Category Archives: clips

NCTE Position Statement: Formative Assessment That Truly Informs Instruction

I was recently honored to get to work on an NCTE Position Statement as a member of the NCTE Task Force on Assessment chaired by Cathy Fleischer. The statement is written to be accessible and useful for classroom teachers. As assessment in an era of the Common Core is being re-defined by organizations like PARCC, this statement offers specific guidelines for how formative assessment can be crafted and utilized meaningfully in teachers’ day-to-day practice. I’d encourage you to take a look – I think this statement turned out great. The entire statement can be read and downloaded as a pdf here.

Beautiful Dark Twisted Pedagogy: New Article in Radical Teacher

My article, “Beautiful Dark Twisted Pedagogy: Kanye West and the Lessons of Participatory Culture,” is now  available in the most recent issue of Radical Teacher. It can be read here.  Here’s an abstract:

 This article builds off of the author’s classroom experience as a high school teacher in South Central Los Angeles and looks at how cultural shifts with regards to media consumption and production impact liberatory pedagogical practice. Using media superstar Kanye West as a case study, this article argues that today’s classroom practices must expand in ways that reflect a more participatory culture. In particular, West’s marketing and engagement with his audience during the release of his 2010 album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy highlight how mainstream media practices offer pathways for renewing critical pedagogy in the 21st century.

This article started as a series of rumblings and throat-clearing on this blog here and here and here. I owe thanks to many of you for helping to continue this conversation with me online and at conferences. As I briefly mention as a footnote here, I am intrigued by West’s latest musical direction (even if he cancelled his recent show in Denver, effectively killing our Sunday night plans). I hope to continue to push on contemporary notions of critical pedagogy through looking to what’s happening in popular culture.

Book Announcement: Critical Foundations In Young Adult Literature

I am thrilled to announce the release of my first book, Critical Foundations in Young Adult Literature: Challenging Genres, from Sense Publishers.

Here is the book description:

Young Adult literature, from The Outsiders to Harry Potter, has helped shape the cultural landscape for adolescents perhaps more than any other form of consumable media in the twentieth and twenty-first century. With the rise of mega blockbuster films based on these books in recent years, the young adult genre is being co-opted by curious adult readers and by Hollywood producers. However, while the genre may be getting more readers than ever before, Young Adult literature remains exclusionary and problematic: few titles feature historically marginalized individuals, the books present heteronormative perspectives, and gender stereotypes continue to persist.

Taking a critical approach, Critical Foundations in Young Adult Literature: Challenging Genres offers educators, youth librarians, and students a set of strategies for unpacking, challenging, and transforming the assumptions of some of the genre’s most popular titles. Pushing the genre forward, Antero Garcia builds on his experiences as a former high school teacher to offer strategies for integrating Young Adult literature in a contemporary critical pedagogy through the use of participatory media.

Table of Contents

Preface. Young Adult Literature Comes of Age: The Blurring of Genre
in Popular Entertainment [Written by Paul Thomas]

Introduction. Reading Unease: Just Who, Exactly, Is Young Adult
Literature Made For?

1. Capitalism, Hollywood, and Adult Appropriation of Young
Adult Literature: The Harry Potter Effect

2. More than Mango Street: Race, Multiculturalism and YA

3. Outsiders?: Exclusion and Post-Colonial Theory

4. Gender and Sexuality and YA: Constructions of Identity and Gender

5. Pedagogy of the Demonically Possessed: Critical Pedagogy
and Popular Literature

6. Grassroots YA: Don’t Forget to Be Awesome

Conclusion. YA and the “Emerging Self”: Looking Ahead at the Genre
and Our Classrooms

When I started writing this book a year and a half ago, my goal was to help educators and librarians make sense of the shifting nature of young adult literature. I attempted to take a theoretical approach to this task while also making theory as accessible for readers as possible. My intention was for readers to be able to utilize feminism or critical race theory or post-colonialism as a means of inciting dialogue in classrooms with youth.

I will be sharing excerpts from the book in the future and would love to engage in constructive dialogue with any readers, YA classes, or preservice teacher educators. The book is part of Sense’s Critical Literacy Teaching Series edited by by Paul Thomas and builds on critical theory to illuminate for teachers, librarians, and preservice teacher educators the ways young adult literature is a genre in flux.

Note: The book details and critiques the capitalist history that created the YA genre. Fittingly, I would highly encourage you to buy as many copies of this book as you possibly can (or at least kindly ask your library to order a copy).

The Listserve, Bell’s Palsy, and Winning The Lottery

I recently “won the Listserve lottery.” The Listserve is a one-email-a-day, free subscription. Members are randomly selected to send a message of their choosing to the nearly 25k subscribers. When I won last week, I chose to write about having Bell’s Palsy. My email is below and – if you enjoy a single, random post each day – I encourage you to subscribe to the Listserve.

[The Listserve] Reflections on teaching with a broken face

In 2005 I stepped into my first classroom as an official high school English teacher. Having survived the usual trials and tribulations of student teaching, non-invasive background checks, and a lengthy Los Angeles commute (is there any other kind?), I was thrilled to get to teach students in my classroom a la the tradition set for me by Hollywood. I was going to be the next Jaime Escalante or that lady from Freedom Writers. Of course that’s not really how things went down.

My first day was, to say the least, challenging. I was 22 and had 21 year old students. My first period class had 43 students and I had a few tarnished tables and chairs to seat maybe a dozen kids. There was a hole in my floor that went to who-knows-where. And–oh yeah–I couldn’t move half of my face.

A day before I started teaching I found out I had Bell’s Palsy. Basically, the right side of my face was paralyzed. I couldn’t blink (I was a really good winker), raise my eyebrows, or move that side of my mouth. My speech was bordering on lispy/drunken belligerent as a result. When I smiled it looked Frankenstein-like grotesque (look in the mirror and try to smile with only half of your face).

Fortunately, Bell’s Palsy wore off after about a month and a half. But that first day was one where superficial moves like smiles and normal eye contact were thrown out the window. And yeah, the school I taught at had some dilapidated challenges too: the conditions my students were expected to learning (did I mention the mousetraps behind the bookshelves?) were not only less than ideal but downright unjust.

I made a lot of mistakes and learned a lot that first year. I learned that the tremendous love, resilience, and hunger for an equal education can make any space ignite with the possibilities of learning. Engaging with my students and being honest about my weird looking face meant my classroom began with a culture of openness and honesty.

The world of education in the United States has a lot of work to do. Nearly a decade after that first day of teaching I’m now helping prepare future teachers for classroom life. It’s a strange shift, sometimes. I build from my experiences looking out an unblinking right eye at a decimated classroom filled with eager students and strive for helping revolutionize the world of education.
Thanks for your time,

Antero
Fort Collins, CO

[BTW: After writing this, I got several commiserating tweets from other former BPers. I also was told that Antero is a common name in Finland. Who woulda thought?]

New DML Post: Critiquing iPads in LAUSD

I have a new co-authored blogpost over at DMLCentral called “iFiasco in LA’s Schools: Why Technology Alone Is Never the Answer.” Written with Thomas Philip, this post takes issue with the recent “hacking” of LAUSD devices by students and builds off of recent research Thomas and I have done together.

SLJ Leadership Summit Keynote video and follow-up

The video from my keynote at the School Library Journal Leadership Summit in Austin, TX can be viewed below. In addition, I wrote a blog post that adds links and background context to some of the main ideas in my talk. That post can be found here. Again, I want to thank the organizers of the SLJ Leadership Summit for the opportunity to share ideas I have been refining over the past few years.

 

Antero Garcia keynote | SLJ summit 2013 from School Library Journal on Vimeo.

Critical Media Literacy, Fair Use, and Copyright

Last month an article I co-authored was published in Learning Landscapes. “Transforming Teaching and Learning Through Critical Media Literacy Pedagogy” can be freely read and downloaded here.

And now I want to talk a bit about copyright and fair use and critical media literacy.

In writing this article with my colleagues, Robyn and Jeff, one of our central arguments is that Critical Media Literacy today is fundamentally pushing toward a more productive space. Tools now standard on computers, easily installed on mobile devices, or quickly googled on the ‘nets make making really easy. As a result, critical media literacy in classrooms today has to shift even more toward critical production instead of just criticism of mass media products.

This is something Jeff and I (along with a few of colleagues – Peter Carlson, Mark Gomez, Clifford Lee) tried to do in a set of graduate classes for preservice teachers in Los Angeles. The students in these classes were constantly creating media products. Some of these projects are described throughout our article.

In our original manuscript several images were included with the descriptions of how these student-created products extended a pedagogy of critical media literacy in the second decade of the 21st century. Most of these images are featured in this blog post. While making revisions to our manuscript we were notified that our images may be a conflict with regards to copyright and we were asked to take them out.

Before I go on, I should be clear that I am not an expert when it comes to copyright law today. It is a passing interest: scholarship by Lawrence Lessig and Aufderheide and Jaszi (in particular their 2011 book Reclaiming Fair Use) inform much of my practice and the workshops I’ve run (such as a one for the UCLA Writing Project called “Copy Left, Right, and Center”).

In discussions with teachers I emphasize four main components of fair use:

  • Purpose
  • The nature of what is being used
  • The amount
  • The effect

Note that those four components of fair use need to be taken collectively. This isn’t something  teachers always consider and, I suspect, many of us infringe on this in ways that highlight how archaic these laws are (and if you’re looking for someone to blame, I would read the slightly dated The Pirate and the Mouse or watch the doc RIP: A Remix Manifesto – though this one slightly conflates different copyright laws).

Let’s unpack an example: say you are asking students to create a video slideshow about a book as an assignment and say that a student chooses to have an appropriately thematic song playing in the background. Maybe this song is a chart-topping pop song. This seems like a typical assignment students would engage in and a creative (and easy) way for kids to customize their interpretation of the work. However, this would not be considered fair use: the song is not used in a short enough amount (though there is no specific time length in legal documents despite what you may have been told otherwise) and the song’s purpose and effect are not significantly different from what they were in a non-school context. I should also point out that being a teacher or using media in a classroom does not grant us special exception from copyright law. We just usually infringe unknowingly.

While all of these components of fair use are not simple to quantify, they act – as Aufderheide and Jaszi note – as the spectrums across which legal actions are determined. Because the images we included with our manuscript (and featured here) are not of commercial quality (they could not be used professionally in the dpi we have submitted) and because they were to be used in ways that clearly and intentionally change the original meaning, they seem like an appropriate case of fair use.

In the fair use research I’ve done, the importance of using others’ work in transformative ways is underscored. I think this is a key point of the critical media literacy article and of the images we were using.

I should also add that I don’t think copyright laws really help media producers innovate today (which, as Lessig argues, was the whole point of copyright to begin with). I don’t describe how I–along with lots of other teachers–probably unknowingly infringed on these laws as a teacher because I think they are good laws. I’m stating my understanding to help somewhat clarify the linearity of my thinking with regards to this article.

Ultimately, my appeal that these images constituted fair use was not enough for the editors to feel comfortable including them. I should note that I do not fault the editors and appreciated their consideration and dialogue throughout the process. The images highlight the challenges of how participatory culture confronts the dilemma of traditionally consumer-driven media markets. Fair use, copyright, and advances like creative commons are areas of this research we did not address in our article and that we need to continue scholarship around in the future.

Article in Harvard Educational Review

An article I recently co-authored with Thomas Philip is now published in the Harvard Educational Review.

“The Importance of Still Teaching the iGeneration: New Technologies and the Centrality of Pedagogy” can be found here. This article extends some of the thinking I began in my dissertation and in a research project with Thomas. I’m excited about expanding the possibilities of this article by working directly with educators around these ideas.

The abstract for the article follows:

In this essay, Philip and Garcia argue that visions of mobile devices in the classroom often draw on assumptions about the inherent interests youth have in these devices, the capability of these interests to transfer from out-of-school contexts to the classroom, and the capacity for these new technologies to equalize the educational playing field. These overly optimistic portrayals minimize the pivotal value of effective teaching and are implicitly or explicitly coupled with political agendas that attempt to increasingly control and regiment the work of teachers. Through discussing student interest and issues of educational technology in urban schools and highlighting the affordances and limitations of the texts, tools, and talk that teachers might facilitate with these devices, the authors offer a teacher-focused perspective that is sorely missing in the contemporary debates about using mobile technologies in schools.

Article in Teaching and Teacher Education

I am a co-author on a recently published article in Teaching and Teacher Education called “When educators attempt to make ‘community’ a part of classroom learning: The dangers of (mis)appropriating students’ communities into schools.” You can find it here.

The abstract for the article follows:

In this article, we explore the ambiguous associations of the term “community” within one professional development (PD) program that engaged teachers in using mobile technologies to learn about data. We argue that multiple meanings of “community” are embedded in competing ideological discourses that reproduce and/or contest relationships of power that shape the educational experiences of students of color. We examine how the norms, representational artifacts, and tools in the PD we studied co-constructed various meanings of “community.” Lastly, we explore the implications of our findings for PD facilitators by disambiguating other analyses that are often conflated with “community.”

I am grateful for the opportunity to learn from my collaborators, Thomas M. Philip, Winmar Way, Sarah Schuler-Brown, and Oscar Navarro.