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Topic: BoysRead
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Kim BowenPerson was signed in when posted  1
03-16-2003 12:00 AM ET (US)
Welcome to BoysRead. This discussion forum was created to encourage teachers to reflect on boys and reading in their classrooms.
Leatha Fields-CareyPerson was signed in when posted  2
05-17-2003 01:21 PM ET (US)
I was not surprised when I read on this site that there is a gender gap in literacy. It is something I have always sensed as a student, and later as an English instructor: that there is something about reading that is more inherently “girl”, and that boys respond much more to more “active” pastimes. As I participated in this webquest, I became more aware of anecdotal evidence to support this theory: even in my Honors level English I classes, the students that tend to make the highest grades are girls, the students who tend to have the most insightful comments and the most personal connections to the literature we read in class are girls, and even boys who have reading scores through the roof make comments such as, “I hate to read,” “Reading is boring,” and, my personal favorite, “Why do I need to read this? It has nothing to do with my life.” Our class reads two novels during our blocked semester-long course, To Kill a Mockingbird and Fahrenheit 451. I was discussing Fahrenheit with one male student after we had finished both books and I asked him which novel he preferred. Not surprisingly, he answered that he preferred Fahrenheit. When I asked him why, he replied, “There was more action and more stuff going on. Mockingbird was just…well…thinking.” I chuckled inside to see how the ideas that I had read about on the webquest site had been borne out in my own classroom.

The texts I use in my English I class are pretty standard for ninth grade English: Romeo and Juliet, The Odyssey, To Kill a Mockingbird, Fahrenheit 451, and a variety of short fiction, poetry, and nonfiction. I also have my Honors students read three independent novels, choosing from a long and varied list of texts that I update each year so that students will have a plethora of material from which to choose. I have found that the texts that are most enjoyed by male students are, not surprisingly, those with more action: The Odyssey, Romeo and Juliet (at least the killing parts), and Fahrenheit 451. Some texts that I would like to try in my classroom (at least on the supplementary reading lists) are Angela’s Ashes, Paddy Clarke HaHaHa, and This Boys’ Life.

I have tried, this year and in the past, reflective journaling to help students (especially boys) connect to literature in a real, meaningful way. In the past, I have often approached my students’ reading experiences from my own vantage point, which is that people read and write literature because it is a part of the human experience that we all share, and that we as readers instinctively connect reading to ourselves, without having to be told to do so or guided in that regard. I have realized, though, that this doesn’t always happen, and sometimes it takes careful and thoughtful planning on the part of the literature teacher to ensure that students have a guide to help through the processes of making meaning.

I would like to try literature circles next year with my students and incorporate some of the great and exciting texts that I read about on the websites, especially GUYSREAD.COM. It’s a strategy that I have been afraid of because it seems so complex, but now that I see the potential value it can have in getting male students more interested in books, I am excited and energized about the practice.

The “new thing” I tried with my classes in response to the webquest played on the idea of acting and drama to engage boys. When reading Fahrenheit, I assigned each student a role of a character (the students were particularly interested in Beatty, the arrogant, eloquent fire chief, because he is such a complex and paradoxical character): Montag, the hero of the novel, Beatty, the fire chief, Mildred, Montag’s shallow, empty-minded wife, Clarisse, the young neighbor who inspires Montag, and Faber, the cowardly professor who helps Montag realize his own potential. Using their assigned persona, each student had to prepare a five-minute dramatic monologue as their character in which they had to speak to the class about their interests, beliefs, and views about the society in which they lived. In addition to preparing the monologue, each student had to bring in a “prop” of some kind that related to their character and explain this prop to the class. Some of the students really got into character and did an amazing job, particularly the guys. Not being much of a dramatist myself, I never really realized the power that drama can have for helping students relate to literature, especially male students. This is something that I intend to use in the future, and I can’t think of anything I would have changed about the assignment. It really seemed to “click” with most of the students.
Max Elliot Anderson  3
12-13-2005 09:18 PM ET (US)
I grew up as a reluctant reader. Now I write adventures, primarily for boys 8 and up, but girls love them too.

NEWSPAPER CAPER, TERROR AT WOLF LAKE, NORTH WOODS POACHERS, MOUNTAIN CABIN MYSTERY, BIG RIG RUSTLERS, SECRET OF ABBOTT'S CAVE, & LEGEND OF THE WHITE WOLF compared by readers and reviewers to Tom Sawyer, The Hardy Boys, Huck Finn, Nancy Drew, Tom Swift, Scooby-Doo and adventure author Jack London.
REVIEWS: http://maxbookreviews.blogspot.com/

http://maxbooks.9k.com
   4
07-19-2006 04:31 PM ET (US)
Deleted by topic administrator 03-27-2007 02:02 AM
joyce  5
03-26-2007 09:50 AM ET (US)
i've been doing a thesis regarding boys and reading. smith and wilhelm have contributed a lot in explaining the gender gap that exists particularly in boys.
Steven jeffords  6
09-15-2007 11:01 PM ET (US)
Reflection on getting boys to read!

I am in college to receive my masters in Education and one of my classes asked us to do this web-quest about getting boys in general to read more. This was an interesting topic. When I become a teacher, I think I’d like to try the Hatchet series by Gary Paulson. I think it would work with boys and girls as well. It is a problem solving story about a young boy whose plane crash lands in the Canadian wilderness and it describes how he survives and figures out each step along the way.
Growing up, I was an avid camper and really enjoyed these books even thought I originally bought them for my son.
It’s the type of book where you put yourself in his shoes and ask yourself the question, “Now What??”
Max Elliot Anderson  7
10-16-2007 05:02 PM ET (US)
It's true, I grew up hating to read. Now I write action-adventures & mysteries especially for boys 8 - 13, who also may not like to read.
 
NEWSPAPER CAPER, TERROR AT WOLF LAKE, NORTH WOODS POACHERS, MOUNTAIN CABIN MYSTERY, BIG RIG RUSTLERS, SECRET OF ABBOTT'S CAVE & LEGEND OF THE WHITE WOLF, are compared by readers and reviewers to Tom Sawyer, The Hardy Boys, Huck Finn, Nancy Drew, Tom Swift, Scooby-Doo, Lemony Snicket, and adventure author Jack London.
 
My blog, Books for Boys, ranks in the top 5 on Yahoo and the top 20 on Google and you can find it at http://booksandboys.blogspot.com There you will also find links to my author's web site and another blog with 50 pages of reviews.
 
If you have any questions, please let me know.
 
Thank you,
 
Max Elliot Anderson
Author
 
http://www.maxbooks.9k.com
Now, from an author who hated to read...comes books kids hate to put down.
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