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Engaging Empathy and Activating Agency: Young Adult Literature as a Catalyst for Action [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 126 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 227x164x15 mm, weight: 372 g, 2 BW Illustrations, 14 Tables
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2021
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1475853645
  • ISBN-13: 9781475853643
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 126 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 227x164x15 mm, weight: 372 g, 2 BW Illustrations, 14 Tables
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2021
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1475853645
  • ISBN-13: 9781475853643
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
This book provides a step-by-step guide for teachers to implement an action-based curriculum, using young adult literature to engage students with contemporary issues. In addition to reading, ELA core standards including speaking and writing are addressed within this curriculum. Each chapter focuses on a different aspect of the curriculum: helping students find their passion; guiding them in collaborative group reading of relevant novels; supporting them in researching, writing, and speaking about their topic; and helping them translate their ideas into action within their school and community. The book is set up in such a way that teachers can follow the curriculum from beginning to endor, if they choose, incorporate only some of the chapters. The author brings the curriculum alive with teacher and student voices about their experiences. The appendix describes contemporary middle school and high school novels that address a variety of social justice topics. Ultimately, the book supports teachers as they inspire their students to examine issues with empathy, research potential solutions, and exercise agency as they take action to help address issues the students are passionate about.

Recenzijos

Engaging Empathy and Activating Agency is a refreshingly vivid account of how teachers can cultivate students inquiry stances to act on their worlds and create change. Through tangible and adaptable activities and detailed and scaffolded instruction, Dr. Hays provides a clear path for those of us wishing to engage students with both literature and life. Accompanied by real-life examples, this work shows us both the successes and challenges of curriculum that pushes the boundaries of traditional classroom settings and offers a way forward in our particularly trying times. -- Ashley S. Boyd, assistant professor, English education, Washington State University In Engaging Empathy and Activating Agency, Alice Hays demonstrates how young adult literature can be utilized by teachers and students to interrogate social issues and build action plans towards addressing those issues. Hays offers a coherent curriculum unit plan and set of resources for secondary English Language Arts teachers to take up and implement in their own classrooms. The important inclusion of teacher and student voices show the impact of uniting literary analysis with a call to social action. -- Stephanie Reid, Assistant Professor in Literacy Education in the Department of Teaching and Learning, University of Montana

Foreword xi
Dr. James Blasingame
Prologue xv
Introduction xvii
Why Young Adult Literature? xvii
How Can Reading YAL Develop Empathy? xviii
Why Is It Important to Teach for Agency? xix
Who Did This Work? xx
Acknowledgments xxiii
1 Finding the Passion
1(16)
What the Teacher Does
2(1)
Priming Students for Issue Focus
2(1)
Guiding Students through Privilege Activities
3(2)
Identity
5(1)
Finding Books
6(1)
Thinking through It
7(2)
Student Activities
9(1)
Discussions of Privilege
9(1)
Philosophical Chairs
9(1)
Brainstorming Issues
10(1)
Social Identity Wheel
10(2)
Putting Theory into Practice
12(1)
Successes
13(1)
Struggles
14(1)
Conclusion
14(3)
2 Reading the Novels
17(14)
What the Teacher Does
18(1)
Creating Groups
18(1)
Setting up a Reading Timeline
19(1)
Thinking through It
19(1)
Consider Reading Attitudes
19(1)
Prepare Literature Circle Packets
20(1)
Student Activities
20(1)
Literature Circles
20(2)
Collaborative Note Taking
22(1)
Structured Identity Journal Entries
22(2)
Putting Theory into Practice
24(1)
Successes
25(3)
Struggles
28(2)
Conclusion
30(1)
3 Building Capacity and Engaging Community
31(18)
What the Teacher Does
32(1)
Focusing the Research Question
32(1)
Understanding and Identifying Research Sources
33(1)
Making Connections
34(1)
Sharing Information
35(1)
Student Activities
35(1)
Preresearch Activities
35(3)
Secondary Research Activities
38(3)
Primary Research Activities
41(3)
Presentation Activities
44(1)
Putting Theory into Practice
45(1)
Successes
45(1)
Struggles
46(1)
Conclusion
47(2)
4 Taking Action
49(16)
What the Teacher Does
50(1)
Student Agency
50(1)
Idea Bank
51(1)
School-Communication
52(1)
Conferencing with Student Groups
52(1)
Thinking through It
53(1)
Barriers Students Might Have around the Issues Themselves
53(1)
Troubleshooting and Supplying Innovative Approaches
54(1)
Student Activities
55(1)
Develop the Work Plan
55(1)
Present Results to Stakeholders in the Community
56(2)
Reach Out to School Administrators
58(1)
Present to the School
58(1)
Assessments
59(2)
Putting Theory into Practice
61(1)
Successes
61(1)
Struggles
61(2)
Conclusion
63(2)
5 Voices from the Field
65(30)
Teacher 1 Mr. Munoz
65(6)
Teacher 2 Ms. Neff
71(5)
Student Experience: Isaiah
76(5)
Appendix: Books for Social Justice Issues
81(1)
Middle School Book Ideas
81(1)
Racism
81(1)
Poverty
81(1)
Immigration
82(1)
Drug Abuse
83(1)
Women's Rights
83(1)
Social Media Awareness
84(1)
Domestic Abuse/Violence
85(1)
Mental Health/Suicide
86(1)
Environment
86(1)
Bullying/Peer Pressure
87(1)
Human Trafficking
87(1)
High School Book Ideas
88(1)
Refugee/Immigration
88(1)
Muslim Discrimination
89(1)
Racial Equality
89(1)
Gender Equality
90(1)
LGBTQ
90(1)
Poverty
91(1)
Abuse
91(1)
Mental Health
92(1)
Environment
92(1)
Technology
93(1)
Bullying
94(1)
Works Cited 95(6)
About the Author 101
Alice Hays is an assistant professor of education at California State University, Bakersfield where she works with teacher candidates. As a former secondary English teacher, she sees the importance of co-creating curriculum with educators currently in the classroom in order to support students engagement as well as inspiring their own pro-social behavior.