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The Big Fresh from Choice Literacy
November 3, 2007 Blood, Guts, & Gas
This week as I was skimming through the new postings, looking for a
theme for this lead article, I noticed a topic that came up in two
different articles. Farts. What are the chances, especially in a
newsletter for literacy leaders?
Maybe the topic popped up because we are coming out of Halloween
week, and that weird sugar/chainsaw vibe it evokes. More likely
it's due to the surge of new interest in boys' literacy. If you
let students, especially boys, choose any topic that engages them
at the moment, you're bound to face a bit of blood, guts, & gas in
your writing workshops.
I hesitate to bring up topics like boys' literacy in the
newsletter, because whatever I write is sure to offend someone.
There are many researchers and teachers who believe we are at a
crisis point with boys and literacy achievement. On the other side
of the fence you have people who agree with Nancie Atwell, who
writes in her new book The Reading Zone:
I read the essays, articles, and books about the boy crisis, and I
shake my head. Who are these boys? I cannot recognize a single
one of the guys I teach in the stereotypes. And I teach guys.
Nancie Atwell, The Reading Zone p. 95 (Scholastic, 2007)
What's your opinion about boys' literacy and school support for it?
Crisis? Much ado about not much? No matter what I believe, what
I write is sure to offend someone reading these words. My best
hope is to come up with something that doesn't offend everyone.
Yet the more I think about it, the more sense it makes for the
newsletter and some of the postings on the site to stir things up a
bit.
Parker Palmer, the author of The Courage to Teach, writes about the
importance of "third things" for learners in any community -
writing, ideas, or art that comes from outside ourselves and our
colleagues to spark new ways of looking at old problems. Whether
it's a poem, a short essay, or a painting, an outside perspective
is often the perfect way in to discussions of topics that we may
disagree about vehemently.
I hope this week's postings that mention the unmentionable can be
useful "third things" for you and your colleagues as you grapple
with the issue of boys and literacy, as well as the pop culture
sludge (male and female varieties) that is always oozing under the
school's doors and into our classrooms.
We aren't going to agree completely in our communities about how to
balance good taste and choice in literacy workshops - but a
spirited, friendly chat among colleagues can help all of us work
through tough issues together. Enjoy!
Brenda Power Editor, Choice Literacy
Free for All
From the Choice Literacy Archives, "Up Gross and Personal: Dealing
with Dicey Topics in Writing Workshops" provides examples from
classrooms at different grade levels of what a range of teachers
accept and won't accept as topics in writing workshops. It's a
good article to use as a springboard for a discussion of school and
community norms:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/public/173.cfm
Guys Read is the website founded by Jon Scieszka, acclaimed author
and former elementary teacher. The site has terrific resources for
educators, parents, and students, and is easy to navigate. This
link takes you to guys' picks of favorite books at different grade
levels:
http://www.guysread.com/picks_guys_young.html
The issue of choice in writing workshops only gets trickier as you
move up through the grades. The Annenberg Foundation's video
professional development programs are always worth a look, but
their middle school writing cycle authored by Linda Rief is
especially strong. Annenberg has the best deal on the web for
professional development - you can download or watch the videos for
free with satellite feeds, and the print resources are also
complimentary and available on-demand:
http://www.learner.org/channel/workshops/middlewriting/
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/products/item16.cfm
For Members Only
"To Fart or Not to Fart?" was the question at the first meeting of
Jennifer Allen's boys' literacy study group for teachers, and what
followed was a rollicking discussion of writing, taste, and books
that hook boys. Jen will focus her writing on organizing and
coordinating study groups all year long at Choice Literacy, sharing
recommended resources, agendas, and snapshots from a range of study
group offerings:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/476.cfm
We've posted Part II of The Sister's design photo essay on tight
spaces. This week's tips cover walls and creative storage:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/477.cfm
Jennifer Jones finds she is still learning on the job as a
literacy coach, especially when it comes to building relationships
through collaborative teaching. In "How I Flunked Literacy
Leadership 101," she shares a breakdown in communication with a
colleague, and how she is working to rebuild the relationship:
http://www.choiceliteracy.com/members/478.cfm
That's all for this week! |