Cross-posted at
ThinkTime and the
Media Literacy Ning.
This is the last in a series of posts about things we can do in honor of
Support Teen Literature Day 2008, which is today, April 17.
In previous entries, I've discussed
book talks and read-alouds and
blog-based literature discussions. These and many other activities are featured at the official teen lit day
wiki presented by the
Young Adult Library Service Association (YALSA).
The wiki offers more than
30 things to do in celebration of young-adult (YA) fiction. Additionally, the YALSA homepage links to a wealth of
YA booklists and
professional development opportunities for teachers and librarians.
As I first perused these resources, I was reminded of just how influential YA has been in my own reading life.
And I was also struck by the utter transformation that has occurred within the YA genre since that summer, more than 25 years ago, when I made the profound and life-changing leap from children's author
Beverly Cleary to Judy Blume, the celebrated YA author who wrote
Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret.
For one, the options, in terms of authors and titles, have increased exponentially. The topics and subject matter are also darker and edgier, with more potential for cross-over appeal among adult audiences.
But without a doubt, the most profound change is technology driven. Digital technologies are transforming the very nature of
what teens read as well as
how they read. From within computer-mediated environments, youth can discuss, nominate, and vote on their favorite new YA titles, participate in surveys, and even chat in real-time with YA authors and readers from around the country.
I remember reading Judy Blume for the first time. I was maybe 10 years old and felt so privileged and so awakened to the fact that books could serve as more than a pleasant diversion from life. Books could also be topical and relevant to my own life and experiences. Wow!
I devoured Blume before moving on to other authors --
Betty Miles,
Paula Danziger,
S.E. Hinton. My favorite, dog-eared books might have been called "feminist fiction for girls," with female protagonists in various stages of social, emotional, and physical development -- all the typical pubescent pangs.
Good stuff. I was engaged, and I stayed engaged until right around the start of high school when I gave up YA almost entirely to take up the "serious reading" of a college-bound student. I did not resume true pleasure reading again until well after college, in my mid-20s.
How much richer my reading life might have been had I had the opportunities that youth have today to connect, communicate, and form communities around favorite titles and authors, to possibly even interact in real-time or asynchronously with the authors themselves.
In the 2006 article
YA Lit 2.0: How Technology is Enhancing Pleasure Reading, author Anita Beaman documents the impact of web-based and interactive technologies on how modern teens read for enjoyment.
Citing the work of Eliza Dresang, who in 1999 wrote
Radical Change: Books for Youth in a Digital Age, Beaman highlights how books for children and young adults have evolved new formats such as novels in verse, screenplays, multiple narrative perspectives, and graphic novels.
Beaman writes, “It was becoming obvious that the mouse-click generation was going to be looking for something new in print.”
She goes on to present evidence that, contrary to conventional wisdom, adolescents are reading, especially when given opportunities to reach out to authors and other teens in media-rich, interactive environments that include email, blogs, iTunes playlists, and MySpace pages.
This is the new playing field -- YA 2.0.
Asserting that "YA Lit 2.0 is a sign that books and reading remain relevant to teens in a digital world,” Beaman concludes with advice to librarians who want to develop programs that are relevant to teen readers: download the playlists, read author blogs, create blogs, visit MySpace, and “share the entire reading experience” with teens.
For Beaman, a high school librarian, the implications are clear: if librarians want to be taken seriously, they must revitalize their programs and immerse themselves in these digital environments, right alongside the teens.
Certainly, any literacy educator would do well to heed this advice.
What do you think?
technorati tags: YA YA literature blogs collaboration Internet multiliteracies new literacies participatory culture student engagement youth web2.0
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