After two years of teaching a course in Young Adult literature for preservice language arts teachers, I was fortunate to receive an examination copy of this book, which is the most comprehensive text I have found for introducing aspiring educators to the teaching of literature.
Although this text is not uniformly solid, it is robust and thorough in many respects. The two introductory chapters provide just enough of a theoretical/pedagogical foundation for students to familiarize themselves with dialogic teaching and an inquiry framework. The chapters also provide a strong argument for the importance of context and getting to know the students you will be teaching. Subsequent chapters address teaching YA literature, incorporating multiple literacies in language arts instruction, curriculum planning, backwards planning, designing inquiry units, supporting reading comprehension, the use of multiple theoretical critical lenses or perspectives to assist students in constructing meaning from literature, responding to poetry, using a variety of writing assignments (many informal and formative in nature), and using formative assessments to inform teaching. Each chapter concludes with a synthesis/sample lesson that is more illustrative than prescriptive, and the authors carefully align their methodology with their progressive, student-centered pedagogy even as they offer honest critique of the limited value of Common Core standards while simultaneously acknowledging the practical need to address the standards in instruction. Unfortunately, the chapters on teaching media literacy and using drama to teach literature are comparatively weak. The majority of this text, however, is more than enough to support a full semester of pedagogy instruction focused on teaching literature.
I plan to use this text in my course this coming fall, and I strongly recommend it to teacher educators, preservice and in-service English Language Arts teachers.
This was one of the most comprehensive books I've read about the teaching of literature, and I wouldn't expect less from my previous experience reading from Richard Beach. I think every ELA teacher ought to find time to read it. I felt this book addressed a number ways to teach literacy in today's changing world (such a YA lit, critical digital media literacy, etc.). I implemented multiple ideas from the reading of this book directly into the classes I taught for preservice teachers the same semester. This book does a fantastic job leaving me with questions to consider and think about as I find ways to implement their ideas in ways that meet my students' needs.
This book had tons of information, but was very dull and repetitive. The language was much hard to understand, particularly because you had to dig past the repetition. Once you did though, there was some very useful information about teaching literature. It is based towards higher grades though, more high school than middle school. It would have to be altered a great deal before being super useful at the elementary level.
I read this as part of a graduate school class on Adolescent Literature. It was okay, but is really designed more for an undergraduate course as much of the info in the textbook is aimed and preservice or beginning teachers.
If you ever get a hankering for a vaguely supercilious book with a few good tips on teaching and a whole mess of uninteresting theoretical polemics, look no further. And if you love finding typos by published authors, you're in luck! You'd think with four people's names on the cover somebody could copy edit, but I guess there are more important things to do, like attend conferences and schmooze (literally recommended in the last chapter-- do I sound frustrated with the state of education?)
There are some very good tools and ideas in this book. However, I often get confused about what she is talking about because she doesn't elaborate on an idea until later. The organization can become confusing as well.