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Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday's 
Monday Motivators

This blog page hosts posts some Mondays. The intent and purpose of a Monday Motivator is to provide teachers or readers with an idea they can share or an activity they can conduct right away.

The Main Blog Page

Choral Reading Using Poetry by Lisa Hazlett

9/25/2023

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Poetry was meant to be heard, but its reading aloud is difficult and requires practice for educators, students triply so.
 
Placing students in situations where they must read unfamiliar material aloud to classrooms via popcorn reading, reading in the order of their seating, small groups, or any other method is usually less than ideal.  Further, doing so is detrimental to poorer readers having more difficulty with pronunciation (true of anyone suddenly asked to perform), causing embarrassment and certainly lowering self-esteem. 
 
Generally, students are more concerned with their personal contribution rather than listening to others; before their turn they are focused upon what they are to read and afterwards, relieved to be finished, pay little attention to others.  Such types of reading aloud do not allow for much understanding or familiarity of the piece selected, or enjoyment.
 
Importance of Reading Aloud and Listening
  • Engagement in expressive reading [enunciation, expression, tone, pausing, etc.] as reading the text as it was meant to be heard. 
  • Develops stronger vocabularies and more sophisticated language structures [symbolism, nuances, reading in-between the lines, foreshadowing, etc.].  Listening to that which they may skip or misunderstand in print assists student understanding/knowledge.
  • Increases attention spans, learning how to listen for important points, and listening to others.  Students have forgotten how to listen in our technology-heavy classrooms as information is often given to them.  Listening requires students to acquire needed information. 
  • Assists in understanding more sophisticated pieces.
  • Helps students visually picture a scene; those who are poorer readers or read infrequently tend not to visualize details (a character’s appearance, the events occurring during a party portrayed) while reading.
  • Naturally, it provides more practice with the English language for ESL/ELL students.
  • If done correctly, reading aloud and listening improve student skills and confidence.
Instructions and Examples
As with most new activities, begin with poetry that is easier to understand, allowing students’ prior understanding of terminology, meaning, etc.  The task here is having more than one read from the same poem and deciding which verse combination expresses the piece most effectively, and why. 
All poems are from Shel Silverstein.
Silverstein, S. (1974). Where the sidewalk ends. Evil Eye Music Inc.
Silverstein, S. (1981). A light in the attic. Evil Eye Music Inc.
  • This activity may be completed on paper, using highlighters, or directly on the computer, then downloading and printing.  
  • Students are placed into groups that equal the number of readers for each poem (2-3); two readers are generally best for shorter works and three for larger ones.
    • Groups may be given the same poem for comparison/contrast discussions, or different poems for each to hear a wider variety.
  • After the group reads the poem, each selects their color (green, yellow, orange) and practice highlighting lines that will be read by each person.  After deciding upon its most effective reading, they should be able to state why this version was chosen.  Next is double-checking that each in the member has the same highlighted lines, followed by practicing reading aloud.
    • Once students become more confident with this activity, two or more may read the same line or lines.
  • For reading, students should stand apart in the classroom, such as one on either side and the third at the back, one on both sides, etc.  This provides a stronger version to listeners, as they are focused upon hearing the poem rather than watching a group at the front.  It also eases reader embarrassment, as such placement removes the feeling of being on display.
  • Students read the poem aloud to the class by the colors selected and the order appearing in the poem. 
  • Whole class discussion can begin after each poem, or after all have been read, considering each separately.
How was each group’s highlighting different, and why?  Which was most effective, and why?
 
Examples

Tryin' On Clothes
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​Recipe for a Hippopotamus Sandwich      
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  Safe?
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Today's post was written by Lisa A. Hazlett. Dr. Hazlett is a professor of secondary education at the University of South Dakota, where she teaches middle/secondary English language arts education courses and specializes in young adult literature regarding presentations and publications; special interests include gender issues and rural education. Her 2023 text, Teaching Diversity in Rural Schools: Attaining Understanding, Tolerance, and Respect Through Young Adult Literature, was published by Rowman & Littlefield, among numerous other publications centered on young adult literature.
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She also serves and provides leadership for numerous NCTE assemblies, special interest groups, and committees, especially ELATE, and as an avid reviewer she regularly evaluates young adult literature novels and manuscripts for various journals and publishing houses. 
 

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Graphic Novels & The Power of Social Emotional Learning: Minh Le’s Enlighten Me by Darius Phelps

9/18/2023

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There are  times in our lives as Literacy Educators where we happen to stumble across a book and immediately know “Yep, that’s the one. The one that will change lives, our communities, our world and most importantly, our hearts --  for the better.” When I got my hands on an advanced copy of Minh Le’s forthcoming Enlighten Me, I knew immediately that this book would start the ripple effect and amplify what it means to dive into ourselves, our emotions, and facing our authentic truths. 
With the implementation of diverse read alouds, it should be our  mission to create a brave and supportive environment that nurtures individual growth, promotes excellence, engages creative thinking, develops a desire for life-long learning, and stimulates an appreciation for human diversity and the world in which we live.  A true safe space is one that is debatable, for students who come with various trauma, baggage, and emotions, so feeling truly safe, may not even be impossible. With a brave space, students are willing to be vulnerable, face uncomfortable situations and conversations, and are willing to speak up/share out, even with this risk.  Now,  as a Lecturer in Multicultural Education My overarching goal is to provide students with the necessary tools to master skills, solve problems, strive for excellence, and live as active members in their local and global communities.

When it comes to Social Emotional Learning (SEL), it is a lifelong process for both the teacher and the student. In order to develop the self-awareness, self-control, interpersonal skills and all the intangibles that are paramount of work, school and life, both adult and child must be willing to do the inner work that is necessary to allow these areas to manifest into something that they can apply to real-life, everyday situations. As a practitioner, I believe that the process of doing that inner work requires honest self-examination, painful self-excavation and restorative healing, as shown through Binh’s journey in Enlighten Me. We, as educators, can teach our students how to deal with these feelings and use Minh’s latest work as a model for change. 
Being Intentional in the Classroom: 
Teach our students strategies to deal with hard feelings
  • Being able to identify and label feelings the foundation. Knowing what to do when unsettling feelings come up is the next step. Feelings like anger, sadness, and confusion will undoubtedly arise from time to time in the classroom.
  •  It is important that we, as educators, always recognize that there is so much more to our students than what we see. We have to be intentional about getting to know our students and understanding their environmental layers. 
  • The factors that make up their microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, and macrosystem are a big part of who they are and in order for our students to feel psychologically safe in our classrooms, we have to get to know those aspects of a student and celebrate what it is that makes them who they are!
  • We must prioritize freedom of expression through writing opportunities moving forward both in the home and school settings so that children can begin to form relationships again.  By pairing with diverse literature, especially graphic novels, we are giving and getting hands-on experience with different world scenarios. 
On September 19th, Minh will release his groundbreaking new graphic novel and with the turning of each page, classrooms around the world will irrevocably change for the better, aiding educators in fostering a true brave space where all are expected, especially male  students of color. With the story being told through the eyes of middle grade aged protagonist, Binh, a young Vietnamese boy who channels the power of meditation to help his own self learn what it means to truly face the spectrum of emotions within. 
This book is exactly what I needed as a young boy struggling to understand his own emotions and feeling alone, especially as an African American male, who only found comfort in books. With this graphic novel, Minh has laid the foundation for showing our young men of color, what it truly means to own their emotions and cultivate their own healing, starting with the archaeology of self in order to cultivate their own genius. 




Today's post is written by Darius Phelps. He is a PhD Candidate in English Education  at Teachers College, Columbia University.



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Burning Books While the Planet Burns by Anna Bernstein

9/11/2023

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In 2022, the American Library Association reported a record number of attempts to ban or censor the books that young people can access in their schools and communities. This staggeringly steep trend line shows increased attention paid to how young people are either afforded access to or denied access from knowledge and experiences that might encourage them to challenge a white, heteronormative, neurotypical, Western-centric status-quo.

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On a different graph, this time of the world’s global average surface temperature, we see the same drastic increase but with an inverted level of attention and immediacy. We can draw the conclusion then that while our planet hurtles toward a flammable end, some Americans are more concerned with the metaphorical flames they wish to consume inclusive and thought-provoking texts. 

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In order for young people to make sense of the climate crisis and its impending effects on their lives, they must have access to not only factual scientific data but also to narratives that allow them to role-play a climate complicated future. The genre “climate-fiction” is an intersection between classic dystopian literature that imagines dark futures and science fiction that imagines new technological and ideological adaptations to those futures. In young adult climate-fiction, protagonists often grapple with the world handed to them by adults too short-sighted to prevent climate disaster and attempt to make sense of climate-controlled experiences. 

Providing students space in the classroom to read and digest climate-fiction allows them to process and problem solve lived and potential catastrophic events without the physical trauma of first hand experience. When a student reads the story of Lynn, a 16 year old defending her only source of potable water from despotic militia forces in Mindy McGinnis’ Not a Drop to Drink they can imagine themselves as decision makers and resource protectors fostering empathy for many of the members of the global majority already suffering from water scarcity. A paired reading with Neal Shusterman’s California-situated Dry will have students comparing Alyssa’s choices for survival as humans decide whether they will support or fight each other for burnt-out natural resources. A reading of both books offer “what would you do” scenarios for young adults who may actually have to make those decisions and choices about a dying planet in the near future. 

Along with providing kids with opportunities to problem-solve both prevention and reaction to the climate crisis, YA cli-fi sheds light on the inequitable impacts and disproportionate effects of the climate emergency on the Global South, people of color, people in low-income communities, and indigenous nations. Cherie Dimaline’s The Marrow Thieves reveals the cyclical nature of history as colonizers chase down indigenous people yet again, this time in a world ravaged by climate change that has limited the space in North America that is livable. The indigenous people who rely on their knowledge of the land to survive communally are led by a 15 year old desperate to escape the white “recruiters” that stalk them. The book is a metaphorical retelling of the way industrialization and colonization destroy indigenous ways of being that might have nurtured planetary longevity. 

In this same “we told you so” and “you should have listened to us” vein, Nailer from Paolo Bacigalupi’s Ship Breaker meets a young upper class girl totally disconnected from his experience as a copper scavenger in the mega hurricane volatile watery regions of the future Gulf Coast. His story weaves a tale of how poverty inequity will only be widened by climate change and the ways in which young people who lack privilege will be marginalized and abused by a world even more bereft in natural resource stability than our current reality. Though incredibly dark at times, it’s a tale that enables students to say “not if I can help it” to the not-so-inevitable doom haunting their very real futures. 
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Literacy has a long legacy of chain-breaking and world-making. Adults have the responsibility to pass down the power of literacy to young people so that future generations can craft a world healthier, more inclusive, and more just than the version they inherit. Providing young people with stories of both tragedy and resilience backed by scientific realities fosters a sense of urgency and creativity about the climate crisis so that they can view themselves as change agents rather than victims; critical citizens rather than passive participants. 

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    Curators

    Melanie Hundley
    ​Melanie is a voracious reader and loves working with students, teachers, and authors.  As a former middle and high school teacher, she knows the value of getting good young adult books in kids' hands. She teaches young adult literature and writing methods classes.  She hopes that the Monday Motivator page will introduce teachers to great books and to possible ways to use those books in classrooms.
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    Emily Pendergrass
    Emily loves reading, students, and teachers! And her favorite thing is connecting texts with students and teachers. She hopes that this Monday Motivation page is helpful to teachers interested in building lifelong readers and writers! 
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    Jason DeHart
    In all of his work, Jason hopes to point teachers to quality resources and books that they can use. He strives to empower others and not make his work only about him or his interests. He is a also an advocate of using comics/graphic novels and media in classrooms, as well as curating a wide range of authors.
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