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ELE 616 Readings and Research in Children’s Literature Spring 2012




                                       Teaching A TEAM
                                       Children’s EFFORT
                                       Literature
2


   Teaching Children’s Literature
A subversive activity?
  . . . I think we should . . . take children’s literature
   seriously because it is sometimes subversive
  The great subversive works of children’s literature
   suggest that there are other views of human life
   besides those of the shopping mall and the
   corporation. They mock current assumptions and
   express the
   imaginative, unconventional, noncommercial view of
   the world in its simplest and purest form. They appeal
   to the imaginative, questioning, rebellious child within
   all of us, renew our instinctive energy and act as a
   force for change.
  Alison Lurie. A Child’s Garden of Subversion.
   New York Times Books section. February 25, 1990.
3

    Why Teach Children’s
    Literature?
“Our purposes for teaching literature to students . . .
 are . . . tied to our notions of the role of schooling”
   We have left behind models of literature teaching
    that result in simply interpreting the texts themselves
    to interpreting and re-interpreting ourselves and our
    worlds through reading. To turn to literature teaching
    as a means toward understanding difference, perhaps
    even to change attitudes toward others and to work
    toward social justice, is to reach toward
    transformative models of reading and
    schooling.
      • Theresa Rogers, Literary theory and children’s
        literature: interpreting ourselves and our worlds
        Theory into Practice, v. 38 no3 (Summer 1999) p. 138-46
4



    The Challenge
Theresa Rogers:
    A final challenge in negotiating children’s responses to
    literature will be to capture the complexity of their lived
    experiences, their private and social performances, and
    their play with and resistance to the demands of
    particular ways of reading and particular kinds of
    stories. What kinds of classroom communities will we
    create in order to provide dialogic spaces in the
    institution of schooling, in which, drawing on
    literature as an art, we help children to know in new
    ways, read the world in new ways, and negotiate their
    responses in a postmodern world?
Literary theory and children’s literature: interpreting ourselves
and our worlds
Theory into Practice, v. 38 no3 (Summer 1999) p. 138-46
5


Importance of free reading
Stephen D Krashen:
  There is now overwhelming research showing that
   free voluntary reading is the primary source of our
   reading ability, our writing style, much of our
   vocabulary and spelling knowledge, and our ability
   to handle complex grammatical constructions. It
   has also been confirmed that those who read more
   know more: They know more about
   history, literature, and even have more “practical
   knowledge” . . .
    • Children’s Literature:
      Very Good News and Very Bad News
6

Pedagogical approaches 1
Teacher-centered approach
  The function of this curriculum is to transmit
  facts, skills, and values through mastering
  knowledge. . . . The teacher determines all
  teaching content and children are just the
  receivers of the knowledge.
  The underlying concept of the teacher-centered
  approach is based on traditional pedagogy
  wherein knowledge is passed from teacher to
  children.
7

Pedagogical approaches 2
Child-Centered Approach
  In comparison to the teacher-centered
   approach, [the child-centered approach] claim[s] that
   the importance of the curriculum is to develop
   children’s capacities and intelligence rather than
   transmitting knowledge and facts.
  The child-centered approach is based on Dewey’s
   (1916, 1938, 1940) theories . . . this approach
   emphasizes nurturing children’s original
   thinking, connecting the learning to children’s
   individual needs, and giving children diverse
   experiences.

  Each approach has strengths and weaknesses . . .
     • Katsuko Hara
8

Reader Response in Teaching
Literature
 Reader Response
   In classroom practice, reader response builds upon the
    transaction between reader and text to encourage
    students to identify explanations, form their own
    opinions, and create meanings based on their own
    individual experiences. As such, in a true reader-
    centered classroom, these explanations, opinions, and
    meanings constructed by students are
    invited, promoted, valued, and seen as beneficial. This
    personal connection between the reader and
    the text is the primary focus of reader response theory.
      • “A Horizon of Possibilities”: A Critical Framework
        for Transforming Multiethnic Literature Instruction
        by Arlette Ingram Willis Julia L. Johnson
9

Literature in the content subjects
 Math and Literature: A Match Made in the
 Classroom
  Literature is the ideal vehicle to help your students see
  the importance of numbers in their daily lives. Included:
  Author Marilyn Burns is one educator who says, “Math
  and literature together? Why not!”
  In Books by Marilyn Burns, Burns uses traditional and
  original literature to address mathematical concepts. Her
  efforts show students that those subjects, like most
  classroom topics, are interrelated.
     • Cara Bafile
       Education World®
       Copyright © 2001 Education World
10



  Multicultural literature
Suggested teaching methods
  Reader response groups
                              From Judith Y. Singer
                              and Sally A. Smith
                              (2003). “The Potential
                              of Multicultural
                              Literature: Changing
  Response journals          Understanding of Self
                              and Others.”
                              Multicultural
                              Perspectives 5 (2), 17-
                              23.
A Collaborative Model          11


(now no longer in operation)
12



  What were the benefits?
More effectiveness!
  By working together, librarians and teachers can
   more effectively enhance student skills, and offer
   youngsters a world of reading and information
   experiences far richer than any institution could
   individually provide.
  -- in just the second full year of Tall Tree
   learning activities, New Rochelle educators and
   librarians already credit Tall Tree with improving
   students' information skills, increasing library use
   and causing parental involvement.
     • What is Tall Tree?
13


  Where are the media specialists?
They should not be left out!
  In a similar partnership to Tall Tree in
   Oregon, “perceiving the public library as a
   threat to their own jobs, [the local media
   specialists] are reluctant to advertise services
   they consider to be duplicating or overriding
   their roles. This creates a dilemma for the public
   library-how can we provide students with
   necessary services without appearing to
   substitute, replicate or duplicate the teacher-
   librarian’s role?”
     • Public/School Library Planning Project,
       Fourth Quarterly Report (no longer available)
14


Are media specialists useful?
Libraries Called Key
  




                        (2004, February/March).
                        Reading Today, 21(4), 1, 4.
15


  English teachers think so, too!
Resolution on Supporting School and
 Community Libraries 2005
  Educational research demonstrates that the services
   of professional school librarians, well-funded
   collections, and rich digital resources enhance student
   achievement. These research studies show that, when
   classroom teachers collaborate with full-
   time, credentialed school librarians to
   design, implement, and assess instruction, student
   achievement increases significantly (see the Library
   Research Service Web site at
   http://www.lrs.org/impact.php).
16

They got power!
 Information Power (1998)
   Roles and Responsibilities of
    the School Library Media
    Specialist
     • As teacher
     • As instructional partner
     • As information specialist
     • As program administrator
17




They empower learners
Empowering Learners:
 Guidelines for School Library
 Media Programs
  Empowering Learners advances
   school library media programs to
   meet the needs of the changing
   school library environment and is
   guided by the Standards for the
   21st-Century Learner and Standards
   for the 21st-Century Learner in
   Action.

                                        17
18




     From:
 Listen to the
    Voices:
   Student
   Learning
through Ohio
    School
   Libraries

Dr Ross J Todd
Presentation at   18
   KLA 2006
19
Are there definite results from
school/library partnerships?
The answer . . . is a resounding yes!
  Students in schools with well-planned
   library media programs and well
   documented collection development
   policies, and whose relationships with
   public libraries include book talks and
   summer reading programs averaged
   reading scores up to 15 points higher than
   those without such LM programs.
     • October 7, 1998
20
21
21
22


You can prove it for yourself!
          Evidence-based practice
23
School Libraries Leading Learning:
from Ross Todd’s Kentucky Address Fall 2006
          School Libraries Work!
               Learning to Read


    Transformational Role of School Libraries




               Reading to Learn
24




A current California campaign
What is a Strong School Library?
  As school libraries close, children of poverty lose
   access and the achievement gap grows larger. The
   easy solution, and one backed up by over 20 state and
   international studies confirms that access to books
   allows children to read more. Reading more creates
   better readers. The school library provides access to
   books, plus access to the professional who can lead
   our children into their digital future safely and
   thinking critically about their world - both virtual
   and real.
     • See also Library Advocate
                                                           24
25




The Challenge!
Being a team player
  It Takes a Village
    • We smother learning
      when we sequester it from the
      community. We strengthen it when we
      bring students and adults together -- in
      whatever ways fit the situation best -- to
      keep company with each other, ask each
      other questions, and witness each
      other's hands and minds at work.
26



A literary village?
Would the community idea be
 something that could be applied to
 teaching children’s literature?




                                      26

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Teaching Children's Literature

  • 1. ELE 616 Readings and Research in Children’s Literature Spring 2012 Teaching A TEAM Children’s EFFORT Literature
  • 2. 2 Teaching Children’s Literature A subversive activity? . . . I think we should . . . take children’s literature seriously because it is sometimes subversive The great subversive works of children’s literature suggest that there are other views of human life besides those of the shopping mall and the corporation. They mock current assumptions and express the imaginative, unconventional, noncommercial view of the world in its simplest and purest form. They appeal to the imaginative, questioning, rebellious child within all of us, renew our instinctive energy and act as a force for change. Alison Lurie. A Child’s Garden of Subversion. New York Times Books section. February 25, 1990.
  • 3. 3 Why Teach Children’s Literature? “Our purposes for teaching literature to students . . . are . . . tied to our notions of the role of schooling” We have left behind models of literature teaching that result in simply interpreting the texts themselves to interpreting and re-interpreting ourselves and our worlds through reading. To turn to literature teaching as a means toward understanding difference, perhaps even to change attitudes toward others and to work toward social justice, is to reach toward transformative models of reading and schooling. • Theresa Rogers, Literary theory and children’s literature: interpreting ourselves and our worlds Theory into Practice, v. 38 no3 (Summer 1999) p. 138-46
  • 4. 4 The Challenge Theresa Rogers: A final challenge in negotiating children’s responses to literature will be to capture the complexity of their lived experiences, their private and social performances, and their play with and resistance to the demands of particular ways of reading and particular kinds of stories. What kinds of classroom communities will we create in order to provide dialogic spaces in the institution of schooling, in which, drawing on literature as an art, we help children to know in new ways, read the world in new ways, and negotiate their responses in a postmodern world? Literary theory and children’s literature: interpreting ourselves and our worlds Theory into Practice, v. 38 no3 (Summer 1999) p. 138-46
  • 5. 5 Importance of free reading Stephen D Krashen: There is now overwhelming research showing that free voluntary reading is the primary source of our reading ability, our writing style, much of our vocabulary and spelling knowledge, and our ability to handle complex grammatical constructions. It has also been confirmed that those who read more know more: They know more about history, literature, and even have more “practical knowledge” . . . • Children’s Literature: Very Good News and Very Bad News
  • 6. 6 Pedagogical approaches 1 Teacher-centered approach The function of this curriculum is to transmit facts, skills, and values through mastering knowledge. . . . The teacher determines all teaching content and children are just the receivers of the knowledge. The underlying concept of the teacher-centered approach is based on traditional pedagogy wherein knowledge is passed from teacher to children.
  • 7. 7 Pedagogical approaches 2 Child-Centered Approach In comparison to the teacher-centered approach, [the child-centered approach] claim[s] that the importance of the curriculum is to develop children’s capacities and intelligence rather than transmitting knowledge and facts. The child-centered approach is based on Dewey’s (1916, 1938, 1940) theories . . . this approach emphasizes nurturing children’s original thinking, connecting the learning to children’s individual needs, and giving children diverse experiences. Each approach has strengths and weaknesses . . . • Katsuko Hara
  • 8. 8 Reader Response in Teaching Literature  Reader Response In classroom practice, reader response builds upon the transaction between reader and text to encourage students to identify explanations, form their own opinions, and create meanings based on their own individual experiences. As such, in a true reader- centered classroom, these explanations, opinions, and meanings constructed by students are invited, promoted, valued, and seen as beneficial. This personal connection between the reader and the text is the primary focus of reader response theory. • “A Horizon of Possibilities”: A Critical Framework for Transforming Multiethnic Literature Instruction by Arlette Ingram Willis Julia L. Johnson
  • 9. 9 Literature in the content subjects  Math and Literature: A Match Made in the Classroom Literature is the ideal vehicle to help your students see the importance of numbers in their daily lives. Included: Author Marilyn Burns is one educator who says, “Math and literature together? Why not!” In Books by Marilyn Burns, Burns uses traditional and original literature to address mathematical concepts. Her efforts show students that those subjects, like most classroom topics, are interrelated. • Cara Bafile Education World® Copyright © 2001 Education World
  • 10. 10 Multicultural literature Suggested teaching methods Reader response groups From Judith Y. Singer and Sally A. Smith (2003). “The Potential of Multicultural Literature: Changing Response journals Understanding of Self and Others.” Multicultural Perspectives 5 (2), 17- 23.
  • 11. A Collaborative Model 11 (now no longer in operation)
  • 12. 12 What were the benefits? More effectiveness! By working together, librarians and teachers can more effectively enhance student skills, and offer youngsters a world of reading and information experiences far richer than any institution could individually provide. -- in just the second full year of Tall Tree learning activities, New Rochelle educators and librarians already credit Tall Tree with improving students' information skills, increasing library use and causing parental involvement. • What is Tall Tree?
  • 13. 13 Where are the media specialists? They should not be left out! In a similar partnership to Tall Tree in Oregon, “perceiving the public library as a threat to their own jobs, [the local media specialists] are reluctant to advertise services they consider to be duplicating or overriding their roles. This creates a dilemma for the public library-how can we provide students with necessary services without appearing to substitute, replicate or duplicate the teacher- librarian’s role?” • Public/School Library Planning Project, Fourth Quarterly Report (no longer available)
  • 14. 14 Are media specialists useful? Libraries Called Key  (2004, February/March). Reading Today, 21(4), 1, 4.
  • 15. 15 English teachers think so, too! Resolution on Supporting School and Community Libraries 2005 Educational research demonstrates that the services of professional school librarians, well-funded collections, and rich digital resources enhance student achievement. These research studies show that, when classroom teachers collaborate with full- time, credentialed school librarians to design, implement, and assess instruction, student achievement increases significantly (see the Library Research Service Web site at http://www.lrs.org/impact.php).
  • 16. 16 They got power! Information Power (1998) Roles and Responsibilities of the School Library Media Specialist • As teacher • As instructional partner • As information specialist • As program administrator
  • 17. 17 They empower learners Empowering Learners: Guidelines for School Library Media Programs Empowering Learners advances school library media programs to meet the needs of the changing school library environment and is guided by the Standards for the 21st-Century Learner and Standards for the 21st-Century Learner in Action. 17
  • 18. 18 From: Listen to the Voices: Student Learning through Ohio School Libraries Dr Ross J Todd Presentation at 18 KLA 2006
  • 19. 19 Are there definite results from school/library partnerships? The answer . . . is a resounding yes! Students in schools with well-planned library media programs and well documented collection development policies, and whose relationships with public libraries include book talks and summer reading programs averaged reading scores up to 15 points higher than those without such LM programs. • October 7, 1998
  • 20. 20
  • 21. 21 21
  • 22. 22 You can prove it for yourself! Evidence-based practice
  • 23. 23 School Libraries Leading Learning: from Ross Todd’s Kentucky Address Fall 2006 School Libraries Work! Learning to Read Transformational Role of School Libraries Reading to Learn
  • 24. 24 A current California campaign What is a Strong School Library? As school libraries close, children of poverty lose access and the achievement gap grows larger. The easy solution, and one backed up by over 20 state and international studies confirms that access to books allows children to read more. Reading more creates better readers. The school library provides access to books, plus access to the professional who can lead our children into their digital future safely and thinking critically about their world - both virtual and real. • See also Library Advocate 24
  • 25. 25 The Challenge! Being a team player It Takes a Village • We smother learning when we sequester it from the community. We strengthen it when we bring students and adults together -- in whatever ways fit the situation best -- to keep company with each other, ask each other questions, and witness each other's hands and minds at work.
  • 26. 26 A literary village? Would the community idea be something that could be applied to teaching children’s literature? 26