CESNational web

 

login
About CES CES Network Fall Forum Small Schools Project Resources My Homebase
 

Great Books for High School Kids: A Teachers' Guide to Books that Can Change Teens' Lives

Type: Horace Book Review
Author(s): Jill Davidson

Source: Horace Vol. 20 No. 3, Spring 2004

Cover for Great Books for High School
Kids: A Teachers' Guide to Books that Can Change Teens' Lives edited by Rick Ayers and Amy Crawford (Beacon Press, 224 pages, $15.00), BUY NOW!
reviewed by Jill Davidson


Three cheers for summer! The weather's great, but the best part is more time to read. Those of us who are daily threatened by the height and heft of our must-read book stack will be enthralled by Great Books for High School Kids.

The first half presents seven essays, each by a teacher telling the story of reading a specific book with a specific class. The richness of the essays lies in the nuances of the students' reactions to the books. As each class makes their way through Bless Me, Ultima, The Oresteia, Bastard Out of Carolina, Song of Solomon, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Things They Carried and Reservation Blues, we're guided through a potent group learning experience that is particularly affirming of the craft and brilliance of great teachers and the insight, intelligence, and emotional capabilities of young people.

While Great Books isn't a how-to, teachers can pick up a lot of practical goodness: the authors interweave their stories with specific reading strategies such as how to prepare a class for a book, how to create a group reading experience with readers with different levels of preparation and ability, how to analyze plot and character, and how to conduct the difficult discussions that powerful books provoke.

The second section of the book is a glorious annotated list: book upon book that inspire great teaching and powerful learning. Great Books' final section presents a compendium of lists, unannotated but categorized. "Talking Back: Making Moral Choices in an Immoral World," "Cultural Survival," "Love, First Love," and "Urban Gritty" are a few.

Ayers, Crawford, and the other teacher-authors honor the synergy created between a book and the personal experiences of a teacher and a group of students. They understand how the most meaningful learning happens when a teacher goes "off the script" and follows the impulses of a deeply felt discussion. Their insight reminds those in the world that would adulterate literature to use as fodder for standardized tests, or foist prepackaged curriculum on teachers and students that books "expand our sensibilities and deepen our encounter with the world." The real power of Great Books is its affirmation that teachers are the best curriculum creators.

BUY THIS BOOK

This resource last updated: November 21, 2004


Database Information:

Source: Horace Vol. 20 No. 3, Spring 2004
Publication Year: 2004
Publisher: CES National
School Level: All
Issue: 20.3
Focus Area: Classroom Practice
STRAND: Classroom Practice: curriculum

 
 
CES logo

About CES | CES Network | Fall Forum | Small Schools Project | Resources
My Homebase | Jobs | Search | Site Map | Contact Us | Home

Have a suggestion? Can't find something? We value your feedback.

This site and its contents © 1998-2002 CESNational. All rights reserved.
CESNational * 1330 Broadway, Suite 600 * Oakland, CA * 94612
tel: 510-433-1451 * fax: 510-433-1455
Credits
 

QUICK FIND
CES Store
Search All Resources
Search All Authors
ChangeLab
Resources for Sale Benchmarks

HORACE JOURNAL
Current Issues
List All Issues
Search Horace

SCHOOL DESIGN
Learning Structures
Teacher Learning
Data Collect. & Analysis

CLASSROOM PRACTICE
Assessment
Curriculum
Instruction
Classroom Culture

LEADERSHIP
Governance
Principal's Role
The Change Process

COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS
Family Collaboration
Community Collaboration
Student Photo
Search
Submit

>> Advanced
link to EssentialVisions DVD page Offsite link to the CES Essential Blog Offsite link to CES ChangeLab