What was your reaction to Roz
Schanzer’s excellent post,
yesterday? Frankly, it made steam come
out of my ears. I took it as a shot
across our bow. The Washington
Post article she linked to and the article last week in the NY Times show an enormous lack of
knowledge about our genre. It’s almost
as if we’re invisible to the rest of the world.
We’re fighting all kinds of assumptions.
Here are a few right off the top of my head:
·
All nonfiction is
equal and equally boring.
·
Nonfiction is
reading a manual
·
“there isn’t that human connection that you get with
literature. And the kids are shutting down”
·
Nonfiction is “recipes and train schedules.”
·
“nonfiction requires more rigor than a literary novel”
·
“nonfiction may help you win the corner office but won’t
necessarily nourish the soul.”
And the articles that I excerpted these quotes from mention only long-form
journalism as an example of high quality nonfiction; neither article mentions
the existence of our genre of nonfiction literature for kids.
It’s not like we haven’t been thinking about
this for a looooong time. Here are a few
of the reasons our books are not studied in classrooms as the CCSS say they
should be taught:
·
They don’t come
with ancillary material such as lesson plans, and teacher’s guides and study
questions.
·
Educators don’t understand
how they support and fit into the curriculum.
·
Teachers are
afraid to stray from the prescribed reading material for fear something might
show up on the assessment tests that they should have “covered” but missed.
·
Teachers are
over-worked, over-scheduled and have very little time to invest in doing
something differently unless they know it will work.
·
Many educators
have not taken the time to read even one of our books. Teachers have no time to read them.
Librarians may beg teachers to work with them and pull books but often they don’t
have much influence.
·
There is a LOT of
confusion about the CCSS. Educators need
to understand that the standards are in
the way things are taught, not in the books themselves. Teaching from badly written material is NOT
the way to teach kids to read to learn—one of the basic literacy skills of the
CCSS. So they need to find out that our books are going to liberate them to
teach with much more creativity, critical thinking and, yes, humanity. And
reading is not just for ELA classes but for all subject areas. Our books are not competing with the teaching
of fictional literature.
iNK Think Tank is in the process of
becoming a company that will address these issues. It’s been a learning curve to find out how to
be a business but, after three years, it’s starting to come together. Here are
some of the things we’re planning: (I’m
into lists today.)
·
We are going to
expand our membership to include you, our readers. If you were a member, what would you want
from such a membership? We’re thinking lesson plans, book clubs with online
discussions, a community of sharing and strategizing about using nonfiction in
the classroom.
·
We will have the
money to pay for high-quality lesson plans, and consultants, and passionate advocates and we invite you to
participate.
·
We’re not yet
sure how things will develop but we already have a mailing list of thousands
of registered users for our database and will use it to keep you informed. So
if you’d like to be involved please register in the iNK Think Tank database and
be sure to use an email address that won’t come up against a school
firewall.
·
If you have ideas
and suggestions about how you personally can help, please send them in to: thoughts@inkthinktank.com
It’s
clear that we authors can’t fight this alone; we need your help. Please join
us. Learning is a struggle, but the
community that reads this blog knows that it can be a joyous one. It’s time to help the rest of the world find
out.
PS. Yesterday, I sent Roz's comments to Valerie Strauss at the Washington Post, who responded with interest. Here two posts of hers hot off the keyboard: Common Core Reading, Pros and Cons; and List: What Common Core Authors Suggest High-Schoolers Should Read.
PS. Yesterday, I sent Roz's comments to Valerie Strauss at the Washington Post, who responded with interest. Here two posts of hers hot off the keyboard: Common Core Reading, Pros and Cons; and List: What Common Core Authors Suggest High-Schoolers Should Read.
4 comments:
The fact that CCSS and the use of nonfiction is getting so much attention in The Washington Post and on various blogs is a good sign. We need to talk about this. Frankly, I found John T. Spencer's list of pros and cons in Commom Core teaching, printed in Valerie Strauss's December 4th article, to be clear and sensible. And, as he noted, this is not going to be s seismic shift in teaching. However, there will be changes.
It is time we all got over the Appendix B issue. These books were listed as EXEMPLARS. They were not meant to define the books being used across the country. Granted, I wish the list had included more recent nonfiction as well as the tried and true AND in some instances the questionable choice. But, let's move on to promote the use of excellent nonfiction that teachers, parents, children, and authors can support.
Vicki -- I had the same reastion when I read the NY Times article. While the author defended nonfiction (which was good), there was no real mention of what we do, and have been doing for years, with nonfiction. As for Appendix B, I've heard a number of people (writers mostly who aren't on the list) criticize and condemn it. My answer is that they really did need to give some examples and tried to put together a wide-ranging list (without creating one so long it would be daunting), but that they never said "these are the only books you should use." I assume there will be many such lists created in the next few years that will have more recent titles listed. It will be interesting to see who creates these lists and what is included (and I'm assuming that some textbook companies will be putting together their own lists -- catalogs? -- in order to stay in the game).
Thanks for helping to jump-start this conversation, Vicki. It's an important one, because the problem with all of these newspaper-sponsored articles is that they ignore EVERY SINGLE ONE of the outstanding nonfiction books that have been written for a modern young audience during the past 15 years or so. This is a crying shame. Kids can relate to these incredible new books in a far more direct way than they can relate to ancient classic texts. And by the way, we authors don't ignore the classic material either. Among other things, today's nonfiction books do an outstanding job of incorporating the ideas from older material and putting them into context in an appealing, compelling, accurate, and astonishingly well- written way instead of hanging the original source material out to dry on its own. The new books turn kids on to reading and learning big time, not the other way around.
So READ YOUR OWN NEWSPAPERS, journalists! You review these great nonfiction books in your own newspapers on the same days you write misleading material about what is or should be included in the Common Core!
Thank you, Vicki and Roz. We need to educate the media, and emphasize that our innovative nonfiction titles are available to replace textbooks (which are boring).
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