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                                                        Literature for Adolescents

                                                     ENG 471 Schedule Line # 74818

                                                  ENG 598 ST Schedule Line # 72251

 

COURSE INSTRUCTOR:      Professor Alleen Nilsen                                                         Fall, 2000

            Office: LL 218; Phone 965-9577; e-mail: Alleen.Nilsen@asu.edu 

            Office Hours: MTWTH 3:30 to 4:30 and by appointment

 

CLASSROOM:  LL 102          Mon/Wed: 4:40 to 5:55

 

CLASS READING MATERIAL:  Texts available at ASU bookstore

            Literature for Today's Young Adults, Sixth Edition by Nilsen and Donelson, Longman

 

            Point of Departure edited by Robert S. Gold (Dell paperback)

 

            The Giver by Lois Lowry (Bantam paperback)

 

            A Day No Pigs Would Die by Robert Newton Peck (Random House paperback)

 

            Twenty-five books chosen by you (some from the cart I will bring in) to match the genres shown on the attached "Reading Lists."  Besides the books I loan you, you will need to borrow some from libraries.  ASU has some YA titles, but your best bet will be a community library.

 

GRADING:  I grade on a modified curve meaning that in a general way you compete with each other in earning a maximum of 90 points, but I lean the curve towards A's and B's and will make the dividing lines where there are natural breaks.

 

            Midterm Exam  Wed. October 11                                            20 points

           

            Final Exam  Wed. Dec. 13, 4:40-6:30                                       20 points

 

            Class participation based on my evaluation                                10 points

            of your contributions to group work and 

            presentations including (but not limited to)

            two book talks, a 20-minute group presentation

            illustrating the use of drama or poetry in an

            English class, and for graduate students, a

            report to the class on a professional resource.

 

            Your term project which will be a teaching plan                         20 points

            for at least one YA novel that I will chose from

            your first  reading list.  You may tie it in with other

            books and poems if you wish.

           

            Miscellaneous written materials including sample                        20 points

            scripts for 2 book talks distributed to the class (4 pts.),

            a reading autobiography (5 pts.), a short story

            reaction (5 pts.), and a collection of ten poems

            that you would like to share with students (6 pts.).

 

NOTE: I WILL DEDUCT ONE POINT FROM YOUR TOTAL FOR EACH ABSENCE

 

                                                         TENTATIVE SCHEDULE

 

You will get more from the lectures and discussions if you read the textbook chapters before they are discussed in class.

 

August

M-21   Introduction to the class, each other, young adult literature, an  extra assignment for graduate students, and a discussion of Arizona State Academic Standards in relation to the teaching of reading and literature.  I will also talk about the reading autobiography, which you will turn in on August 28, and I will distribute books for a get-acquainted exercise with new books by selected authors.

 

W-23  Lecture/Discussion Text Ch. 1 “Young Adults and Their Reading” 

 

M-28   Reading autobiographies due 

            Lecture/Discussion of Text Ch. 2 “A Brief History of Adolescent Literature”

            Toward the end of the period, we will divide into groups based on the author you read and prepare for making group presentations introducing your author to the class.  The point is for the class to get acquainted with important new authors and to get an overview of the kinds of books currently being prepared for teenagers as compared to the historical ones discussed in Chapter 2 of the textbook.

 

W-30   Group presentations introducing contemporary authors and talking about how their books differ from the historical ones

September

M-4     Labor Day Holiday

 

W-6     Come ready to discuss from Point of Departure:

            Updike's "A & P"

            Malamud's "A Summer's Reading"

            Saroyan's "Seventeen"Continuation of group presentations.

            Gordimer's "A Company of Laughing Faces"

 

M-11   Come ready to discuss from Point of Departure

            Kelley's "A Good Long Sidewalk

            Sillitoe's "The Bike"

            McCuller's "Sucker"

            Collier's "Ah the University"

 

W-13 Read all three of these stories, but choose one of them to write on: Updike's "Tomorrow and       Tomorrow and So Forth," Clayton's "The White Circle," or Hecht's "Snowfall in Childhood."          Write a 2- to 4-page paper in which you:

            1.         Indicate the appropriate grade and maturity level.

            2.         Tell why the story is worth using with kids.

            3.         Tell how you would prepare kids to read and consider the story.

            4.         Tell what's worth talking about in the story.

            5.         List at least seven questions worth asking about the story.  Put them in ascending order of difficulty or sophistication.

            6.         As a conclusion, write a paragraph or two responding to one of the more difficult questions as you hope a good student would.

 

NOTE: Sept. 15 is the unrestricted withdrawal deadline.

 

M-18   Text Ch. 3  YA Literature, Pop Culture, and the Mass Media

 

W-20   Text Ch. 4  The New Realism: Of Life and Problems

 

M-25   Come ready to discuss Robert Newton Peck's A Day No Pigs

            Would Die.

 

W-27   Text Ch. 5  The Old Romanticism: Of Wishing and Winning

October

M-2     Be ready to discuss in groups your accomplishment romance.

 

W-4     Text Ch. 6  Adventures, Mysteries, the Supernatural, and Humor

 

M-9     Come prepared to do a book talk on a book you especially enjoyed.  Reading List due with 12 books.  Bring written scripts  for two book talks photocopied to be given to everyone in the class.     

 

W-11   Midterm Exam

 

M-16   Text Ch. 7  Fantasy, Science Fiction, Utopias, and Dystopias

 

W-18   Come ready to discuss first half of Lowry's The Giver.

            Lecture/discussion on making a teaching plan for a book

 

M-23   Come ready to discuss the rest of Lowry's The Giver.  

 

W-25   Text Ch. 8  History and History Makers

            Discussion of biographies

 

M-30   Text Ch. 8 Nonfiction: Information, Poetry, and Drama

            We'll get organized into eight groups to do some kind of a special presentation (10 to 15 minutes) of drama, poetry, or other literature appealing to teenagers.

 

November

W-1     Bring a non fiction sex-education book to class or a fictional book that includes sexual references.  We want to compare different approaches.

           

M-6     Lecture/discussion on poetry and drama

            Half-period saved for groups to work on oral presentations

 

M-13   Text Ch. 10 Evaluating, Promoting, and Using Young Adult Books

            Presentations by Groups 1 and 2

 

W-15   Continuation of Text Ch. 10

            Presentations by Groups 3 and 4

 

M-20   Text Ch. 11 Literature in the English Class

            Presentations by Groups 5 and 6

            Turn in your collection of 10 poems gleaned from various sources         

 

W-22   Text Ch. 12 Censorship

            Presentations by Groups 7 and 8

           

M-27   Bring two more written scripts for book talks of favorite books photocopied to give to all class members.

            People in first third of alphabet, present their teaching plans (between 5 and 10 minutes)             for the book I assigned from first reading list.  Prepare a one-page handout summarizing           your ideas for your classmates.  

 

W-29   Presentation of teaching plans by middle third of alphabet.

           

December

M-4     Presentation of teaching plans by last third of alphabet. 

            Everybody turn in teaching plans for grading.

            Turn in reading list with all 25 books.

  

W-6      University Wide Reading Day

 

W-13   Final exam 4:40 to 6:30 

 

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