these titles: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Little Women, and Tom Sawyer.  What's your opinion? Do these books belong in a top 100 lists? Are they favorites because people discovered them when they were young? If we were to classify them now, would they be YA? Were they even written with an adolescent audience in mind?
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Group 2

The second group is comprised of 9 books written between 1908 and 1961. I might argue that one, The Little Prince, is really written for adults, but I can sure name students who first found the book as adolescents. Two others strike me as children's literature without question. Both Charlotte's Web and The Chronicles of Narnia are read in elementary school. While older readers still embrace them and revel in their magic, I still think they pull in young readers. Three more seem like books found by readers in late elementary or during middle school-- Anne of Green Gables, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, and Where the Red Fern Grows.  
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The final three books in this group deserve separate consideration. All three continue to be taught in American high schools. They are frequently included in discussions about the "real" birth of Young Adult Literature. Many of us have written about them and discussed their merits as literature, books for adolescents, and their place in the classification of YA literature. I don't believe any of their authors envisioned them as standard texts for adolescent reader, but they are omnipresent in that environment.

I am quite sure that J. D. Salinger did not see The Catcher in the Rye as a novel for teens. Nevertheless, its themes of loss of innocence and a distrust of adults was one of the hallmarks of the early realistic YA novel and both remain prominent, if not dominant, themes of the classification. Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird remains one of the primary ways that young people are introduced to the themes of racism and social justice. Is it a perfect text or the perfect model of behavior? I think not. But it has its strengths.  A Separate Peace by John Knowles was in my curriculum every year that I taught tenth grade. Students liked it. The themes of friendship, death, and war resonated with my students. I liked teaching it and just finished writing a chapter about it for a forth coming book. in addition, the latest edition of the book has an afterward by David Levithan. For my money, David has a pretty good eye for quality literature.
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The last group begins with a book published in 1967 and is considered a fixture in the beginnings of Young Adult literature and ends with a 2016 publication by one of the most exciting voice in the field today. Hinton's The Outsiders has certainly stood the test of time. It remains important thematically and still resonants with readers who might think about Chris Pine instead of Paul Newman as they exit a movie theater. Jason Reynolds has my vote as a powerhouse, but I am not sure that I pick Ghost as my favorite among his solo works. You can decide for yourself. Nevertheless, Ghost is a fine middle grades book that introduces his fast past and invigorating Track series (Patina, Sunny, and Lu). 
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The final nine books in this group all strike me as Young Adult literature. I would love to be in the room during the marketing discussion. For example, I don't think either The Book Thief or The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time were initial considered Young Adult. At the same time, the eventual marketing, readership, inclusion in school curricula, and adolescent characters have certainly made them easy to identify as Young Adult.

Others will take issue with the Harry Potter series and claim it as Children's literature. I think that is probably true with the beginning books in the series. As the characters age and the books begin to take on the issues of adolescents directly confronting adulthood, I believe the books become squarely Young Adult.

It is impossible to argue with the success of either the Twilight and The Hunger Games series. Both series are terrific reads. The plots move and those of us who where teaching when these books arrived can attest to the fact that kids--and perhaps their parents--were devouring them. One might argue with the stylistic quality of some the writing, but plot and character development are strong and compelling. Publishers relished the rise of books with fantastical creatures--vampires, werewolves, and zombies and a renewed interest in distopian conflicts. Both books have been aided by the movies that accompany them and have become legitimate, bankable franchises.
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The last four books all seem unquestionably young adult and represent different genres. The oldest is Hatchet, and as I mentioned earlier, it remains a popular book. It fits a classic set of definitions about Young Adult literature--the adults are gone, the kid must do the work, and the themes of independence, loss of innocence, and self-discovery play an important role. In many ways, The Giver is the epitome of the YA novel and introduces young readers to the danger of group think that was formerly given to adolescent in high school through Animal Farm, 1984, Brave New World, and Fahrenheit 451. Well, the barn doors are open and a host of YA novels have distopian settings. 

Looking for Alaska in often considered John Greene's tour de force. I love the book, but I also think he had a lot to say in An Abundance of Katherines and Paper Towns. His books are clearly placed in the context of the YA realistic problem novel. I am one of those critics who still thinks we should pay attention to everything he writes. I think there is more to come. 

The final book in the group is in the spirit of Feed and The Last Book in the Universe. Cline's Ready Player One takes on the role technology, gaming, and corporate control play in the modern world. I read it and start to wonder just how far in the future it might be. 

Whether you agree are not with my short assessments about these 23 titles, I think you would agree that American readers haven't done a bad job of giving us a set of novels that good easily be the core of class on Young Adult literature. The list, however, seems a bit short and restricted. I would love to add a couple of titles to hit some gaps. For my money, both Woodson's Brown Girl Dreaming and Draper's Copper Sun would be welcome additions to the list. I also think that American Born Chinese, We Were Here, and Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass should be there as well. 

There are two final points too make about an already pretty good list. First, Young Adult literature, as a classification, is full of quality novels. Second, the list needs to be more inclusive in a number of ways. Both points suggest the beginnings for future blog posts. 

Start reading and start voting.
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You Can Vote!

Until next week.
2 Comments

Mercy Rule and Teacher Talk: Navigating the New Normal of School Shootings by Joellen Maples

5/25/2018

1 Comment

 
Welcome to a special Friday Edition of Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday! Are you sick and tired of school shootings? of gun violence? Do you want to feel empowered with tools that might help you talk with your students? Shortly after the Parkland, Florida shooting, Tom Leveen released a new book. Mind you, it was well on its way to publication before this event. The fact that the book is, unfortunately, timely lets you know that YA authors and ELA educators are thinking about the safety and trauma that these events bring to schools and communities.

For this special edition by Dr. Joellen Maples (who has contributed before and you can find her previous post here.) talks about how quickly she encountered the book and how she used it to engage her students and local teachers. The topic is timely and important.

The same time that Joellen was working in her environment, I had occasion to be in conversation with Dr. Shelly Schaffer and Dr. Gretchen Rumohr-Voskuil. Infact, I asked them to preread my blog post reaction to the previously mentioned tradegy at Stoneman Douglas High School (Columbine, Sandy Hook, Aurora Colorado, Orlando, Las Vegas, and now Parkland). I consider both of them friends and valued colleagues. More importantly, I know they care deeply about adolescents and the preservice and inservice teachers in their spheres of influence. Thankfully, I work in a profession where that is true of so many people. I picked on Shelly, because she has written about the issue. I turned to Gretchen because she has written for the blog several times (look for her on the contributor's page) and she and I have been writing together on several projects. She does her best to make sure I say what is on my mind with clarity. After they offered their advice we disussed the possibility of a book on gun violence in schools. We formed an idea, invited other English Educators and YA authors to write chapters on the various aspects of the subject. We started. We crafted a proposal. The chapter authors began writing. We acted with faith, hoping that someone would want to publish this important book.

We got the news yesterday morning, Thursday, May 24, 2018, that Routledge is offering us a contract. The tentative title: Contending With Gun Violence in the English Language Classroom: Teaching Beyond Fear. Now the work begins in earnest so that we can submit by August 1, 2018 and have the book in hand by NCTE. Do you hear that chapter authors? The pressure is on.

Thanks Joellen for leading the charge with this Friday post.

Mercy Rule and Teacher Talk: Navigating the New Normal of School Shootings by Joellen Maples

As I was working on my blog submission, the horrific news came across my television. There had been another school shooting. This time it was in Santa Fe, Texas. 10 killed. 13 injured. I might have thought it coincidental that I was writing about Tom Leveen’s latest book, Mercy Rule, which on the surface is about a school shooting. Yet, coincidental would be lucky because school shootings have averaged out to be one a week since this year started. No coincidence. I could have been writing this blog any week this year, sadly. 

And yet, Mercy Rule was released 6 days after the Parkland shooting. I stumbled upon it when I read an article about Dr. James Blasingame’s work using young adult literature to work through school violence. Mercy Rule tells the story through multiple points of view of different high schoolers all struggling in their own way with various stressors. Danny is struggling to fit into a public school since he got taken out of his private school, and he deals with unrequited feelings from Candice, a freshman, who is positive all the time. Brady appears to have it all together as a talented football player, but he often is homeless and doesn’t have food to eat. Other characters deal with their identities, unhealthy ways of expressing their stressors (cutting), and also having to take on the role of caretakers. You begin to care about the characters as you read and realize that any one of these characters could be the school shooter and more importantly, that this book is about so more than just a school shooting. The stressors mount throughout the novel until that day when one of the characters simply has had enough. Leveen adds twists to the plot that the reader doesn’t expect, and he plays with format through font changes and blank spaces on pages. Definitely a worthwhile read to share with adolescents to finally talk about what precipitates these horrific events that has become a reality for teens. 
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I immediately got the book on its release date and was reading it when a lot of teachers (my former graduate students in literacy) were telling me about the “protests” in their schools that were also happening nationwide as a result of the Florida shooting. I say “protests” because these protests were mostly allowed by the schools and planned by the adults. Principals told students when they could exit the building and for how long. Parents signed permission slips for their kids to participate. With not a lot of discussion in classrooms about protesting and the issue at hand, some students merely went out for 10 minutes to get out of class. To make matters worse, when students returned, many teachers felt upset that they were told to move on. Business as usual. There were no discussions about the shooting, the protest, nothing. Then the barrage of questions from my former students, “What can we do?” “Are there any books out there that we could use with our students?” And there was one. Just released. In my hand. Mercy Rules.
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In response to such questions, I felt the need to start a “What is Dr. Maples Reading?” book club with my colleague, Kathy Broikou. Former students have always contacted me about new books to use with their students, and I felt teachers needed a place to talk in hopes that they might use this literature with their students as an avenue toward discussion. I decided to open up the book club to 50 teachers all across the Rochester area, and with the help of Dr. Blasingame, I was put into contact with the author, Tom Leveen. I asked if he would be willing to Skype with a group of teachers who would read his book, participate in the book club in small groups, and then ask him questions when he skyped in. He graciously agreed. It was a profound experience for all the attendees.

Teachers’ Takeaways from the Book Club

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​Weeks after the book club, I spoke with a couple of my former students, Nicole Lombardi and Courtney Alexyn, who liked the book and wanted to use it in their classes in the future.  I asked them about what resonated with them about the discussion on Mercy Rule. 
 
Nicole focused on the use of multiple perspectives in the book while also bringing up issues of race and class. She replied, “What resonated with me during my group's discussion was the fact that there were many characters in the novel who could've been the shooter. The multi-perspectives showed that adolescents deal with issues such as bullying, feeling like an outsider by family and peers, abandonment, homelessness, pressure to be someone they're not, self-harm, mental health concerns, etc. Kids don't really get to be kids anymore because society is making them grow up so quickly. What also resonated with me was that school shootings are predominantly occurring in predominately white middle to upper class suburban schools, yet it’s city schools with predominantly lower socio-economic, students of color  that have metal detectors. More attention to taking preventative measures should be put on making all schools safe, regardless of location and socioeconomic status.” Even while listing all the stressors adolescents can face, she still saw hope when she said, “With this book being released in the wake of the Parkland shooting and the influence characters had in the novel, it became even more apparent to me that the students who essentially are putting their lives on the line to come to school have the potential to be incredibly powerful in their speaking out against gun violence. We should not take for granted the maturity of these young people and what a difference they can make with their words and actions.”
​Courtney now teaches in a rural setting, and what struck me as she was talking was she said school shootings have become the norm which were the exact words a Santa Fe student remarked when a reporter asked her if she was surprised this happened. Courtney continued with, “I recall when I was in high school and we did a few lock down drills, but my teachers always taught through them because they were just drills.  It's crazy to me that in just 10 years this has changed so much.  As the teacher, I find myself rearranging my room so we have more hiding spots in case a drill is no longer a drill.  When the principal comes over the loud speaker with the code word, my students just know to get up, hide, and sit quietly.  As their teacher, I find that heartbreaking.  I want my students to feel safe in school like I did, not worrying that this drill might be real.  Working out in the country, a lot of my students are experienced with guns because they are hunters, and after the latest school shooting, that concerned many.  I had students profiling each other.  Because of this, I feel that topics that are brought up in this novel NEED to be discussed in the classroom.  Not only is bullying something that is a cause of these tragic events, but mental health is something that needs to be addressed as well.  I think that students should know where they can get help if they are having these feelings.  Luckily I work at a school where we have a great mental health staff, and they work well with both teachers and students.  Although the topic of school shootings can be uncomfortable it is something that students should be discussing in their classes.”
 
I asked Courtney how reading the book affected her own teaching and view of teens and she replied, “Teens are very complex.  I've learned from teaching in two different schools, one urban and one rural, that although each teen is different they all want the same thing: someone to care about them.  I understand as a teacher I am not going to be every student's "favorite" or the person they go to for advice; however, I make it known to all my students that I am there for them.  I am grateful for where I work and the team of teachers I work with.  We set aside a period every day to discuss our 9th graders.  We talk about changes we see in them or any concerns we are having with a specific student.  I think that this is beneficial because we are able to discuss ways we can help this student.  Do they need to go talk to a trusted adult? Is something going on at home? Can we reach out to their parents? Can we bring the student in and talk to them?  These are all options we discuss as a team. 
 
I think that is very important to have in a school.  The teachers need to work as a team to help the students succeed.  I also learned that if you are the trusted adult students come to it is part of your job to get them the help they need.  I have had kids come to me and talk about how I might not see them on Monday.  It was hard to break their trust, but I followed the necessary steps to get them the help and support so I could see them on Monday.  School shootings are something that can be uncomfortable to teach because it is about more than just a school shooting.  It is looking into bullying, mental illness, the lack of home support, and teachers not doing their jobs.  However, these are all issues students need to discuss and talk about because this is what is impacting them. It really only takes ONE person to listen to a student and help.  It was heartbreaking to read in Mercy Rule about someone who is begging for that help and isn't getting it.  It personally made me more aware in my own classroom.” 
Courtney and Nicole understand that this issue is so much more complex than just guns, and Courtney points out the tenuous nature of discussing guns with students whose families hunt and grew up around guns. As teachers, it’s important for us to consider all the multiple viewpoints in our classroom. Whenever I use young adult literature that my students are uncomfortable with or afraid of discussing the topics with their students, I always respond with three precepts (they could probably quote me by now!): 
 
1) You do right by kids all the time.
2) Books do not harm children.
3) If not you, then who?
 
I realize that last one puts a lot of pressure on them, and in the context of gun reform, it sadly seems it might just be teachers since our lawmakers certainly are not taking up the cause. I taught Courtney as an undergraduate and then was fortunate to have her as a graduate student---she’s heard my 3 points above many times. As an undergraduate she was afraid of teaching such topics. She’s progressed since then and I was happy when I asked her about teachers teaching Mercy Rule and talking about school shootings she said, “As uncomfortable as this topic might make teachers,  they need to discuss and teach it.  Whenever I am teaching a topic that is deep and raw and might make me uncomfortable, I always tell my students that I do not have all the answers and I might not know what to say. But I want to talk about this because it is important that they are aware of what is going on in the world because they can make a difference.  It's okay to be uncomfortable; I found my students appreciate it when I am honest and tell them that.  It makes for a greater discussion.  Mercy Rule is the book I recommend to all students when they come to me for a book recommendation.  I tell them it is a book they can all connect to.   I highly recommend reading the book and trying to find ways to implement it into the classroom.  I know I will be working on that over the summer. “
 
Listening to Courtney, I might just add another precept:

4) It’s okay to be uncomfortable.

Read the book. Spread it widely. And listen to kids and let them talk. 

Hey! Tom Has More Books!

Below are some sample questions that Tom was asked during his Skype with my book club. He again, graciously agreed to answer them so that I might share them with you.  Enjoy!

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1. What was the impetus for you writing a book about a school shooting?

​Technically, MERCY RULE is a prequel to another novel I was working several years ago about a group of students who meet every Friday night at a place they simply call “The Corner.” As I was working on it, I realized I needed an impetus for them to be there, and thought perhaps there had been some tragic event that originated the weekly meetings. That led to the idea of a school shooting.
 
Every novel I’ve ever written comes from a question that can’t be answered by any conventional means. My novel just prior to this one, HELLWORLD, is a horror story that asks “What do you do when your world goes to hell? When you know tomorrow is going to be worse than today?” Thematically, it’s a book that is entirely about dealing with a loved one who has Alzheimer’s, even though that has nothing to do with the plot. In MERCY RULE, given our preponderance of school shootings since Columbine, I wanted to find an answer or seek to understand more what would drive a person to such a horrific act. Readers will notice very quickly that there is more than one person in the novel who might have a “reason” for doing it, and that is intentional—I wanted to draw attention to the fact that there are a lot of hurting students (and adults) in this nation who are being dismissed; unseen, unheard. Rejection at least implies acknowledgement, while dismissal is the utter denial that you even exist, or deserve to. What I learned through writing the book is that it’s easy for any one of us, myself included, to dismiss someone, and that those cumulative dismissals—from parents, family, teachers, peers, whomever—can be devastating.
 
To me, it’s not a “school shooting book.” That is the climax, but it’s not the point. Looking closely, I think readers will find multiple types of violence and dismissal throughout the story.

2. What's the significance of the title "Mercy Rule" ?

​In high school athletics there is often an official or unofficial decision referees can use called the “mercy rule.” It essentially means that if one team is being terribly, terribly beaten—a complete shut-out—the referees will no longer stop the clock so the game will end more quickly and the teams can get off the field instead of being made to stay on and stretch out the embarrassment.
 
One character describes what the mercy rule is and that “in real life, there is no mercy rule,” meaning that too often, it feels as if there is no one to help us, no one who will at the very least allow us some dignity. I think far too many people—students and adults alike—feel this way today. We have to find a way, culturally, to stop treating one another this way.

3. What are some key takeaways that you hope readers leave with when they finish the book?

​The first is that I hear you. That if you have ever felt any of the things these characters feel, you are not alone. There are lots of others who have been where you are, and that there is reason to hope and to hang on.
 
Secondly, I hope it reminds readers that we have got to talk and to listen to one another. We’ve all gotten so good at smiling and saying, “Good, good!” when someone asks us how we are, yet we could be full of torment inside. That’s not helping us. We have to speak up about what we are really feeling; we have to speak up when we suspect someone is not well; and we have to listen when someone tells us (through words or actions) that they need help. It feels as though “slipping through the cracks” has become the norm for us, and I hope this book and others like it get readers to stop and think and choose to listen to others.

4. I know YA authors don't write books for teachers to use in their classroom, but this is obviously a timely topic and necessary topic to discuss in schools. What would you like to envision in terms of the discussions by students and teachers around your book? What action do you hope might come about as a result of students reading this book?

Books act as surrogates. Students can talk about characters and situations that they are intimate with, without naming themselves. I hope discussions about identifying with characters will happen; I hope teachers will have the courage to ask readers, “What did you think of the adults in the novel?” and listen carefully and respectfully to responses. Ask them if they knew who the shooter was going to be, and if so, why? What were some of the things that tipped them off? What would they have done if they were a character in the book?
 
As a multiple victim of it myself, I have come to believe that all violence—physical, emotional, mental, spiritual—makes all of us in the world a little less human. The violence in the book is not isolated to the shooting at all; some of it takes place on page one, and many students will recognize that instantly even if they can’t (or won’t) necessarily articulate it out loud. I have political opinions on gun control and arming teachers and all the rest of that . . . but I feel strongly that such conversations (which are necessary) are missing the deeper point. I sincerely hope the book causes readers of all ages to look and talk beyond laws and political changes (again—very necessary to have those talks and action!) and into “Why does this keep happening? What can I, a fourteen-year-old freshman, do to change how our world seems to be operating right now?” Because maybe that one change is saying hi to the kid they’ve always avoided. Maybe as a coach or after-school activity sponsor, it’s checking in with all the kids once in a while in a sincere manner.
 
It’s one thing to put mechanisms and machinery in place to “end school shootings.” It’s entirely different to talk about “ending violence in all its forms.”
 
I’m going to say this next part as carefully as I can because I hate upsetting people, but I think it’s important for teachers on the front lines to think about:
 
I had one high school educator tell me right after the Parkland shooting that she asked her class what they were feeling, and, “no one would say anything.” I did not say this, but my first thought was: “I’m 14, 15 years old…sitting in this class day in and day out…and it took a bunch of kids getting killed for you to ask me what I’m feeling? Sorry. You had your chance. Too little, too late.” Does that make sense? We as the adults can’t swoop in now, wringing our hands and begging them to talk to us. Those relationships have to start on day one and keep on going. It starts today if it hasn’t already. Make me (a student) feel listened to and seen and heard. Make this space a safe one for me when things are falling apart at home. No, it’s not what you went to school for, I understand that, but teachers have an impact on student’s lives, period. There’s no escaping that, so we ought to embrace it.
 
This is particularly true in high school, because if you teach up to 12th grade, you are quite possibly and literally the last adult who is going to have influence on a kid. Make it count. Teachers are what I call “the thin chalk line” between childhood and adulthood; once they’re out of high school, that’s it. Students are mostly thrown into the world, so these last few years really, really count.
 
Finally, on the more actionable side—maybe break them into groups and do mini-bookclubs. If this book was meaningful to them, get them started on another one that handles difficult subjects. Get them talking and listening to each other.
 
Then ask them what actionable ideas they have. They are smart and creative and have the energy and the resources; they’ll come up with great suggestions. It will vary from school to school, and what one needs might not work for another.

5. Any last thoughts you can offer teachers about using your book in their classroom?

I would give students a chance to use multiple means of expression to discuss the book. We are all gifted differently, and I think those differences should be highlighted and celebrated. Let them write a song or a poem; write an additional chapter from their own POV as a character in the book, or from one of the extant characters; design a poster or a website; make a short video or book trailer or act out a reader’s theatre scene; write an essay, write a fictional news report or blog post. Whatever their strength is, let them play into it and then give them a damn A for it. I know for some, that’ll be the first “A” they ever got, right? What might that “A” change for them? (I’ve done this in some schools during a writing class I teach. I’ve literally given some students the first A they ever earned, and, wow. Their expressions alone…)

Lastly—and this does not just apply to me—invite authors into the classroom in person or via Skype. YA authors take their jobs very seriously and believe in those readers. If we can help in any way, we love to do that. It seems teachers and media specialists/librarians never think to go ahead and reach out to authors. Often, yes, especially the most popular authors don’t have a lot of time to do many visits…but you’d be surprised how many authors absolutely will make time to meet with you. Reach out. (I can be reached at info tom@tomleveen.com and most authors can be contacted directly through social media, websites, or their publishers.)

I’d like to add: Thank you. Thank you for doing sometimes impossible work under often intolerable circumstances. There is a reason I am not a teacher; I couldn’t handle it. Teachers are rock stars and should be treated as such. My friends and I would either not be here or would be a whole world of hurt today if not for our teachers. Thank you so much for what you do, and don’t give up on us. We need you.
1 Comment

ProjectLIT: A Book Club That’s FIRE by Martha Guarisco

5/23/2018

1 Comment

 
Summer is coming! Will your students be reading? Are you reading yourself? Perhaps most importantly, how are you planning the reading opportunities for all of the students you will meet next year? These are important questions. I believe that we need to think intentionally about our reading and the reading of our students. I read intentional in at least three ways. First, I read a great deal of young adult fiction. It is my profession. As a result, I think about it, I critique it, I write about it, I wonder about the impact it has in the life of adolescents. Given all of that, I still read quite selectively. Primarily, I read older, realistic young adult fiction. To stay current, I rely on the reviews of others so that I don't miss the best of YA sci-fi, fantasy, or middle grades book. Thankfully, every so often these individuals write for this blog. 

Second, I read American detective fiction. Now, that summer is here, I will soon make a pilgrimage to the public library to catch up one the most recent books by Robert Crais, Walter Mosely, Lee Child, James Lee Burke, Michael Connelly, Linda Barnes, Bill Pronzini, Marcia Mueller, Janet Evanovich, and yes, even though Sue Grafton has passed on, I still have to read Y is for Yesterday. I will lament with many others that her alphabet will end with Y.

Third, I still read the classics and the books of Nobel and Pulitzer prize winning authors. I don't see an end to my "to be read" list. In fact, as I finish this introduction, I am listening to the PBS show, The Great American Read. I am thrilled with all of the children's and young adult books on the list. I love that I have read so many. Yet, there are some that I need to   to my list. The list is exciting, but, in my opinion, it has gaps. It doesn't have a book by William Faulkner, Saul Bellow, or Cormac McCarthy.

Well, enough about my reading habits. Martha Guarisco, a teacher from Baton Rouge, introduces us to a reading activity that might be implemented in your classroom or school.

ProjectLIT: A Book Club That’s FIRE by Martha Guarisco

It’s still dark outside, 5:15 in the morning on the last Monday of the school year.  To-do tasks, loose and prepped by their warm-up laps during my fitful sleep, line up at the day’s starting line, side-eyeing each other, checking out the competition. In the first heat: books to organize, grades to record, essay feedback to share, parents to email, checklists to complete.  

They’ll have to bounce on their toes a while longer, though, because first, I need to print out a copy of the cover of the latest ProjectLIT book selection for the upcoming school year, Like Vanessa by Tami Charles.  I promised Ella, one of my reluctant readers, she could hang it up this time.  Besides, the sprinting will come soon enough.
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ProjectLIT has, in some ways, been a game changer this year, a reminder that while it’s easy to get bogged down in the nuts and bolts of curricular demands, what matters most is connecting readers to books.  Jarad Amato started ProjectLIT in his Nashville school two years ago, focusing his work on establishing a book club to address book deserts.  Since encouraging other teachers to join in, there are now 230 chapters across the country. 230 groups of students reading and discussing diverse, contemporary young adult literature.  230 enthusiastic chapter leaders eager to share their experiences with like-minded professionals.
Each of my ProjectLIT book club meetings has looked a little different.  Kwame Alexander’s Booked and Alan Gratz’s Refugee were whole-class novels, so discussion took place throughout our reading..  Students who’d somehow missed out on R.J. Palacio’s Wonder before coming to middle school were encouraged to read it independently before seeing the movie and competing in a BreakoutEDU game.  Students waited, impatiently, to get their hands on one of the 10 copies I ordered of Towers Falling by Jewell Parker Rhodes, which we celebrated by creating a poster for first responders in our area. Many students realized they enjoy graphic novels (and history!) through reading John Lewis’ March, for which we created a trivia game. In one of our Twitter chats, another chapter leader encouraged me to try Jason Reynold’s Ghost as a read-aloud, and students unanimously picked Patina as a followup.  Last week, part of our book challenge included a sunflower seed spitting contest.
My involvement in ProjectLIT has served as powerful reminder not to forget the fun while I plan for students’ literary experiences.  It’s also given students ways to show leadership: planning for snacks, decorating our meeting space, designing flyers, creating trivia questions, announcing our meetings, scoring trivia contest entries.  60 of my 90 6th graders participated in leading a book club meeting at some point this year.
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And we’re hoping to grow next year.  We’ve ordered book trucks so we can share books with other grade levels.  Students are eager to read the 2018-19 book selections over the summer so we can make good choices about which ones to tackle in our book club.  We’d like to invite other community members to participate, too.
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Interested in learning more about ProjectLIT?  Or curious about the last selections to be announced? Check us out on Twitter: @ProjectLITBR @ProjectLITComm @marthastickle
Don't forget. There is still time to come to the 2018 Summit on the research and teaching of young adult literature. I am sure we will be discussing great project like this one. Don't forget to come be #VegasStrong and #YACritical
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Until next week!
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Two New Books! Young Adult Literature and the Digital World and Toward a More Visual Literacy

5/16/2018

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As an editorial team, Jennifer, Shelbie, and I couldn't be prouder of the work that has gone into producing these two timely volumes. The Digital world is here. How we consider its space and place in the English Language Arts Classroom is an important topic of discussion. We were very lucky to find a group of scholars and teachers who are imagining this world in combination with Young Adult Literature.  Below we introduce you to the each book along with a brief abstract of each chapter. To further peak your interest, in some instances we show the cover of a YA title featured in the chapter.  In addition, we introduce you to the authors of these fine chapters. We hope you share this space over and over again.
Plus, right now there is a Giveaway! Win a copy of Young Adult Literature and the Digital World or Toward a More Visual Literacy! Click here for the details!
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Jennifer S. Dail is a professor of English education in the Department
of English at Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia. She
also directs the Kennesaw Mountain Writing Project (KMWP), a National
Writing Project site serving teachers Pre-K through college in all content
areas. She has received multiple grant awards supporting the work of KMWP, including an Improving Teacher Quality grant. Prior to joining the faculty at Kennesaw State University in 2006, she taught English education courses at
the University of Alabama and taught middle and high school English. Dail has served as coeditor of SIGNAL Journal. She is also an active member of National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and the National Writing Project
(NWP).
Shelbie Witte is the Kim and Chuck Watson Endowed Chair in Education
and associate professor of adolescent literacy and English education at Oklahoma State University, where she directs the Oklahoma State University Writing Project and leads the Initiative for 21st Century Literacies Research.
Her research focuses on the intersection of twenty-first-century literacies and pedagogy, particularly at the middle level. She is coeditor, along with Sara Kajder, of NCTE’s Voices from the Middle.
Steven T. Bickmore is associate professor of English education in the Department of Teaching & Learning in the College of Education at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). He taught high school English in the Jordan School District in the Salt Lake City area from 1980 to 2008. In addition to teaching English courses, including Advanced Placement courses, he taught
Latin and humanities. His many teacher awards and recognitions included an NEH/Reader’s Digest Teacher Scholar Award (a full-year paid research sabbatical) for the 1989–1990 school year, and he was a winner of the prestigious Milken Educator Award in 1999. He is a cofounder and coeditor of Study and
Scrutiny: Research in Young Adult Literature
. 

Young Adult Literature and the Digital World

​PART I: USING YOUNG ADULT LITERATURE AND DIGITAL SPACES TO ENCOUNTER THE WORLD

​Chapter 1.
​Emojis 👀, #Hashtags, and Texting 📱, Oh My!: Remixing Shakespeare in the ELA Classroom
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Michelle M. Falter is a former middle and high school English teacher and is currently assistant professor of English education at North Carolina State University. Her scholarship focuses on English teacher education; young adult literature; emotion in the teaching of literature and writing in the secondary classroom; and participatory, dialogic, and critical, feminist pedagogies that help educators coconstruct knowledge with their students. She is also the coeditor of the book Teaching outside the Box but inside the Standards: Making Room for Dialogue (2016), with Bob Fecho and Xiaoli Hong.
Crystal L. Beach is a high school English teacher and a doctoral candidate at the University of Georgia in the Department of Language and Literacy Education. Her interests include new literacies, identity, multimodalities, popular culture, and technologies in the secondary English classroom. She writes about these topics to offer educators ways to consider how they might create a more meaningful pedagogy for their unique students. Currently, she is working on a project that focuses on sports literacies and representations of female athletes’ bodies.​
Abstract: In this chapter, we explore how ELA teachers can better bridge the canonical with the digital world adolescents fully embrace. Although some English educators and scholars argue that Shakespeare is irrelevant to the lives of teens today (Gallo, 2001; Roberts, 2008; Spangler, 2009), other scholars argue that the universality of classic and canonical texts and authors like Shakespeare stands the test of time and should continue to be taught in classrooms (Jago, 2001; Lomonico, 2012). Despite the very split views on Shakespeare’s relevance today, we feel that Shakespeare isn’t going away anytime soon, and we don’t think his works necessarily should. Therefore, we make an argument for a middle ground -- a bridge between the traditional, classic, canonical text and the digital, multimodal, participatory world of the 21st century. This middle ground, we argue, can be found in Random House publishing company’s new series called OMG Shakespeare! that takes four Shakespeare plays to the modern era by remixing them into a story using all the tools of today’s digital text-message society.
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Chapter 2.
​When Stories Transcend Books: Ideas for Teaching Transmedia Stories in the ELA Classroom
Rikki Roccanti Overstreet is a doctoral candidate in curriculum and instruction with an emphasis in English education at Florida State University. With a master’s degree in post-1900 literary and cultural studies, she is interested in how literature and literacy evolve with time, technology, politics, and culture,and how such changes shape adolescent readers and affect the ELA classroom.
In conjunction with this interest, she studies young adult literature, transmedia stories, and twenty-first-century literacies.
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Abstract: this chapter address the environment transmedia storytelling by discussing what transmedia stories are, why teachers should use them in the classroom, when teachers should use such stories, and ways to specifically implement these texts into a curriculum. Woven into this discussion will be practical applications, specific examples of transmedia texts, and theoretical frameworks to support educators’ use of transmedia stories in the classroom. The goal of these discussions is to increase educators’ knowledge of what transmedia is and facilitate a discussion about its use in education in the hopes of increasing teacher confidence to use such texts. 
Chapter 3.
Book Clubs to Book Trailers: Remixing Reader Response with Digital, Mobile, and Multimodal Literacies
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Lesley Roessing taught middle school for twenty years. She now serves as founding director of the Coastal Savannah Writing Project and senior lecturer in the College of Education at Armstrong State University. Lesley
is the author of several professional books for teachers including The Write to Read: Response Journals That Increase Comprehension, Comma Quest: The Rules They Followed--The Sentences They Saved, No More “Us” and “Them”: Classroom Lessons & Activities to Promote Peer Respect, and Bridging the Gap: Reading Critically and Writing Meaningfully to Get to the Core, as well as articles for NCTE, NWP, ELMLE, and AMLE publications. She is also a columnist for AMLE Magazine.
Julie Warner is a former high school teacher and holds National Board Teaching Certification. She has a decade of experience implementing professional development for teachers across grade levels and subject areas in technology and literacy. She has also worked as a K–12 education policyadvisor in the US Senate and as an education research analyst at the US Department of Education. Prior to her federal service, Julie taught university faculty teaching courses in writing, linguistics, and Internet ethics. She also served as technology director of the Coastal Savannah Writing Project. She is the author of Adolescents’ New Literacies with and through Mobile Phones as well as articles for the Journal of Literacy Research and SIGNAL Journal.
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Abstract: This chapter describes the practice of reading YA novels in book clubs and collaboratively creating book trailers (short, visual “teasers” that advertise books to prospective readers) for those books with iPads for mobile, multimodal, and networked literacy practice. The book trailer project makes a space for students to engage with print text in mobile, kinesthetic, and ultimately multimodal ways.

PART II: USING YOUNG ADULT LITERATURE AND DIGITAL SPACES TO EVALUATE THE WORLD

Chapter 4.
We Too Are Connecticut: Digital Ubuntu with Matt de la Peña’s We Were Here
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Bryan Ripley Crandall, PhD, is director of the Connecticut Writing Project at Fairfield University (CWP-Fairfield) and assistant professor of literacy in the Graduate School of Education and Allied Professions. His interests include writing instruction, young adult literature, refugee and immigrant youth, and community-based scholarship.
For this chapter Bryan brought together a team of teachers.
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Kate Bedard currently teaches English at Bassick High School in Bridgeport,Connecticut, where she advocates for urban youth, storytelling, and creativity.
Paula Fortuna teaches world literature at the Center for Global Studies in Norwalk, Connecticut. Her students explore their place in the world through the processes of analyzing and creating a wide variety of texts. As a world traveler herself, she celebrates diversity, multiculturalism, perspectives, and
international integrity. She is a teacher-fellow of CWP-Fairfield.
Kim Herzog teaches English at Staples High School in Westport, Connecticut. She is the faculty advisor of award-winning literary magazines and is the teacher-leader of her school’s technological efforts. In 2015–2016, she was her district’s Teacher of the Year and was a state semifinalist for Connecticut Teacher of the Year.

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Shaun Mitchell teaches African-American literature, playwriting, and AP literature at Central High School in Bridgeport, Connecticut. When he is not teaching in the classroom, he directs and advises the Central Players, the drama program at his school. In 2016, he was a finalist for Connecticut Teacher of the Year. Shaun also is a lead instructor of several of the Young Adult Literacy Labs offered through CWP-Fairfield.
Jennifer von Wahlde teaches English at Darien High School in Connecticut and is a part-time communications instructor for Post University. Her passion for teaching is rooted in fostering creative expression and growth opportunities
for her students. She is a teacher-fellow who instructs in CWP Fairfield’s Young Adult Literacy Labs.
Megan Zabilansky is an English teacher at Joel Barlow High School in
Redding, Connecticut. She currently teaches AP Language and Composition, Writing to Speak: Words to Be Heard, and sophomore and junior general English. She is also a teacher-fellow of the CWP-Fairfield.
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Abstract: In 2015, teachers from six urban, suburban, and rural high schools collaborated to provide writing opportunities for students for a Writing Our Lives – Digital Ubuntu conference at Fairfield University. Rethinking traditional classroom spaces them helped to celebrate youth voices and perspectives in a variety of digital genres.  Through the use of Matt De La Peña’s young adult novel We Were Here , they asked their students to leave their mark on Connecticut. Funded through a 2014 LRNG Innovation Challenge grant, each school united projects through following an African philosophical concept of Ubuntu (Caraccciolo & Mungai, 2009; Swanson, 2007) and asked high school students to explore individual responsibilities to their larger communities.
Chapter 5.
Becoming a Global and Digital Citizen through the Power of Young Adult Literature
Kathryn Bailey is a secondary English teacher in the Henry County School System, currently teaching at Hampton High School in Hampton, Georgia. She received her undergraduate and graduate degrees in secondary English education from Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia.
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Abstract: This chapter is about harnessing the power of Young Adult Literature to promote students’ identification of social issues and injustices in order to find real-world solutions. Teachers will be encouraged to personalize instruction for students not only by making the content relevant to the world around them, but also by how they read their texts and advocate for change or awareness of their social issue. 

PART III: USING YOUNG ADULT LITERATUREAND DIGITAL SPACES TO ENGAGE IN THE WORLD

Chapter 6.
Participating in Literacy and the Outside World: Consuming, Composing, and Sharing Graphic Narratives
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Brandon L. Sams is an assistant professor of English at Iowa State. His research interests include reading and writing pedagogy, critical reflection, and teacher identity development. His work has appeared in such venues as The ALAN Review, Journal of Language and Literacy Education (JoLLE), and English Teaching: Practice & Critique. He is currently focused on aesthetic and contemplative reading practices to interrupt and renew “schooled” reading practices shaped by the epistemologies of audit culture. 
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​Mike P. Cook is an Assistant Professor at Auburn University, where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in English Education. He utilizes comics and graphic novels with pre-service and graduate-level ELA teachers and has done scholarship on using graphic novels to foster engagement, comprehension, and multimodal literacy. His scholarship has appeared in The ALAN Review, SIGNAL Journal, and Journal of Language and Literacy Education, among others. 
Chapter Abstract: ​The purpose of this chapter is to describe the ways graphic narratives can be used with ELA students and pre-service teachers to foster multimodal literacy and to assist all students in becoming engaged, thoughtful participants in their digital and disciplinary worlds. Grounding our methods in a theoretical framework informed by digital literacy and multimodality, we offer, using our own classroom as a model, a unit centering the analysis, composition, and publishing of graphic texts. Our approach provides students opportunities to contribute to their digital, local, and global communities, positioning academic and out-of-school literacies as mutually enriching activities. 
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Chapter 7.
​Remixing Literacy for Justice and Hope
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Breanne Huston is the Co-Director of the Summer Institute for the Red Clay Writing Project. She has facilitated workshops and presentations on writing instruction in the secondary classroom for Red Clay’s Saturday Morning Series, for GCTE, and for NCTE. She is a 2018-2019 Conference on English Leadership Emerging Leaders fellow. She is currently a member of the Georgia Writing Project (GaWP), PhD candidate at The University of Georgia, and a secondary literacy coach.
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Abstract: This chapter describes how teachers may think about using young adult novels, technology, and social media to provide critical opportunities within the ELA curriculum for students to think about the world and their place within in it. The author uses Sherman Alexie's novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian as an example text and describes literacy activities incorporating cameras, podcasts, and memes.
Chapter 8. 
#iread #iwrite #iteach: Modeling the Use of Technology,Participatory Culture, and Critical Inquiry with YA Literature in the ELA Classroom

Steffany Comfort Maher is a new minted Ph.D in English education from Western Michigan University with a dissertation on critical inquiry approaches to teaching young adult literature. She is now an Assistant Professor of English Education at Indiana University Southeast. Her research interests include intersections between cultural studies, critical youth studies, young adult literature, and preservice teacher education. The mother of fourdaughters, Steffany is also interested in the reading practices of “adolescent” girls. In addition to her chapter in this book, she has published an article in English Journal entitled “Using To Kill a Mockingbird as a Conduit for Teaching about the School-to-Prison Pipeline.”
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Abstract: Combining critical inquiry with the examination and creation of remixes and mashups is an opportunity for students to connect popular culture with critical pedagogy.  In this chapter, Steffany shares methods ELA teachers are using to empower students to playfully and critically inquire into culture; to analyze stories, contexts, themes, and issues in young adult literature and other forms of popular culture such as memes, advertisements, and subvertisements; to engage meaningfully with technology in the English classroom through creating a participatory culture; and to share ideas and make a difference in their local communities and in the world.   
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Toward a More Visual LIteracy

PART I: CLASSROOM CONTEXTS: HELPING STUDENTS VISUALIZE DIGITALLY

Chapter 1.
“It’s about More Than Words:” Reading All American Boys in a Social Digital Reading Environment
Sara B. Kajder, PhD, is a member of the English Education faculty at the University of Georgia. Her research and pedagogical writing explore questions related to our uptake of digital tools in support of readers and writers, teacher practices with digital tools and social media, and implications for teacher education. She is the author of several practitioner books, including the 2012 James Britton Award winning Adolescents and Digital Literacies. Dr. Kajder received the 2016 Divergent Award for Excellence in 21stCentury Literacies and the 2017 National Technology Leadership Fellowship in English Education. She currently coedits the NCTE’s journal Voices from the Middle with Shelbie Witte.
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Abstract: This chapter unpacks a five-week project conducted in the spring of 2016 which engaged two classes
of eighth grade readers in a collaborative exploration of All American Boys by Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely. What
makes the project stand apart are three main elements. First, all of the reading and annotation was done using Glose, a multi-platform digital reading environment which supports multimodal annotation along with more traditional text-based response, highlighting, etc. Second, the two classes were separated geographically by 625 miles, but shared demographics including food-unstable homes facing significant poverty, diversity of enrollment, and the reality that each class roster was loaded with readers who were performing at least two years beneath grade level (by district assessments). And, thirdly, it presented an opportunity for students to use their avatar within Glose to project an entirely new and different reading identity, one which invited them to talk with agency about how a book meant, and what it (and their understanding) could do. This was a social reading experiment that completely transcended the goals we set for it as classes of readers and as teachers who read. 

Chapter 2.
Flipping the Teaching of Young Adult Literature with Preservice Teachers
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​Bio: Dr. Amy Piotrowski is an assistant professor of secondary education and English education at Utah State University-Uintah Basin.  She teaches undergraduate courses in English education and secondary education as well as graduate courses in literacy education.  Her scholarly interests focus on 21st century literacies, digital literacies, young adult literature, and teacher education.  Before becoming a teacher educator, Dr. Piotrowski taught middle school and high school English in Houston, Texas.
​Abstract: My chapter, "Flipping the Teaching of Young Adult Literature With Preservice Teachers" is about preservice teachers in an English education course on young adult literature.  My preservice teachers were introduced to flipped learning and then made a flipped lesson on a young adult novel that they had read.  Two preservice teachers in this course made very different flipped lessons, demonstrating that flipped learning can be a useful teaching method for a variety of approaches to teaching literature to secondary students.
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Chapter 3.
Socratic Learning Conversations: Ancient Practice Meets New Technology
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Matt Copeland is an author, presenter, and instructional coach who works with educators to build capacity in using Socratic Circles in K–12 classrooms and beyond. A former English teacher and department head, he has been recognized as the 2006 Distinguished Kansan of the Year in Education, a 2005 Milken National Educator, and a 2003 Kansas Master Teacher. He is a frequent presenter at local, regional, and national conferences and has published several books, essays, and poems on the teaching of English.
Jenny Cameron Paulsen is an instructional coach at Holmes Junior High School in Cedar Falls, Iowa. A junior high and high school English and history teacher for twenty-three years, she is a past-president of the Iowa Council of Teachers of English and an ardent advocate for the Iowa Writing Project. A graduate of Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa, She is passionate about spreading hope, conversational learning, genealogy, archery, and knitting. She lives on a farm with her husband and teenage son.

PART II: SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT: CONNECTING YOUTH BEYOND SCHOOL

Chapter 4.
Responding to Young Adult Literature through Civic Engagement
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Kristen Hawley Turner, PhD, is associate professor of English education and contemporary literacies at Fordham University. Her research focuses on the intersections between technology and literacy, and she works with teachers across content areas to implement effective literacy instruction and incorporate technology in meaningful ways. She is the coauthor of Connected Reading: Teaching Adolescent Readers in a Digital World and Argument in the Real World: Teaching Students to Read and Write Digital Texts. She is also a teacher consultant for the National Writing Project and director of the Fordham Digital Literacies Collaborative.
Dawn Reed is an English teacher at Okemos High School in Okemos, Michigan. Dawn is also codirector of the Red Cedar Writing Project at Michigan State University. Dawn earned her master’s degree in writing and rhetoric with a specialization in critical studies in literacy and pedagogy from Michigan State University. She conducts PD for teachers focused on technology integration and the teaching of writing. She is coauthor of Research Writing Rewired: Lessons That Ground Students’ Digital Learning and Real Writing: Modernizing the Old School Essay, and she has published in various journals, books, and websites.
Abstract: Digital media has infiltrated every aspect of life. Teens, in particular, embrace Internet use, and their digital habits bring opportunities and challenges for teachers of literacy. On the one hand, students are able to connect with others, beyond the walls of the classroom, in order to share - and develop - their views of the world. They can, in fact, contribute in meaningful ways to society at large. On the other hand, teens need to develop skills of participation. They need to connect their academic lives to their social ones in productive ways, and they do not necessarily develop the critical practices they need without the support of adult mentors. This need can be met by rethinking the role of literature, particularly young adult literature (YAL), in English Language Arts classrooms. This chapter explores YAL as a springboard to civic engagement, showcasing classrooms that engage students in participatory action.
Chapter 5.
​Social Media, Gaming, and Jay Gatsby: Integrating Youth Motifs with Youth Literacies in High School English
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Alison Heron-Hruby is assistant professor of English education at Morehead State University in Morehead, Kentucky, and a former middle and high school English teacher. Her research focuses on multimodal literacies, reading comprehension, and the teaching of writing. She has published in Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, Reading and Writing Quarterly, and English Journal.
Dakoda Trenary recently graduated from Morehead State University with a Bachelor of Arts in English, concentrated in secondary education, and is an instructor of English at Rowan County Senior High School in Morehead, Kentucky.
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Abstract:  This chapter demonstrates the value in having students use social media and gaming platforms as mediating tools for reading comprehension. The guiding question for our chapter is relatedly: How can (and why should) high school teachers re-mix literary interpretation to include youth’s preferred multiliteracies? Samples of multimedia student work delineate the unique and important contributions a group of high school students made to their class unit on the The Great Gatsby.
Chapter 6. 
​Infusing Young Adult Literature into the Virtual Classroom
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Brooke Eisenbach is assistant professor of middle and secondary education at Lesley University. She was a middle school English and young adult literature teacher for nine years, and an English I virtual school teacher for two years. She is an active member of the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and American Educational Research Association (AERA), anda state representative for Assembly on Literature for Adolescents (ALAN). She is a member of NCTE’s Standing Committee against Censorship. She is a former recipient of the Florida Council of Teachers of English Teacher of the Year and the NCTE Outstanding Middle Level Educator in the English Language Arts awards.
Paula Greathouse is assistant professor of secondary English education at Tennessee Tech University. She was a secondary English and reading teacher for sixteen years. She is an active member of the NCTE, Literacy Research Association (LRA), AERA, and a state representative for ALAN. She sitson NCTE’s Standing Committee against Censorship, LGBT Advisory Committee, and Gender and Equities Committee. She is a former recipient of the Florida Council of Teachers of English High School Teacher of the Year Award and the NCTE Teacher of Excellence Award.
Jennifer Farnham is a teacher for Florida Virtual School, an online K–12
public school where she teaches film/theater and social media. She was a middle school language arts teacher for three years and a high school English teacher for ten years. She is passionate about incorporating independent reading in the classroom along with innovative technology and social justice.
Abstract: Virtual education is expanding. With this ever-growing form of education comes challenge and opportunity. Teachers must find ways of meeting the academic, as well as social and emotional needs of students. It is important to encourage virtual adolescent learners in their critical reading and engagement with the world of YAL through today’s virtual channels in an effort to help them see the importance of reading in their lives and allow  students to grow and develop as avid readers and connoisseurs of YAL. This chapter provides readers strategies for integrating contemporary YAL into the virtual classroom, along with suggested YAL titles focused on the role of technology within the lives of today's adolescent learner. 

PART III: CRITICAL INQUIRY: DIGGING DEEPER WITH YOUNG ADULT LITERATURE

Chapter 7.
Emerging Media, Evolving Engagement: Expanding Teachers’ Repertoires of Young Adult Literary Study and Response
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Anna Smith is an Assistant Professor of Secondary Education at Illinois State University. She is the co-author of Developing Writers: Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age, and a co-editor of the Handbook of Writing, Literacies, and Education in Digital Cultures. Her research on writing development, transliteracies, educational technologies, and the intersection of teaching and learning can be found in Theory into Practice, Journal of Literacy Research, Education Sciences, English Journal, and Literacy. Her scholarly work is buttressed with 19 years of work in public schools as a teacher, district-level teaching specialist, and teacher educator. You can find her online on her website, Developing Writers, or on Twitter at @anna_phd.
Robyn Seglem is an Associate Professor of Middle Level English Language Arts and Literacy at Illinois State University. Researching on technology’s role in literacy, adolescent literacy, and content area literacy, her work has been published in Teachers College Record, the Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, English Journal, Voices from the Middle, and the Journal of Language and Literacy Education. She teaches literacy courses to middle and secondary preservice and graduate teachers from 20 content areas. She is a nationally board certified teacher, and taught for nine years in middle and high school language arts.
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Abstract: Drawn from both university and school-based professional development courses focused on young adult (YA) literature, this chapter includes activities for teachers to begin and/or deepen their engagement in new forms of literary and media study with YA literature. Organized around three forms of traditional literary study—close reading, reader response, and social semiotics—that are evolving in the advent of new media, this chapter provides teachers ways to take up practices learned from youths’ engagements with YA literature and new media to better prepare themselves to contribute to their students’ learning of the same.
Chapter 8.
Seeing the World Differently: Remixing Young Adult Literature through Critical Lenses
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Jennifer S. Dail is a professor of English education in the Departmentof English at Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia. She also directs the Kennesaw Mountain Writing Project (KMWP), a National Writing Project (NWP) site serving teachers Pre-K through college in all content areas. She has received multiple grant awards supporting the work of KMWP, including an Improving Teacher Quality grant. 
Aneté Vásquez is associate professor of curriculum and instruction at Kennesaw State University. She teaches courses in English/language arts and general education in the Department of Secondary and Middle Grade Education. Her research interests include all aspects of the clinical preparation of teachers, particularly in the area of preparing teacher candidates to work with diverse learners.
Abstract: This chapter examines and reports on how students take up critical literacy lenses in analyzing literature. It then use remix as a concept in responding to literature and how that up-taking of remix demonstrates the five characteristics of the participatory culture framework as described by Jenkins, Kelley, Clinton, McWilliams, and Pitts-Wiley (2013).
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Chapter 9. 
​“Song of Myself ”: A Digital Unit of Study Remixed
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Fawn Canady is a visiting professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, in literacy education. Her research interests include visual culture and multimodal composition. An active member of the Southern Nevada Writing Project, she engages in writing, youth, and community. Prior, Fawn was a high school English teacher at a career and technical academy,  and project facilitatorfor the Clark County School District, supporting new teachers and mentors. She was also an online instructional designer in professional development education.
Chyllis E. Scott is assistant professor of literacy at UNLV. She graduated from Texas A&M University with a PhD in curriculum and instruction with an emphasis in literacy education. Prior to earning her doctorate, Dr. Scott was a classroom teacher, English as a Second Language teacher and department head, codirector of Advancement Via Individual Determination (AVID) and gifted and talented education programs, and a school-wide reading specialist. Her primary research interests include adolescent literacy
Kymberly Martin is a high school English teacher in Las Vegas, Nevada, and an adjunct professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, in the Department of Teaching and Learning, Literacy. She teaches honors and AP courses. Kym has worked as a project facilitator for the Clark County School District developing professional development (PD) for new teachers and mentors. She has also designed PD around projectbased learning. Kym has worked  with UNLV researchers to pursue  meaningful, creative, and identity-affirming curriculum for high school students.
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Abstract: In Chapter 9, Whitman’s celebrated poem, Song of Myself, served as an invitation to explore the social and “essential self” through a Digital Self-Portrait: a media representation of identity reflected in and through online technology.  The project consisted of a student-directed genre study (e.g., social media, digital video, online comics), explorations of modes, peer workshops, and literature circles around young adult literature (YAL) choices.  YAL created an entry point into conversations about complex issues surrounding technology, social relationships and identity. Throughout this unit, students used their digital media savvy to probe socially embedded codes and explore identity.  This is their story.
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YA Graphic Mysteries by Robert Prickett and Casey Cothran

5/9/2018

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One of the best perks of running this blog is the opportunity to learn from all of the guest contributors. I love it when Robert Prickett is on the list. I learn new information from him every time. He is an expert on the YA graphic novel. This time he has teamed up with his colleague from Winthrop University, Casey Cothran. I would be the first one to acknowledge, that in most cases, my students in a YA course know more about graphic novels than I do. I am always learning (I don't what to look stupid; which, as I age and get further removed from some aspects of popular culture, happens all of the time.). So, thanks Robert and Casey. This is a great post and I have a longer too read list. This a post that you should share with others. Take a minute and share the URL.

Before you get too far into graphic mysteries, take some time to check Robert's previous posts. He has one on YAL that is connected to Politics and Activism and a second on Female Coming of Age in the Graphic Novel. 

YA Graphic Mysteries

You may be thinking … Graphic mysteries?! For young adults?! Just how graphic is graphic?! However, today we’re discussing comic books and graphic novels. (Which, to be honest, may very well include a graphic murder or two.) But why is it important to think about the graphic mystery text in relation to YA readers? Mystery can be a controversial genre, as it often deals with issues of violence, human cruelty, injustice, and suffering. Nevertheless, many argue that, despite its dark moments, the mystery story allows the reader opportunities both to solve complex puzzles and also to regain faith in the idea that answers to difficult questions do exist.
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Furthermore, when combined with the graphic novel format, the mystery might be said to inspire “double-detective* work” on the part of the reader. (And aren’t we always trying to encourage YA readers to think deeply?) In a typical mystery, the reader is constantly on the alert. She is paying attention to physical clues, to mysterious past events, and to character behavior, as well as to the tone and language of the story she is reading. Ultimately, she is working to solve the riddle of the crisis before the detective does! Additionally, one might note that the reader of the comic book also does special work in an effort to follow the plot of the graphic text. He is paying attention to both the written words on the page and to the graphic imagery. It is the pictures in the comic book that communicate major events of the plot, the feelings of characters, and the tone of the story. Ultimately, when one combines the mystery narrative with the medium of the comic book, the critical thinking requirements are amplified. In their efforts to solve mystery puzzles, readers of these texts are inspired to investigate the interaction between text and image, the coloring of a panel, or the discrepancies that may exist between character dialogue and blocks of narration. They have to become reader-detectives.
​And how much fun is that? It’s a lot of fun. So, here are a variety of graphic (and great) mysteries for you to investigate on your own. FYI: Book title links are to Amazon; author/illustrator links are to personal webpages or social media accounts. (Please note: we purposefully have focused on YA-friendly graphic novel mysteries in the list below. There are some classic graphic novel mysteries like Watchmen, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Blacksad, and The Fade Out which are appropriate for older adolescents and adults.) 

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​Angel City: Town without Pity written by Janet Harvey and illustrated by Megan Levens and Nick Filardi
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A “classic” Hollywood noir, presented with style, this story follows Dolores Dare, a former starry-eyed ingénue turned enforcer, whose past and present collide when an old friend is found murdered. 
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​Bad Machinery series written and illustrated by John Allison
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Two groups of sleuths: three girls, three boys compete (and sometimes collaborate) to solve mysteries around Keane End, Tackleford and Griswalds Grammar School. Very humorous. Very British.  
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Batman: The Long Halloween written by Jeph Loeb and illustrated by Tim Sale
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This collected graphic novel (of the original 13 issue series) follows Batman as he tries to catch a serial killer. Can Batman catch the murderer, who is killing only on holidays, before the killer strikes again?
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Black Dahlia (Treasury of XXth Century Murder) written and illustrated by Rick Geary
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Named a 2017 YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens, Nonfiction, this graphic novel recounts the life and death of 22-year-old Elizabeth Short , who would become known in 1947 as “Black Dahlia”.
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Bungo Stray Dogs written by Kafka Asagiri and illustrated by Sango Harukawa
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This manga centers around gifted detectives with supernatural powers who form the “Armed Detective Agency” solving mysteries and carrying out missions for the mafia.
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Chew written by John Layman and illustrated by Rob Guillory
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Tony Chu is a detective. Tony Chu is Cibopathic – meaning he gets psychic impressions from whatever he eats. Tony Chu is a good detective as long as he doesn’t mind chewing a corpse or two. 
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The Mystery Society written by Steve Niles and illustrated by Fiona Staples
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Anastasia Collins and Nick Hammond are the Mystery Society. They are rich, resourceful, refined, determined to uncover the paranormal secrets of the world’s underbelly . . .  and in need of new recruits: a ghoul named Secret Skull, two twin girls from Area 51, and a robot with the brain of Jules Verne round out the gang. 
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Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys: The Big Lie written by Anthony Del Col and illustrated by Werther Dell’edera
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Teenage brothers, Frank and Joe Hardy, are accused of murdering their father. They must prove their innocence by teaming up with Nancy Drew to solve the mystery. This is a re-imagining of the classic teen detectives. 
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Scooby Apocalypse written by Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis, and illustrated by Howard Porter, Dale Eaglesham, Wellington Alves, and Scott Hanna
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The classic gang is back (or rather in the post-apocalyptic future): Fred, Daphne, Velma, Shaggy, and Scooby Doo still fight crime – but “the apocalypse has happened” and “the old rules about logic do not apply.” Like Nancy  Drew and the Hardy Boys, check out this re-imagining of classic mystery sleuths.
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I am Princess X written by Cherie Priest and illustrated by Kali Ciesemier
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This is a particularly unique text; it combines a traditional mystery novel with graphic segments, so it is not quite a “graphic novel” or a “traditional novel,” but it is excellent nonetheless. Two best friends create a comic book princess together. A few years later, one of the girls, Libby, dies in a car crash. The surviving friend, May, now sixteen discovers a sticker with a remarkable likeness to Princess X, the princess created many years ago. Soon, May sees the Princess everywhere. 
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​Stephen King wrote in Under the Dome, “Murder is like potato chips: you can’t stop with just one.” We’d agree and argue that “Graphic mysteries are like potato chips: you can’t stop with just one.” Enjoy!
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​*For a deeper scholarly analysis of the idea of the double-detective, see our forthcoming article, “The Double Detective: Compounding Complexity in The Fade Out, a Noir Graphic Novel” in Clues: A Journal of Detection, 36.2 (Winter 2018).

​Until next time.
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Sarah has a Book Event!

5/7/2018

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Remember, Sarah? See was highlighted a little over a week ago, because she is giving away books and Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday is helping. In you are in the Chicago area, you might consider trekking over to Glen Ellyn. 
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To get to know Sarah a little bit better, she has answered some interview questions.
If you want a chance to talk with Sarah, come helps us be #VegasStrong and #YACritcal at the 2018 Summit. She will be discussing her work and doing some breakout sessions.
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Until next time.
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Brendan Kiely has a New Book and Laurie Halse Anderson is Going to be with him to Talk about Tradition.

5/3/2018

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Brendan Kiely is a happy guy! He should be. He has a new book out. I don't think I have ever seen Brendan when he hasn't been brimming with enthusiasm. Well, he should be, his books are fantastic. I know, I know you might have heard of a little book that made a splash a couple of years ago--All American Boys.  Well, if that is the only book of his that you know you are missing out. The primary thing you need to know about Brendan, is that he is not afraid to speak truth to power. His debut novel, The Gospel of Winter is compelling and powerful. His writing gets more powerful as he moves along. I feel in hard for his third novel, The Last True Love Story. As I was reading about it, I kept thinking, I am going to write about this book. It is fantastic. Music is a dominate theme that helps establish character, setting, and connects ideas family across time and space. So, I did. My son, Isaac Bickmore, a music educator at the University of Central Missouri, teamed up with me and we wrote a chapter about project based learning and alternate assessments using music as a base. The chapter is entitled "A Music and ELA Project: Connections through Brendan Kiely's The Last True Love Story" I was published in Adolescent Literature as a Complement to the Content Areas: Social Science and the Humanities edited by Greathouse, Kaywell and Eisenbach.

Back to Brendan.
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The new book, Tradition, is another book that deals with male aggression and rape. It tackles the subject with the same literary strength as Speak, Inexcusable, and Wrecked. These are the first few that come to mind, but there are many others and Kiely's effort is fine addition.  ​
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Brendan has been on tour with the new book--unfortunately, he isn't coming to Las Vegas. He is, however, going to be Fairless Hills, PA with Laurie Halse Anderson on May 4, 2018--Today! Wouldn't you just love to be in this conversation? I certainly would. If you are in the area, you ought to make your way over to that particular Barnes and Noble bookstore. 
While you are there don't just buy a copy of Tradition, pick up the rest of his works.

​Brendan has been kind enough to answer a few interview questions. Take a few minutes and get some added insight into the workings of this gifted author. 
Until next time. 
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    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
    Chief Curator
    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and department chair 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.

    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.

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