Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Online Reflection #2: For The Love of Books....


Let me start off by saying, “I absolutely love books.”  This statement is the premise which I base the following information on.  I have been in the high school now for 3 years and have often wondered, and even asked, how teachers choose the books they use in the classroom.  I have encountered books that are good and those which I have found myself thinking there is no way I would have a class read that book.  There have even been wonderful stories taught in ways that I questions and less fantastic books taught with lessons that are to be admired. 

My CT has already chosen the novels that she wants to teach this year, beginning with The Contender by Robert Lipsyte.  This is a story about a young man who works in a grocery store, his best friend is a drug addict.  The main character decides to join a boxing club in order to improve his chances, and along the way he will discover what it takes to be a “Contender” and a man.  Now don’t get me wrong, there are some very valuable lessons to be learned from Alfred, the main character.  The problem that I have encountered is with those students who are just not engaged in this story.  I have read, and experienced that no matter how wonderful your lessons are, if the students don’t care about the book, they just will not engage. 

One of my big concerns for the future is how to select books that the students want to read and connect with.  In my journey to answer this question, I was introduced to a book by Donalyn Miller titled The Book Whisperer.  Now upon first inspection this book is geared toward middle school, but as with all books, the ideas can be adapted for any level if you work at it.  I connected with what the author was saying in the very beginning, as in the introduction, when she states “I am a teacher who inspires my students to read a lot and love reading long after they leave my class” (Miller, 2009, p. 1).  My response to this was a very loud and resounding, “Yes!  That is what I want to do.”  This book opened my eyes to the reading workshop structure and I have been looking for a way to incorporate it into the high school classroom as she did in her middle school.  Mrs. Miller strongly believes in letting the students choose what they want to read and she teaches “comprehension strategies and literary elements that students could apply to a wide range of texts” (Miller, 2009, p. 17). 

I have not yet seen this strategy applied in high school but I would love to do more research and find out just how we can develop readers.  If anyone has any ideas or additional sources please let me know.  I will leave off with this great quote at the beginning of chapter one in The Book Whisperer:

 

What we have loved

Others will love

And we will teach them how

 

- William Wordsworth

 

References:

 

Miller, Donalyn.  The Book Whisperer: Awakening the Inner Reader in Every Child.  San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2009.