Title: Young Adult Fiction Materials Format Minilesson
1Young Adult Fiction MaterialsFormat Mini-lesson
- Diane Brackman
- EDIT 6340, February 2006
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2What is Young Adult Fiction (YAF)?
- Literature written with teenagers in mind
- Could include novels, books on tape, short
stories. - Confronts issues in which young adults are
concerned - Dating
- Fitting in
- Friendships
- Sex
- Drugs
- Self esteem
- School
- Relationships with parents and siblings
3Purpose of Young Adult Fiction
- Coping tool as reader connects with character
- Entertainment
- Can relate and promote schools curriculum
- Helps develop a lifelong love of reading
- Instills social responsibility and social action
in youth
4YAF Focuses on Social IssuesIt Can Generate
- Passion
- Empathy for others
- Reflection on personal pain
- Respect for writing
- Moral development
- Empowerment
5YAF Genres and Subjects
- Abuse
- Adoption
- AIDS/all illnesses
- Alternative lifestyles
- Anger
- Apocalypse/end of world
- Christian fiction
- Classics
- Coming-of-age
- Crime
- Death
- Disabilities
- Divorce
- Drugs
- Eating disorders
- Family
- Fantasy (fairy tales)
- Friendships
- Gay and lesbian
- Heroic figures
- Historical fiction
- Horror
- Humor
- Mystery/thriller/suspense
- Politics
- Romance/love
- Science fiction
- Religious issues
- War issues
6How to Select Young Adult Fiction
YAF is the most often challenged material so
you must be careful!
- Does it relate to our community values
- Does the content match the needs/desires of our
students - Will it promote a love of reading among our
students - Will it relate to our curriculum
- Is there literary merit
- Use standard criteria from selection policy, too
7More on Selecting YAF
- Suggestions from teachers and students
- Survey student readers
- Read reviews
- Journals/titlewave.com
- Make sure collection reflects cultural diversity
of school population
8Ideas for Attracting Teens to Books
- Display a popular magazine cover with a related
book - Sports Illustrated with a YA basketball book
- Time or Newsweek with a nonfiction title on the
current topic - Other connections fashion, film, skiing, nature
magazines
9Ideas for Attracting Teens to Books
- Make large color posters with popular school
athletes reading a book - The students love to see their local hero's
pictures and you create the image that reading is
fun and cool, even for busy athletes - Change the posters periodically
10Multi-Voiced Journaling Strategy to Foster
Socially-Conscious Thinking
- Process of writing has the potential to foster
social imagination and promote understanding - Read aloud a book
- Stop at a pre-determined spot and have students
journal in a characters point of view - Use a book with many characters, ideally with
diverse points of view - Examples of book Crossing Jordan by Adrian
Fogelin, Naughts Crosses by Malorie Blackman
11Use YAF with Curriculum
- To introduce class to a new topic, read an
excerpt from a book - Example for a topic like Vietnam War, you could
read a section from We were Soldiers OnceAnd
Young Ia Drangthe battle that Changed the War
in Vietnam by Harold Moore and Joseph Galloway
12Introducing Curriculum with Literature
- Introduce new curriculum by using literature
- http//www.carolhurst.com
- Lesson plans available for many subjects/themes
- Topics are fully developed with related
children's books, and activities
13Vendors for Young Adult Fiction
- Follett Library Resources
- 1340 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry, Illinois 60050
- 1-800-435-6170
- www.follett.com
- Bound to Stay Bound
- 1880 W. Morton Avenue, Jacksonville, Illinois
62650 - 1-800-637-6586
- www.btsb.com
- Baker and Taylor, Inc.
- 2550 West Tyvola Road, Suite 300, Charlotte, NC
28217 - Phone 800.775.1800
- www.btol.com
14To Find the Best of the Best YAF
- Alex Awards (adult books for YAs 12-18)
http//www.ala.org/yalsa/booklists/alex/ - Best Books for YAs (fiction and nonfiction for
YAs 12-18) http//www.ala.org/yalsa/booklists/bby
a/ - Margaret A. Edwards Award (lifetime achievement
for YA author) http//www.ala.org/yalsa/edwards/ - Printz Awards (fiction for YAs 12-18)
http//www.ala.org/yalsa/printz - For more lists http//www.seemore.mi.org/booklist
s/fiction.html
15References
- Book Smart Network. Young adult books. Retrieved
February 9, 2006 from http//www.bookspot.com/you
ngadultfeature.htm - Hipes, D. (2006). Whats new in young adult
literature and how to use it in your program. WA
Bureau of Education Research. pp 35, 54, 58,
122. - Van Orden, P. and Bishop, K. (2001). The
collection program in schools Concepts,
practices, and information sources, 3rd ed.
Englewood, CA Libraries Unlimited, p. 209. - Wasman, A. M. (1998). New steps to service.
Chicago American Library Association. p 80.