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Title: ACEI VIRTUAL PRESENTATION


1
Using Fantasy to find reality in young adult
literature
  • ACEI VIRTUAL PRESENTATION

www.seancoon.org
BY STACEY RHOADESSLIPPERY ROCK UNIVERSITY
2
Whats the Deal with Imagination?
  • Why has the Harry Potter series exploded in the
    young adult world?
  • Who is Stephenie Meyers, and why does she write
    about vampires?
  • More importantly, why do teenagers enjoy reading
    these books in the first place?

www.sodahead.com
www.stepheniemeyer.com
3
Answer?
  • Unfortunately, it is not that easy to answer.
    However, by the end of this presentation, you
    will have a better understanding on how and why
    fantasy literature helps young adults find their
    place in the world, and more importantly, how to
    incorporate imagination into the curriculum.

4
Before you start
  • It is important to know before you view this
    presentation that the imagination is not a small
    area in our mind it is not a thing that can be
    pinpointed, but rather an energy that comes from
    the ability to think. John Dewey writes
    Imagination is as much a normal and integral
    part of human activity as is muscular movement .

5
Imagination and learning
6
Imagination and Learning
  • It is becoming clear that human learning does
    not involve simply mirroring what is outside the
    mind, but crucially involves constructing or
    composing (Bruner, 1986).

7
Imagination and Learning
  • This mind is not a filing cabinet or a computer
    system.
  • Instead, information is overlapped, connected,
    and blended, and here, in the mind, is where new
    information is made, broken, or remade.
  • Therefore, the livelier the minds imagination,
    the more combinations the mind can make with the
    already existing knowledge it posses, which gives
    a new outlook of the world!

8
Imagination and Learning
  • The more flexibly we can think of things as
    possibly being so, the richer, and the more
    unusual and effective can be the meanings we
    compose (Egan, 1992).
  • In other words, an active imagination provides
    a greater possibility for learning.

9
Imagination and social virtue
10
Imagination and Social Virtue
  • By imaginatively feeling what it would be like
    to be other than oneself, one begins to develop a
    prerequisite for treating others with as much
    respect as one treats oneself (Egan, 1992).

www.toddpowelson.com
11
Imagination and Social Virtue
  • Every person is unique, distinct, and independent
    with goals that are just as important as our own.
  • This type of attitude toward knowledge not only
    promotes a non-judgmental attitude, but a
    tolerance toward other views.

12
Imagination and Social Virtue
  • The ability to understand and sympathize with
    others reflects the multiple nature of the human
    being, this potentially leads for many more
    selves and kinds of experiences than any one
    being could express. The capacity to sympathize
    or to identify with the experiences of other is a
    most precious human attribute (Rosenblatt, 1983).

13
Imagination and freedom
14
Imagination and Freedom
  • Imagination is what allows us to envision
    possibilities in or beyond the actualities in
    which we are immersed (Hanson, 1988).

sanjaibhana.blogspot.com
15
Imagination and Freedom
  • Survivors of concentration camps or prisoners of
    war show that a powerful imagination can provide
    a sense of mental freedom.
  • Imagination can break away from the predetermined
    future individuals set up for themselves
    genetically and environmentally.
  • With a vast imagination we can change the world
    around us in ways we find desirable (Egan,
    1992).

16
Imagination and Freedom
  • Imagination, illusionary or not, provide those a
    sense of freedom, which goes without saying,
    freedom to think beyond our reality in hopes for
    change.
  • In other words, imagination is power.

17
Imagination and Freedom
  • Literary texts foster the kind of imagination
    needed in a democracy the ability to participate
    in the needs and aspirations of other
    personalities and to envision the effect of our
    actions on their lives (Rosenblatt, 1983).

18
Imagination in middle school
19
Imagination in Middle School
  • Before trying to develop appropriate teaching
    techniques for the use of imagination in the
    classroom, it is important to discover general
    characteristics of students imaginations
  • The Affective Connection
  • Extremes and Limits
  • Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • The Heroic
  • Revolt and Idealism
  • Matters of Detail
  • These categories are tools that will help
    educators focus on specific components of
    development.

20
Imagination in Middle School
  • It just so happens that the middle school age
    group (ages 8-15) have more common features of
    imagination than any other age span.
  • Imagination is much like the intellectual and
    physical aspects of the body It changes with age
    and experience. This is also the stage of life
    where the most change will occur.
  • I will present different examples that solidify
    my reasoning for this specific age group, like
    books, games, T.V. shows, and stories.

21
The affective connection
  • Imagination in Middle School

22
Affective Teaching
  • Knowledge is acquired through affective teaching
    narratives (in other words, engaging stories).
  • Knowledge is not acquired through effective
    teaching (in other words, activities that are
    sorted and graded).

23
Affective Teaching
  • Students imaginations are more readily
    stimulated by content that engages their emotions
    than by content that doesnt (Egan, 1992).

www.clivebarker.info
24
Affective Teaching
  • A story will create an emotional involvement for
    all students.
  • The term story does not mean to use a
    fictional narrative every time, but a narrative
    shaping (or a cookie cutter mold of a narrative)
    with the content thats being taught.
  • The narrative context stimulates the imagination,
    which creates knowledge.

25
Affective Connection
  • Myth storyconceived as a symbolic form is a
    way of organizing the human response to
    realityand is a fundamental aspect of the way
    we process experience (Lavin, 1966).
  • Fantasy is a marvelously adaptable tool of
    therapy (Bettelheim, 1989).

26
Extremes and limits
  • Imagination in Middle School

27
Extremes and Limits
  • The more bizarre and strange a phenomena, the
    more engaging it is likely to be to an
    individual.
  • The strange or amazing knowledge is understood in
    terms of an individuals everyday experience,
    which can shed new light on their daily lives.
  • The assumption that prior knowledge is a starting
    point can be very misleading. Although vital, it
    can only be used after the imagination is readily
    engaged with the distant and different.

28
Extremes and Limits
  • What topics would children choose to research
  • Important features of your neighborhood
  • Or
  • Torture instruments through the ages
  • (Although inappropriate , the answer is very
    clear).

29
Extremes and Limits
  • So what sometimes seems to some teachers as a
    regrettable fascination with exotic trivia, is in
    fact a profoundly sensible strategy for making
    sense of ones place in the scheme of things.
    Only knowing the limits and extremes of things
    can we make sense of our own place (Egan, 1992).

www.amazon.com
30
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Imagination and Middle School

31
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Romance the archetypal term that means a heroic
    journey filled with adventure and extreme
    events.
  • Wonder something that is rare or strange, maybe
    even extraordinary, but can be understood in
    terms of reality i.e. the works of a computer.
  • Awe a feeling that is beyond explaining the
    miraculous or mysterious that doesnt connect
    with the real world i.e. the supernatural.

32
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Anything can be romanticized it just has to be
    viewed as going on a journey heading toward a
    greater truth or understanding. The Romantic
    Poets did it all the time.
  • When imagination is developed along the side of a
    romanticized subject, students can then think of
    anything as wonderful or at least contemplate it.

33
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Paradox
  • We use the imagination to help understand
    reality.

34
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Argumentative steps
  • Familiar content must be made meaningful in an
    enriched way
  • By making the content romantic, students can
    think of it as wonderful therefore, it makes it
    meaningful
  • Then, we can flip that same idea and turn our
    everyday lives into a romantic journey and view
    it as wonderful
  • Thus, proving the paradox correct.

35
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Awe may not seem useful, but it is the step
    beyond wonder.
  • A person familiar with awe is less likely to be
    a victim of surprise at the way life happens to
    clobber out events (Egan, 1992).

www.tv.com
36
Romance, Wonder, and Awe
  • Romance, Wonder, and Awe seem to have a greater
    effect with students at the ages of 8-15.
  • This is the reason for their attraction towards
    Princesses, Star warriors, (the romantic figures)
    tarot cards, Ouija boards, spooky stories,
    adventure stories, the supernatural, (the wonder
    and awe).

www.geocities.com
sharetv.org
37
The Heroic
  • Imagination in Middle School

38
The Heroic
  • Students in middle school are relatively
    powerless.
  • They are subjected to
  • Parents rules
  • School rules
  • Societal rules
  • A hero is a person who is subjected to those
  • same kind of restraints, yet transcends them.

39
The Heroic
  • We move in the direction of what we admire, as
    far as we can, and, during this period of
    self-definition, students commonly admire and
    move toward a variety of heroic qualities (Egan,
    1992).

spinninginmyteacup.wordpress.com
www.kokasexton.com
40
The Heroic
  • This is the reason for their attraction towards
    teen-exploration movies, pop group bands, and
    anything that shows freedom from those
    constraints.
  • When immersed in these stories, we reflect on
    our own self-definition and move towards those
    heroic qualities of the protagonist.

www.Amazon.com
www.Amazon.com
41
Revolt and idealism
  • Imagination and Middle School

42
Revolt and Idealism
  • Inevitably there will be tension between the
    adult world and the growing student (Egan, 1992).

clothing.blog.com
43
Revolt and Idealism
  • Many forms of revolt are tried on by teenagers
    they are trying to find themselves in a world
    that does not yet accept them.
  • If teachers are to figure out where our students
    are, remember that they are at a place of
    increasing idealism, with revolt constantly
    nudging their elbows (Egan, 1992).

44
Revolt and Idealism
  • This is the reason why teenagers
  • sulk, use quiet resistance, to flaunting hair
    styles, clothing, music, and dancing.

www.pbase.com
The imagination is working through all of this,
thinking of what will work best for the
proliferating individual.
45
Matters of detail
  • Imagination and Middle School

46
Matters of Detail
  • During this period of time, students are coming
    more aware of the world around them however,
    they dont understand its limits.
  • They discover meaning by exploring.
  • And through exploring, students discover just
    what limits are limits in types of sets, limits
    in the imagination, and limits in the world
    around them.
  • The set doesnt need to be completed, some are
    just as a satisfied with discovering what the
    limits are.

47
Matters of Detail
  • This is the reason why teenagers have obsessive
    hobbies and collections Pogs, stamps, trading
    cards, shells or stones, dolls, comics, etc

www.usmoneyreserve.com
It is through discovering everything about
something we will again get some secure sense of
the extent of reality. At least, we gain the
comfort of realizing that the world is not
limitless, and that we can get intellectual
control over some aspects of it (Egan, 1992).
48
Not Buying It?
  • These characteristics do over lap and may seem
    unnecessary knowledge for the classroom
    however, if this is where teenagers are, then
    this is where teachers need to be.
  • Teachers can use these characteristics with all
    content that needs to be taught (math, science,
    language arts). Just construct the content
    around a narrative shape so that affective
    teaching takes place.
  • Dont believe me? Lets take a look

49
Fantasy framework
  • Curriculum Framework for all Content

50
Fantasy Framework
  • How can we take what we learned and apply it to
    the classroom?
  • This is a demonstration of a framework that a
    teacher can take and apply to other subjects and
    grade levels. It does not contain methods of
    instruction they will vary depending on teacher
    and subject.

51
Fantasy Framework
  • You can take parts of the framework or all of it,
    whichever works best for you. There is no right
    or wrong way to implement this idea it can be
    done in a day or an entire unit.
  • The possibilities are endless.

52
Fantasy Framework
  • Identify inspirational qualities
  • What awe-inspiring human qualities that can be
    seen and felt central to the topic (what are the
    amazing, strange, wonderful etc)
  • What affective images are evoked? (imagine a
    story line, a picture to visualize, or a scene of
    a movie to better experience the topic)

53
Fantasy Framework
  • Organizing content
  • Initial access
  • What content, distinct from their everyday
    experience, best represents the awe-inspiring
    central topic? (Attempt to answer a mystery of
    the subject or take them on a quest. Use audio,
    illustration, inquiry, whatever )
  • Does it expose an extreme or limit of reality
    with the topic? (expose the weirdness)
  • Structure the body of the unit or lesson
  • What content best describes the topic in a clear
    narrative story? Set the scene. (look at a
    timeline, or discuss social and political
    background of the timeif possible)
  • Humanize the content
  • How can the content be shown in terms of hopes,
    fears, or other emotions? (Dont just think human
    qualities, but feelings curiosity, frustration,
    persistence, stubbornness)
  • What aspects of the content can arouse romance,
    wonder, and awe?
  • What ideals and or revolts against conventions
    are evident in the topic? (science, religion,
    government, virtue, discovery)
  • Pursue details
  • What content best allows students to pursue some
    aspect of the topic in exhaustive detail?
    (charts, timelines, diagrams, maps)

54
Fantasy Framework
  • Conclude
  • How can one best bring the topic to satisfactory
    closure, while pointing on to further dimensions
    or to other topics? How can the students feel
    this satisfaction? (what is still unknown,
    unclear, other connections with other ideas,
    etc..)

55
Fantasy Framework
  • Evaluate
  • How can one know whether the topic has been
    understood and has engaged and stimulated
    students imaginations? (teacher assessment,
    student going beyond what is required,
    drawing/panting, obsessive engagement in a topic,
    self evaluation)

Click for Example
56
Still Not Buying it?
  • Kieran Egan has spent much of his work studying
    the imagination and how it effects education.
  • Here are some extra links if you would like to
    further explore the subject
  • Fantasy and Reality in Children Stories
  • Memory, Imagination and Learning Connected by
    the Story
  • http//www.educ.sfu.ca/kegan/

57
Final Thoughts
  • And if we deny our children their cultural,
    historical heritage, their birthright to these
    stories, what then? Instead of creating men and
    women who have a grasp on literary allusion and
    symbolic language, and a metaphorical tool for
    dealing with serious problems of life, we will be
    forming stunted boys and girls who speak only a
    barren language, a language that accurately
    reflects their equally barren minds (Yolen,
    2007).

58
Work Cited
  • Bettelheim, Bruno. The Uses of Enchantment The
    Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales. Vintage,
    1989
  • Bruner, Jerome. Actual minds, Possible Worlds.
    Cambridge, MA Harvard University Press, 1986.
  • Egan, Kieran. Imagination in Teaching and
    Learning The Middle School Years. Chicago
    University of Chicago Press, 1992.
  • Hanson, Karen. Prospects for the Good Life
    Education and Perceptive Imagination. New York
    Teachers College Press, 1988.
  • Lavin, Albert. Some Meanings and Uses of Myths.
    ERIC database, 1966.
  • Rosenblatt, L. Literature as Exploration. New
    York Modern Language Association, 1983.
  • Yolen, Jane. Touch Magic Fantasy, Faerie, and
    Folklore in the Literature of Childhood. August
    House, 2007.

59
Example
  • Area Science Topic Trees
  • Identify Inspirational Qualities Trees provide
    building materials, fuel, paper, fruits, nuts,
    oxygen, prevent erosion, and homes for animals.
    They are crucial to our lives, the world, and
    civilization. They are faithfully supportive to
    our existence. Our theme will be, what trees do
    for us, and in return, what we do for (or more
    commonly, to) trees.

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60
Example
  • Organize the Content Central topic Take a look
    at how the growth of human civilization depended
    on trees and then show how civilization declined
    due to the excessive exploits (this shows an odd
    perspective of trees as well as an obsessive
    tendency). Develop a new perspective on
    civilization by exploring the Roman Empire,
    Britain, or USA. Look at the characteristics of
    trees and how they helped develop a prosperous
    civilization. (The story content depends on what
    information needs to be learned by the student).

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61
Example
  • Organize the Content Appeal to the emotions of
    the students show how the loss of trees to a
    particular tribe effects their existence. Make
    it Romantic, wonderful and awe-inspiring Look at
    a book of records of the tallest, smallest, and
    oldest trees in the world. Wonder about the
    technology that cuts or shapes wood. Expose the
    ideals and revolts explore the ecosystem
    conservation and management of trees. Discover
    the details learn in depth details of one
    particular tree.

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62
Example
  • Conclude Read or watch a text on trees. The
    Oscar award winning film, The Man Who Planted
    Trees, takes the viewer on an expedition all over
    the world and how he planted trees and watched
    them thrive.
  • Evaluate teacher assessment, drawing/panting,
    self evaluation,etc

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