Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning

Students’ backpacks bulge not just with oversize textbooks, but with paperbacks, graphic novels, street lit, and electronics such as iPods and handheld video games. This book is about unpacking those texts to explore previously unexamined assumptions regarding their usefulness to classroom learning. With a strong theoretical grounding and many practical examples, the authors speak to both skeptical instructors who favor traditional canonical literature and to technology enthusiasts who already use popular music or video in their classrooms. Each chapter includes teacher, administrator, media specialist, librarian, and student voices; classroom activities; adaptable lessons; and professional study-group questions.


Bring It to Class features:



  • A researched rationale for using pop culture in middle school and secondary classrooms as well as school libraries and media centers.

  • Field-tested teaching approaches that will connect adolescents with school-based learning and motivate their literacy practices in and out of class.

  • An easy-to-use format that includes classroom vignettes, sample lessons, and a glossary of key terms.


Margaret C. Hagood teaches courses in 21st-century literacies in the Department of Teacher Education at the College of Charleston. Donna E. Alvermann is a distinguished research professor in Language and Literacy Education at the University of Georgia. Alison Heron-Hruby is an assistant professor of English education at George Mason University.


“All students—not just the ones who struggle to read, but all students—will benefit from the critical, evaluative, collaborative, and creative thinking activities in this book…. Bring It to Class offers a ‘how-to’ guide about new ways to educate that offer new results.”

—From the Foreword by Kylene Beers, president, National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE)


Bring It to Class is just what English teachers need to build confidence using new instructional approaches, as it offers fresh and engaging strategies for meeting students where they live!”

Renee Hobbs, founder, Media Education Lab, Temple University



“A must-read for teacher educators who have a responsibility to prepare present and future teachers to deliver instruction that capitalizes on their students’ rich, diverse experiences with popular culture texts.”

Shelley Hong Xu, California State University, Long Beach

1101142354
Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning

Students’ backpacks bulge not just with oversize textbooks, but with paperbacks, graphic novels, street lit, and electronics such as iPods and handheld video games. This book is about unpacking those texts to explore previously unexamined assumptions regarding their usefulness to classroom learning. With a strong theoretical grounding and many practical examples, the authors speak to both skeptical instructors who favor traditional canonical literature and to technology enthusiasts who already use popular music or video in their classrooms. Each chapter includes teacher, administrator, media specialist, librarian, and student voices; classroom activities; adaptable lessons; and professional study-group questions.


Bring It to Class features:



  • A researched rationale for using pop culture in middle school and secondary classrooms as well as school libraries and media centers.

  • Field-tested teaching approaches that will connect adolescents with school-based learning and motivate their literacy practices in and out of class.

  • An easy-to-use format that includes classroom vignettes, sample lessons, and a glossary of key terms.


Margaret C. Hagood teaches courses in 21st-century literacies in the Department of Teacher Education at the College of Charleston. Donna E. Alvermann is a distinguished research professor in Language and Literacy Education at the University of Georgia. Alison Heron-Hruby is an assistant professor of English education at George Mason University.


“All students—not just the ones who struggle to read, but all students—will benefit from the critical, evaluative, collaborative, and creative thinking activities in this book…. Bring It to Class offers a ‘how-to’ guide about new ways to educate that offer new results.”

—From the Foreword by Kylene Beers, president, National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE)


Bring It to Class is just what English teachers need to build confidence using new instructional approaches, as it offers fresh and engaging strategies for meeting students where they live!”

Renee Hobbs, founder, Media Education Lab, Temple University



“A must-read for teacher educators who have a responsibility to prepare present and future teachers to deliver instruction that capitalizes on their students’ rich, diverse experiences with popular culture texts.”

Shelley Hong Xu, California State University, Long Beach

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Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning

Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning

Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning

Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning

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Overview

Students’ backpacks bulge not just with oversize textbooks, but with paperbacks, graphic novels, street lit, and electronics such as iPods and handheld video games. This book is about unpacking those texts to explore previously unexamined assumptions regarding their usefulness to classroom learning. With a strong theoretical grounding and many practical examples, the authors speak to both skeptical instructors who favor traditional canonical literature and to technology enthusiasts who already use popular music or video in their classrooms. Each chapter includes teacher, administrator, media specialist, librarian, and student voices; classroom activities; adaptable lessons; and professional study-group questions.


Bring It to Class features:



  • A researched rationale for using pop culture in middle school and secondary classrooms as well as school libraries and media centers.

  • Field-tested teaching approaches that will connect adolescents with school-based learning and motivate their literacy practices in and out of class.

  • An easy-to-use format that includes classroom vignettes, sample lessons, and a glossary of key terms.


Margaret C. Hagood teaches courses in 21st-century literacies in the Department of Teacher Education at the College of Charleston. Donna E. Alvermann is a distinguished research professor in Language and Literacy Education at the University of Georgia. Alison Heron-Hruby is an assistant professor of English education at George Mason University.


“All students—not just the ones who struggle to read, but all students—will benefit from the critical, evaluative, collaborative, and creative thinking activities in this book…. Bring It to Class offers a ‘how-to’ guide about new ways to educate that offer new results.”

—From the Foreword by Kylene Beers, president, National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE)


Bring It to Class is just what English teachers need to build confidence using new instructional approaches, as it offers fresh and engaging strategies for meeting students where they live!”

Renee Hobbs, founder, Media Education Lab, Temple University



“A must-read for teacher educators who have a responsibility to prepare present and future teachers to deliver instruction that capitalizes on their students’ rich, diverse experiences with popular culture texts.”

Shelley Hong Xu, California State University, Long Beach


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807770702
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 04/12/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Margaret C. Hagood teaches courses in 21st-century literacies in the Department of Teacher Education at the College of Charleston. Donna E. Alvermann is a distinguished research professor in Language and Literacy Education at the University of Georgia. Alison Heron-Hruby is an assistant professor of English education at George Mason University.

Table of Contents

Foreword Kylene Beers ix

Acknowledgments xiii

Introduction: What's in Your Backpack? 1

A Textual Day in a Life 3

Reflection Activity: What's Your Textual Day in a Life Look Like? 7

What's the Hang Up with Pop Culture and Texts? 7

Views of Pop Culture 9

Reflection Activity: What Are My Views of Pop Culture? 11

Additional Resources 11

1 Unpacking Pop Culture 13

What Do We Mean by Pop Culture Texts? 14

What Interests You and Your Students in Pop Culture? 15

Connecting Pop Culture Texts to Concepts in the Curriculum 17

How Does Multimodality Figure In? 18

Reflection Activity: Critical Reading of a Blog 20

Pop Culture in Action: A Blueprint for a Blogging Project 21

Challenges to Using Pop Culture Texts in School 23

Additional Resources 24

2 How Does Pop Culture Connect to Standards? 26

Standards Influence How We View Pop Culture 27

How Has Pop Culture Been Used in Schools? 28

Reflection Activity: Literacy of Fusion 31

Linking Pop Culture and Academic Standards 31

Pop Culture in Action: Paul Reverse Uses MapQuest 32

Reflection Activity: Understanding Visual Literacy 34

Making Pop Culture Valid 35

Additional Resources 35

3 Connecting to Audiences, Connecting to the Canon 36

Memorizing Lyrics: It's All About Comprehending 38

Going Backstage with Students 39

Pop Culture in Action: Connecting Rap Lyrics to a Unit on Bullying 40

Center Stage: Adolescents Authoring Texts for Peer Audiences 43

Texts That Connect: Or Do They? 45

Reflection Activity: Fractured Expectations and Experiences of Text 46

Additional Resources 47

4 Connecting Pop Culture to Text Interpretation 48

What Is Interpretation? 50

Pop Culture in Action: "The Freshman" 52

Reflection Activity: Interpretive Communities in the Content Areas 53

Pop Culture and Conceptual Understanding 54

Pop Culture in Action: The Day the Earth Stood Still 55

Pop Culture as Interpretation 56

Additional Resources 57

5 Who Do People Think I Am, and Who Do I Want to Be? 58

How Do We Use Pop Culture to Construct Identity? 59

Identity and Subjectivity Played Out 61

Reflection Activity: Rewind and Redo? 62

Challenges to Creating a Community of Trust 63

Reflection Activity: Representations of Teacher Identities in Popular Culture 64

Connecting Student Identity, Teacher Identity, and Instruction 64

Pop Culture in Action: Adolescents' Readings of Identities in Media 65

Additional Resources 68

6 Conclusions: Connecting Across Generations via Turning Around Pedagogies 69

Connecting Across Generations 71

Making a Space for Learning with 21st-Century Texts in Schools 72

Taking Stock 73

Reflection Activity: Time to Repack? 74

"Turn-Around" Pedagogies 74

So How Do We Bring on This Turning Around? 76

Reflection Activity: Strategies for Small Steps 77

Last Words 77

Additional Resources 78

Glossary 79

Classroom Resources 83

References 85

Index 91

About the Authors 95

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Bring It to Class offers a ‘how-to’ guide about new ways to educate that offer new results.”
—From the Foreword by Kylene Beers, president, National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE)


Bring It to Class is just what English teachers need to build confidence using new instructional approaches, as it offers fresh and engaging strategies for meeting students where they live!”
Renee Hobbs, founder, Media Education Lab, Temple University


“A must-read for teacher educators who have a responsibility to prepare present and future teachers to deliver instruction that capitalizes on their students’ rich, diverse experiences with popular culture texts.”
Shelley Hong Xu, California State University, Long Beach

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