Wednesday, November 24, 2010

About Hi-Y'ALL

The Historical Young Adult Literature Library aims to serve as a quick reference for both social studies and language arts teachers in finding great literature to use in their classrooms. We believe that literature is one of the most powerful tools for educating students about the themes and issues which have challenged people throughout time. Literature is especially effective for teaching historical themes, since it allows students to vicariously experience historical problems first-hand. This allows educators to cut past both the twin-stumbling blocks of drily abstract history textbooks and inaccessibly opaque primary texts.

Hi-YALL rates books with a 5-point scale in three attributes. Each attribute is represented by a visual symbol which hopefully also acts a as mnemonic. The attributes are:

  • Historical Themes, symbolized by Hats. Rather than focusing on strict accuracy, this attribute refers to how well a work explores the social issues of a particular time period. A novel may be set in medieval Europe or the 19th century American West, and represent those periods with exacting detail, but that doesn't mean students will gain a better understanding of the social issues in those places and periods just from reading it. Similarly, fantastical elements or historical characters who don't behave quite like their real-life counterparts won't diminish a rating in this category in and of themselves. The more "hats of historicity” a book earns, the more useful it will be as material for studying the period in which it is set. The specific type of hat will vary depending on the historical period.

  • Literary Quality, symbolized by Quills. This refers to the level of craft with which a book is composed. It includes the allure of its narrative, artistry of its language, the believability of its characters, its aesthetic use literary devices, and all that other stuff that good literature is supposed to be. The higher a book's score on literary quality, the more useful it will be as material for literary study.

  • Appeal to Adolescents, symbolized by Apples. This refers to how excited students will be to read the book. Low scores indicate books that are so painfully boring, typical students will only read them upon threat of failure, and even then only with the utmost reluctance. High scores indicate books that many students will devour, then order the sequel weeks before it becomes available, wait hours in line for it on the day of release, and chatter about in the hall with their peers. Your desk is much more likely to be populated with apples if you assign students to read such popular books.

The Historical Young Adult Literature Library began as a an independent project by Stephen Worthington (Mr. Double Yoo), an undergraduate student during a teacher-preparation program. Stephen, who is trained in both the social studies and language arts, was taking courses in teaching literature and in young adult literature when he realized that many of the approaches to literature instruction can tremendously enrich the teaching of history. He dreamed up this blog as a means of helping fellow educators bridge this part of the discipline gap.

Currently, all of Hi-Y'ALL's reviews are written by Stephen, but he hopes to recruit more contributors soon.

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