The Great Gatsby
discussion
If we could the replace Gatsby on the school required reading list...

But as for contemporary novels, I think Speak is a beautiful book, that carries a deep message. It's not written brilliantly or anything, and the main character is very annoying but I can see it touching hearts, and convincing kids, especially young girls, to speak up about what bothers them.
And maybeThe Perks of Being a Wallflower I'm not so sure about that one. But I will admit that it touched me.
As for Dostoevsky and Tolstoy, I think I might have hated them if I had been forced to read them. The same is the case with this book, The Great Gatsby. It has a lot of symbolism, best discovered on its own. Not to be shoved down our throats by teachers. I hated The Pearl when I first read it. But once we were done with it, I picked it up again, and fell in love with it.
The question here is what do we expect these books to do? Do we expect them to change views, to touch hearts, and to help us connect? Or do we expect them to teach us about writing, and symbolism, and analogies, and metaphors?

And I prefer to think of myself as helping students to see things differently and encourage them to find meaning where they may not notice it on their own, rather than shoving things down people's throats. It's really not as violent as that.


And by all ..."
It depends on state requirements. In SD where I teach, one semester must be composition and grammar each year and one semester is literature each year. With my junior American Lit class, after I get through some early colonial essays, segments of Walden, and some poetry, I only have time for The Great Gatsby, The Crucible, and Of Mice and Men. Sometimes I squeeze another novella into the composition semester. Consider yourself lucky to have the time to do 6 novels a year. I would wonder if you get enough composition and research skills with that many novels?

I think it depends on the level of depth. If you hit them with too much it will discourage them. At the grade school level, I suspect that a few novels covered in depth is better than skipping along the surface of a dozen or more. This is how you learn to appreciate literature, as we do here on Goodreads. By discussing targeted aspects of individual works it forces us deeper into them.
It's like processing ore for gold. Hidden nuggets begin to appear.

I think it depends on the level of depth. If you hit them with too much it will discourage the..."
That is exactly what the national common core standards and project based learning are aiming for - depth over breadth. The NCCSS emphasizes non-fiction reading to the tune of 75% non-fiction by junior year.



Yes, as a matter of fact I do teach The Book Thief. One of my favorites!

What percentage actually reads the novels if they are not given class time? Maybe your students are more studious than mine. I give them around 20 minutes of class time a day to read so I can be sure they actually read some of it. About 25% really read, about 50% read what they can get done in class and then sparknotes the rest of the chapter, and 25% fake read in class and either use sparknotes or asking someone what it was about. Obviously when it is exam time and essay time, it is clear what category they fall in, but the ones who do not read at all really are not that motivated to earn good grades. From the sounds of it, I focus on writing a lot more than you, but that is teacher preference to an extent.

Please do provide a list, I'd love to read them ( ^ ^)

By the way, typically it is taught in the junior year, and I would not teach it any earlier. There is a tremendous difference between juniors and seniors as a whole (because they see themselves as mature) and freshmen and sophomores as a group.

...typically it is taught in the junior year, and I would not teach it any earlier."
Agreed on all counts. Bravo!

Good for you that you had such a good experience, and I can understand the ranking you gave them. They are all significant to the eras of history that they are about, but Gatsby is clearly the easiest to teach. I know; I tried them all. It is hard to teach the colonial period at any time, but the Salem witch trials are about the most interesting thing to juniors. The 50s era for Catcher in the Rye is closer to us, but hard to teach to anyone that did not live in it. One book that I also had great success with, and particularly with advanced classes, was The Grapes of Wrath. But it takes careful chapter by chapter monitoring.

I concede with pleasure. ( ^ ^)
That was one well rounded argument.


Shelley, http://dustbowlstory.wordpress.com


Exactly Tilly. And it is refreshing to hear you say that not enough classics are taught. I maintain that there is a wave of contemporary literature, so much so that many college English majors have had little or no exposure to the "old dead white guys" literature. And teachers in high school tend to teach what they know and what they like, and so the problem grows. Teachers sometimes have this attitude that if I don't know it or I have never heard it, it must not be important. It takes a good teacher to venture into territory they are unfamiliar with, and more teachers like that are needed.

The book was written by a 16-year-old student, and the crudeness of the writing (by S.E. Hinton) adds to the books' realism. The book moves along at a rapid pace and is novella length.
It does, however, speak to an era, the late 60s, and a region, Tulsa, Oklahoma.


Well said Tilly!


If we're going down that road, why not "Sometimes a Great Notion" by Ken Kesey?

If we're going down that road, why not "Sometimes a Great Notion" by Ken Kesey?"
I took the The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test comment as a joke. I hope it was, because getting any book that glorifies drug use would never get past the school curriculum censors.
Sometimes a Great Notion is a great novel (much better for my tastes than One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), but I think the subject matter of prostitution would doom it to censorship as well. The writing style would also be tricky for inexperienced readers.
But

If we could the replace Gatsby on the school required reading list, with something that's both age relevant, and well writ..."
No need to condescend. I don't think the commenter meant that teens can't handle Gatsby, rather that there are other classic and/or challenging books that will encourage critical thinking and discussion, but also resonate with their life stage. Probably why Catcher in the Rye has been in high schools for decades, and Mockingbird in middle schools.

are you worried about whether high schoolers can comprehend and digest the great gatsby, o..."
It is important to learn how to write in high school. You might have paid better attention in the punctuation and grammar courses. To your point, yes, some high school students will refuse to read no matter what you hand them. I think the goal in lit classes at a high school level are to teach kids to think critically and to encourage a love of reading. The best way to accomplish that, in my opinion is to choose books that will both challenge and comfort students, like classics that have young adult themes. The Great Gatsby is a challenge with its metaphors and historical undertones, but it's not terribly relatable. The point is that there may be better choices that would entice even the laziest of students.

thank you, thank you!

http://www.cracked.com/blog/4-ways-hi...
Its craked.com, not a scholarly journal, but once you get past the pesty tone, the article actually touched upon a lot of this thread's discussion points.

Exactly. This is why I had no interest in reading The Great Gatsby until I was 30. That said, I'm glad I was able to avoid it in high school-- as I would have only read it then and discarded it, rather than enjoy it as much as I did as an adult.

Exactly. This is why I had no interest in reading The Great Gatsby unti..."
I think the teacher can make or break a book. It doesn't matter whether it is assigned or not.

That can certainly be part of it-- and it probably was the case once or twice for myself-- but another large part of the equation is the maturity of the students at the time the reading is assigned. In the high school English class I was in when this was assigned, some of the students were avid readers and loved the book, others struggled the book or were not interested in reading, and even more were struggling to survive their battle with their hormones. Like I alluded to before, I was insubordinate when it came to must assigned reading; however, I've read many of those books I shunned as a teenager, as an adult. Owing to this, I appreciate the books in a way that our teachers that assigned the reading can understand, and in a way that many teenagers are unable to.

Maybe I was lucky, but I had a lot of students who told me that they never understood Shakespeare until they had my class. I even had a basic (very low) group of students ask (beg) me to do Romeo and Juliet with them when they were seniors because other teachers had told them they were not smart enough to read Shakespeare. I promised I would explain all the dirty jokes to them. We ended up re-writing the last act in modern English and performing it in front of an audience. I retired last year because I too was "insubordinate." But we had a lot of fun while it lasted.

Maybe I was lucky, but I had a lot of students who told me that they never understood Shakespeare until they had my class. I even had a basic (very low) group of students ask (beg) me to do..."
William,
I think that is wonderful that you took the time to teach your students Shakespeare. I believe one of my most biggest pet peeves is when people say students are too 'dumb' to understand something. That's why you teach it to them so they can improve, not cater to their ignorance. Shakespeare is very difficult my high school freshman teacher made it so fun.


Also, a lot of you guys mentioned replacing it with Of Mice and Men, The Catcher in the Rye, to Kill a Mockingbird, Lord of the Flies...we read all of those in high school as well in addition to Gatsby, along with a ton of other books and plays.

Ramona, Huck Finn is a great novel and, as I mentioned earlier, one that fits well into the idea of history shaping the arts. It also requires careful teaching because of the apparently flippant use of the word "nigger," even tough by the end of the story Huck has come to realize that Jim is a fellow human being for whom he goes to great lengths to help. My personal problem with Huck Finn, which happened every time I taught it (about six) is that the book loses the students' interest in the last third. It becomes rather silly and is just not interesting. The first two-thirds is wonderful.



Note sure what you mean by age-relevant. The subject matter is age appropriate, IMO.
As others have pointed out, it's a teacher's job to help bridge the connections of the books themes and relate them to ideas that resonate with their class.
Personally, I enjoyed this book in high school and beyond. I got less enjoyment from Catcher in the Rye, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, and such. Some of this was less than stellar units/teaching, some just personal taste.
I think Gatsby has a place in the regular high school curriculum. If you're looking for other titles to possibly use with students, here are a few that connected with me at that age (14-17), some assigned, some personal choice:
The Lord of the Rings
Crime and Punishment
Illusions
Watership Down
anything by Ray Bradbury
Hemingway short stories
Steinbeck's shorter novels (not East of Eden or Grapes of Wrath
Edgar Allan Poe
Avoid:
William Faulkner
John Updike


Certain objectives (comprehension, written fluency, critical thinking) should be common; even certain broad ideas can be shared (cover, say, race, class struggles in America, the development of the American Dream, etc) --- but let the teacher decide how to best provide examples, forge connections through discussions and exercises, and achieve those objectives in a way that will work best for their students in their classroom.
Sure, there are certain "common" fiction and non-fiction works that everyone should have covered by the time they graduate. But given time restraints, there's only so much you can cover. One person's "essential" is another's not-so-much.
So the common list would have to be pretty small. As much as I like (sometimes love) Gatsby, I don't know if it would make my short list. I'd have to think about it some more.

Certain objectives (comprehension, written fluency, critical thinking) should b..."
It is always a risk where I live to venture too far from the standard canon. But like you say, there should be some books that all students have in common. Like boot camp in the service, every soldier, sailor, and marine have at least one thing in common. Then there are those who might quibble about what is of literary merit and what is not.

It seems to me that kids do not seem to be reading enough in school. I know when I was in school, we were always assigned to read at least about 10 books for the year. If we think 6 books is too much, that sends out a message that we think of reading as a chore.
I believe that if a teacher is enthusiastic about the books being assigned a kid will pick up on it. (Lara, you sound like a teacher I would have loved to have). Why not mix up classics with more contemporary books so that kids get a variety and have something to look forward to reading? One of my teachers would print out a list of about 50 classic and modern classic books and after reading an assigned book, we would then have to choose from this list and write an essay on the book we picked. I used to love being able to choose my own book. Having read "Of Mice and Men" in 9th grade and loving it, I picked up "Grapes of Wrath" and "East of Eden" from this list. I also picked up "Catcher in the Rye" from this list and it became one of my all-time favorites, a book that affected me profoundly. Getting kids involved in what they read helps.
I hated "The Great Gatsby" and many other assigned books ("The Scarlett Letter" comes to mind) but I'm also glad that I read them. They are all important books of a curriculum.
If I may add another suggestion, my 7th grade teacher would assign us books that were of impact at that time or that she had loved. I remember reading "Roots", "The Once and Future King", Fantastic Voyage", "Farenheit 451", "Flowers for Algernon", "Farewell to Manzanar" and I loved some, disliked some, but I was also so grateful to her for not shying away from assigning some of these books to the class and introducing me to such wonderful books such as "Roots" (the longest book I had read at that age, and almost seeming like it would have been impossible to finish it, so I completely don't buy that kids cannot read more than 6 books a year).
Kids need to be encouraged to read outside of the curriculum as well, just for the simple pleasure of reading. When you enjoy reading just for pleasure, you are more likely to pick up a wide range of books, even if it's just to see what all the hype was about or to see why a book is considered important enough to be called a classic.

Shelley, you are so right. So many of the books we read in high school stay with us into adulthood. A lot of the books we didn't like or even understood are books that as adults we want to re-read. You bring up a very goos point of why some books should remain required reading.
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I agree. This is why books like Of Mice and Men, Lord of the Flies and The Catcher in the Rye are so important. They'll never be out of print.