I have already begun curating my
library for my classroom. Here and there, I pick up books that I think would be
great for my students. Of course, I have the classics that you’d expect, some Shakespeare
and Moby Dick, as well as more contemporary books like The Chronicles of Narnia
and The Hunger Games. When I took my adolescent literature class here at RIC, I
made sure to purchase all of the books because I felt like that was a great
place to gather recommendations.
When I was in middle school and
high school, I remember finding the Chronicles of Vladimir Tod and immediately checking
the books out back to back when I could. It was so fun to me to read a story
about a kid who looked and acted kind of like me. Short of being a vampire, I
really did connect with these books and the characters. Other stories like
Catcher in the Rye and Beloved are examples of things that when I read, I very
much connected with and that are more classic examples.

We have a responsibility
to be mindful that the “white male canon do[es] not reflect your own culturally
proactive pedagogy and/or your students cultural backgrounds, needs, or interests”
(Garcia & O’Donnell-Allen). Later on in
the chapter, they talked about if the authors demographic that your students
were consuming matched the United States demographic the syllabus would include:
half of the texts written by women, 4/10 would be people of color and 6/10
white people, and of these listed 25% would be written by authors of other minorities
like LGBTQ+ or those with disabilities. See 2010 Race
Profile by Vox. These statistics fascinated me because most of the texts I
had consumed were written by 90% white people and mostly men.
It
was only until college that I was truly exposed to different authors. It was
purposeful that RIC has required world literature classes. I have had whole
semesters where we did not read more than a paragraph or two of a white person’s
literature and it was extremely eye opening. I really enjoyed the different stories
and perspectives and I know that high school students are eager and willing to
read and interact with these types of authors.

Poetry
is another great gate way to literature for students. Chapter 1 of Teaching for
Joy and Justice by Linda Christensen talks all about the power of poetry in the
classroom. Christensen explains that “by letting go of the rules and the mandates
about technical grammar, I freed my students to find their voices” (44). I think
that is so important because it is much more enjoyable for students to write
once they have discovered how powerful their voice can be in words. Often “teachers
hold struggling writers’ hostage to learning grammar before they can write
papers” (Christensen, 44) and I think that with poetry students feel more open
to making mistakes and taking chances which is so important. It will be challenging
because “curricular
documents like the Common Core State Standards that make no mention of writing poetry”
(Macaluso). I am very excited to incorporate my favorite poem My Papa’s
Waltz by Theodore Roethke, into my curriculum as well as have an awesome
library for my students.