Acts of Resistance: Subversive Teaching in the English Language Arts Classroom

Acts of Resistance: Subversive Teaching in the English Language Arts Classroom

Acts of Resistance: Subversive Teaching in the English Language Arts Classroom

Acts of Resistance: Subversive Teaching in the English Language Arts Classroom

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Overview

A 2021 SPE Outstanding Book Award Winner

In 1969, Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner published Teaching as a Subversive Activity. Subversive teaching today, however, looks very different than it did in 1969. Teachers today must deliver their instruction in an era of formidable challenges related to curriculum, educational policy, and cultural and political ideology. Students learn in an environment that includes active shooter drills and increasingly violent public policy that assaults immigrants, people of Color, women, and the LGBTQIA+ community. A robust public education is needed now more than ever, though the resources to provide it dwindle daily.

Acts of Resistance: Subversive Teaching in the English Language Arts (ELA) Classroom showcases examples of subversive pedagogy to instruct and inspire teachers and to contextualize subversive ELA pedagogy in the contemporary educational moment. Chapter authors—in-service teachers and teacher educators alike—draw from case studies, narrative inquiry, and other qualitative methodologies to explain how they have variously taken up subversive pedagogy in the ELA classroom. Because teachers and other stakeholders resist oppressive structures—including disciplinary confinements—when they teach from subversive viewpoints, each chapter describes a disciplinary “act of resistance” that illuminates possibilities for countering uncritical, “traditional” handling of ELA experiences.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781975503338
Publisher: Myers Education Press
Publication date: 02/06/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 250
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Dr. Jeanne Dyches (she/her), an associate professor at Iowa State University, researches the relationship between curriculum, racial literacies, and antiracist teaching practices. Specifically, she works to understand how teachers and students resist limitations of their curriculum in order to engage antiracist, emancipatory, and joyful secondary literacy instruction. A former high school English teacher and literacy coach, Dr. Dyches has won awards for her teaching on both the secondary and post-secondary levels. The American Educational Research Association, American Reading Forum, Society of Professors of Education, and Iowa Academy of Education have recognized Dr. Dyches’ research and scholarly contributions to the field of education. Dr. Dyches has published in many journals, including Harvard Educational Review, Journal of Teacher Education, English Journal, and Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy.

Brandon Sams is an assistant professor of English education at Iowa State University. His work has recently been published in English Teaching: Practice and Critique, The ALAN Review, Changing English, and The Journal of Language and Literacy Education.

Ashley S. Boyd (she/her) is an associate professor of English/English Education at Washington State University, where she teaches graduate courses on critical theories and anti-oppressive pedagogies and undergraduate courses on Young Adult Literature and Methods for Teaching English. A former secondary English-language arts teacher, Ashley’s scholarship examines practicing teachers’ social justice pedagogies and their critical content knowledge; explores how young adult literature is an avenue for cultivating students’ critical literacies; and investigates how students select, organize, and implement social action projects. Her books, including Social Justice Literacies in the English Classroom: Teaching Practice in Action, analyze and amplify how teachers subvert traditional classroom curriculum to advance equity and justice. She is co-author of Reading for Action: Engaging Youth in Social Justice through Young Adult Literature, and she has also published in the Journal of Teacher Education, English Education, and The ALAN Review.

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction: What Is Subversive Disciplinary Literacy?
Jeanne Dyches, Brandon Sams, and Ashley S. Boyd

1. Black Words Matter: Bending Literary Close Reading Toward Justice
Scott Storm

2. Arguing for Empathy: Subverting the Teaching of Argumentation
Crystal Sogar and Melanie Shoffner

3. “Well, I Took It There”: Subversive Teaching to (Disrupt) the Test
Leah Panther and Selena Hughes

4. Inquiry Ignites! Pushing Back Against Traditional Literacy Instruction
Jill Stedronsky and Kristen Hawley Turner

5. “Climb Into Their Skin”: Whiteness and the Subversion of Perspective
Anna Mae Tempus and Carey Applegate

6. Amplifying Teacher Voices Through Instagram: Subversive Teaching Meets the 21st Century
Michelle M. Falter and Megan DuVarney Forbes

7. Making a “Safe” and Subversive Space for Students’ Lives Through Open Mic
Caroline T. Clark and Jill M. Williams

8. The Responsible Change Project: Subverting the Standardized English Language Arts Curriculum
Heather Coffey and Steve Fulton

9. Disability as Pedagogy: Vulnerability as a Social Justice Tool
Katie Roquemore

10. Gender Bending the Curriculum: Queer Approaches to Teaching Shakespeare in High School
Ryan Burns and Janine Boiselle

11. Interrupting “Single Stories”: Using Socially Just Media Texts to Teach Rhetorical Analysis
Lori Garcia and Michael Manderino

12. Can We Talk?: Promoting Anti-Oppressive Futures for Girls of Color Through a Social Justice Enrichment Program
Dorothy E. Hines, Jemimah Young, Rossina Zamora Liu, and Diana Wandix-White

13. Subverting Curricula and Assessment Design by Using Culturally Responsive Teaching Practices: My Culturally Responsive World Literature Course
Kristen R. Strom

14. “Why Can’t They Test Us on This?” A Framework for Transforming Intensive Reading Instruction
Amanda Lacy and Angela M. Kohnen

15. Reading The Odyssey Today: Subversive Outsiders, Stances, and Journeys
April Zongker McNary and R. Joseph Rodríguez

16. Revolutionizing the Canon: Repositioning Texts During Politically Tumultuous Times
Katie Aquino and Gena Khodos

17. The Case of Courtenay: Subversive Resistance in English Teacher Evaluation
Meghan A. Kessler and Angela L. Masters

About the Authors

Index
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