Rated YA-MA discussion
Reading Challenges
>
YA to Z 2023 Discussion Thread
date
newest »


https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
My initial reaction is to write your own version of the challenge. My human reaction is do what brings you joy. If a challenge is a chore and not fun, why do it?

So, I am excited to give it a go.

L Lore Olympus: Volume One- it was a bit more risque than I was expecting. I'm unlikely to continue the series.
S Something is Killing the Children, Vol. 4- book 4 in an already started series. I will read v 5 when it's available either in my library or on Scribd.
and our group BOTM
T The Ten Thousand Doors of January

M- #Murdertrending Chosen on a whim but a good start to a dystopia world. It borrows from a lot of tropes but is well executed.
P- Panic Group book of the month. A bit heavy on the teenager angst, but overall an enjoyable read.
R- Red Rising A reread. It has been long enough that I forgot a lot of details. I probably enjoyed it more the first time around.

C- Chains
G- The Graveyard Book reread
H- The Hunger Games reread

...plus there was parent drama with the book section. I'm kind of hoping I don't have to teach 7th grade next year.

...plus there was parent drama with the book section. I'm kind of ..."
Ugh! I've been contemplating getting my Master's in Library Sciences, but with everything going on in this country, I don't know if my heart can take it.


Why do you think the temperature should turn down in a few years? Just that the parents of today’s younger kids will be less “indoctrinated “?

Also my beat on American politics suggests it will too. The parent rights movement began as a very valid desire to get students back into school after a pandemic. It also was because what is taught in school became more transparent when learning was forced to be at home ... and there was some stuff that parents did not like. The broader public, though in favor of having a say in what their students read and learn, are not supportive of not letting other people choose what books their kids can and cannot read. And I think they'll win the day.
Right now it is trendy to start a social media blitz @ the slightest dislike, but good schools have procedures and policies in place to appropriately address parents concerns. My school does. Also, the national library association {I forget it's formal name/ acronym] has a whole process for schools to follow to determine what books should/ should not be present in adolescent libraries. In may case we followed the process and it was stress but it worked out because I know why I teach what I teach and the parents had choices too (which is only right and fair). I think schools that reactively start excommunicating books from libraries are deeply wrong. I'm not fighting that battle here. But I would because it's a battle worth fighting.
end diatribe
Books mentioned in this topic
Chains (other topics)The Graveyard Book (other topics)
The Hunger Games (other topics)
#Murdertrending (other topics)
Panic (other topics)
More...
1. Ask questions.
2. Request or give book recommendations.
3. Comment on your personal challenge progress
To officially join the challenge, sign up here:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...