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AdLit gathers interesting news headlines about literacy, middle grade and YA books, best practices in instruction, and other key topics related to middle school and high school teaching and learning.

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Our 3rd Annual STEM Writing Contest (opens in a new window)

NY Times

October 05, 2021

The NY Times invites students (age 11-19) to choose an issue or question in science, technology, engineering, math or health, then write an engaging 500-word explanation. Contest Dates: Feb. 2 to March 9, 2022.

Q & A with Monica Zepeda (opens in a new window)

Publishers Weekly

September 28, 2021

Monica Zepeda is a triple threat of the literary variety. She is a teen librarian at the Beverly Hills Public Library in Los Angeles County, a debut young adult author, and an award-winning screenwriter. Her first YA novel, Boys of the Beast, won the Lee & Low 2019 New Visions Award for new authors of color, and will be published in February 2022. Zepeda spoke with PW about her role as teen librarian, and the journey she took while crafting Boys of the Beast.

A Winning Time (opens in a new window)

Hastings Tribune

September 20, 2021

Hastings Middle School students are seeing a lot of success with a recently implemented program that uses goal setting to close the gap on academic shortfalls.

Q&A: Tanita S. Davis, Author of ‘Partly Cloudy’ (opens in a new window)

The Nerd Daily

September 09, 2021

A chat with author Tanita S. Davis about her new middle grade novel, Partly Cloudy(opens in a new window), along with book recommendations, writing, and more! From award-winning author Tanita S. Davis comes a nuanced exploration of the microaggressions of middle school and a young Black girl named Madalyn who learns that being a good friend means dealing with the blue skies and the rain—and having the tough conversations on days that are partly cloudy. 

Why Do Students Disengage? (opens in a new window)

ASCD

September 02, 2021

We have long known that a transmission-of-knowledge model, where students passively receive and then reproduce information, isn’t how learning occurs. Better to flip the script and examine what’s getting in the way of learning, realizing that there are cognitive barriers to effective teaching.

Podcast: Hey Ya (opens in a new window)

Book Riot

September 02, 2021

From great new books to favorite classic reads, from news to the latest in on-screen adaptations, the Hey YA podcast elevates the exciting world of young adult lit.

Don’t ignore direct SEL instruction (opens in a new window)

Flypaper: Fordham Institute

August 23, 2021

Advocates for social and emotional learning (SEL) have pushed for schools to embrace the teaching of healthy life skills to students. This can take many forms, from school-wide policies that foster a positive and exemplary culture for students, to a program where teachers are taught to model behaviors in their classes for students to learn from, to a course where social and emotional skills are taught from a curriculum.

So why an explicit approach? And what about parents’ concerns about teaching SEL? First, the types of difficult conversations I experienced with my students may not come up naturally in typical classroom settings, and not all teachers have the ability to properly address them if they do—especially those without formal training in SEL instruction. The more explicit approach that my school took guaranteed that important skills and development were addressed clearly, directly, and effectively.

Introducing Students to the Anatomy of Nonfiction Books (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

August 23, 2021

Today’s high school students, often called “digital natives,” generally feel comfortable navigating the internet or learning a new app. On the other hand, these same students may have less familiarity using physical nonfiction books. Many teachers grew up around books and may not realize that students don’t share the same level of proficiency navigating nonfiction texts.

Students will need to be able to use books for research and academic assignments, especially if they plan on college. By teaching the parts of a book, educators can help students become more efficient at reading nonfiction texts.

John Lewis’s Sequel to His Award-Winning Graphic Memoir, ‘March’ (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

August 19, 2021

Anyone familiar with Lewis’s celebrated “March” trilogy (whose final book is still the only comic to win a National Book Award) knows that graphic novels can handle nuance quite adeptly. Run, Book One, most of which was completed by Lewis and his team of collaborators before he died in the summer of 2020, picks up where “March” left off, with the civil rights movement winning important legislative gains in the 1960s but still very much unfinished in its aims. There’s a timeliness to “Run,” a reminder that the efforts to keep prospective voters from casting their ballots that are so much in the headlines these days are nothing new.

Virtual Learning Was Better for Some Kids. Here’s What Teachers Learned From Them (opens in a new window)

Education Week

August 19, 2021

Kareem Neal, a 24-year veteran educator, noticed something surprising when his school went all virtual last year: Not only did most of the students in his self-contained, special education class navigate the change better than he expected, three of them blossomed academically. All three are on the autism spectrum and have a tough time navigating the social aspects of school. But during virtual instruction, “they were fine with just hours of academic instruction happening at home,” said Neal, who works at Maryvale High School in Phoenix and was an Arizona teacher of the year in 2019. “All of those other things were off their plates, and there was just their work, and they loved it.”

Most students didn’t make much progress—or flailed—in online learning during the pandemic. But a subset who may have struggled with in-person learning in the past—like Neal’s trio of kids—actually thrived. Now many of those students, some of whom have learning and thinking differences or mental health conditions like social anxiety, must return to the traditional classroom, an environment that did not work for them before COVID.

Who Runs The World? Kids. (opens in a new window)

National Public Radio

August 19, 2021

This is the third year that the Student Podcast Challenge has been up and running — it’s headed by our friends over at NPR’s Ed Team. And it’s the first year that the contest has had a category for college students. (Spoiler alert: Those entries were really good.) So this week on the pod, we’re featuring some of our favorite student podcasts about race and identity. We’ll have you moose hunting in Alaska, eating Vietnamese-style crawfish in New Orleans, and gawking over beautiful tattoo art in Illinois. You can listen to all of the finalists — including a bunch that didn’t make the episode.