Monday, February 2, 2009
the high school canon
English teaching students often think about the literature we are expected to teach because English studies is heavy into reading and analyzing literature as being synonymous with what one learns in English class. English study at the college level too often privileges and sustains this notion. However, if you look at what counts as English study at the middle and secondary level, you notice that we talk as much about our responsiblity to teach all the English language arts (speaking, reading, writing, listening, and viewing) not strictly literature. Also, new teachers and preservice teachers also think about teaching the works they read in college with their students in middle and secondary schools (e.g., Shakespeare, Milton, Chaucer, Joyce, etc.). There is a high school canon that rarely, if ever, gets read or discussed at the college level. Many new teachers gasp in horror when they get the "approved" book list or the grade level curricula and discover that many of the books they'll be expected to teach are books they haven't read or discussed since they themselves were in high school. The ENT 439 class and their other literature classes do little to help new teachers prepare to teach works like To Kill a Mockingbird or The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Can you find some representative book lists from Missoula County Public Schools or from some other district in which you imagine yourself teaching? Survey the list to note whether you have ever read the books on the list, when you last read them, whether you discussed them with other readers and how well prepared you would feel if told tomorrow that you needed to teach such-and-so a text. How might media help you feel more prepared, better prepared than you do today?
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http://www.norwichfreeacademy.com/fileadmin/user_files/about/Information_Technology/summer_reading_10-12.pdf
ReplyDeleteThe .pdf link to the summer reading list for my high school, grades 10-12. I feel like my high school holds exceptional standards for its students and can imagine myself teaching in this type of environment.
I think the list is pretty contemporary with books, such as Marley and Me and The Secret Life of Bees but also respecting the classics like The Grapes of Wrath and On the Road while even addressing a multicultural aspect with The Alchemist.
It has been over 10 years since I have read some of these books and just as long since I have engaged in discussion about them. I would not feel prepared if I had to teach any of these books tomorrow. I think media can play a role in teacher preparedness but I also can see it offering instances for laziness when preparing for lessons; perhaps I am not thinking out of the box enough and have not yet grasped the possibilities media brings to the table.
This question makes me want to read more!
Plains High School teaches the Red Badge of Courage, which I have never read. They teach one Shakespeare play every year and parts of Beowulf which I feel competent to teach. They use a text book for English more than novels, and they do not spend as much time analyzing literature as I would expect. However, they have a great writing program which does prepare the students for college.
ReplyDeleteAlthough I would prefer to teach on a piece of literature that I have read and studied, I would not be afraid to teach a literary work of art that I have never encountered. Part of the joy of learning is the discovery process and I would feel closer with my students discovering a new work with them. I would like part of my challenge as a teacher to keep introducing new works. If we (as a class)only study what I (as a teacher)know and think it would be boring!
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