| Programs 101.
Workshop 1. Reader Response: Pat Mora and James Welch - In Part I, Alfredo Lujan
and his students at the Monte del Sol school in Santa Fe, New Mexico, explore
My Own True Name, Pat Mora's collection of poetry for teens and young adults.
Pat Mora visits the classroom and shares her poetry with students. In Part II,
Greg Hirst's Wolf Point High School students on the Fort Peck reservation in Wolf
Point, Montana, respond to the literature of Native American writer James Welch.
102. Workshop 2. Reader Response: Keith Gilyard and Mourning
Dove - In Part I, Alfredo Lujan's students discuss poems in Keith Gilyard's Poemographies.
Gilyard reads his poem, "The Hatmaker" to the students and leads them in a response-based
writing activity. In Part II, Greg Hirst's students learn about and enact the
oral tradition through the Salish coyote stories as written by Mourning Dove.
103. Workshop 3. Inquiry: Rudolfo Anaya and James Baldwin
- In Part I, Jorge Arredondo's students at Charles H. Milby High School in Houston,
Texas, begin an inquiry-based exploration of Rudolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima.
In Part II, Bo Wu and her students at Murry Bergtraum High School in New York
City explore three works by James Baldwin and begin to create their own Web sites
about Baldwin. 104. Workshop 4. Inquiry: Tomás Rivera
and Esmeralda Santiago - In Part I, Jorge Arredondo's students begin an inquiry
unit based on Tomás Rivera's And the Earth Did Not Devour Him by visiting with
Rivera translator and poet, Evangelina Vigil-Piñón. In Part II, Bo Wu and her
students discuss Esmeralda Santiago's memoir When I Was Puerto Rican and begin
creating their own memoirs. 105. Workshop 5. Cultural
Studies: Ishmael Reed and Graciela Limón - In Part I, Betty Tillman Samb and her
students at Raoul Wallenberg High School in San Francisco, California, explore
Ishmael Reed's poem "Railroad Bill, A Conjure Man" and related texts. Reed visits
the class and reads excerpts of the poem. In Part II, Bobbi Houtchens and her
students at Arroyo Valley High School in San Bernardino, California, discuss excerpts
from Graciela Limón's novel about Chiapas entitled Erased Faces. Limón reads passages
from her novel and shares stories of growing up in East Los Angeles and visiting
the Zapatistas in Mexico. 106. Workshop 6. Cultural Studies:
N. Scott Momaday and Russell Leong - In Part I, Betty Tillman Samb's students
study the mythological themes and historical shifts of Kiowa culture through N.
Scott Momaday's The Way to Rainy Mountain. In Part II, Bobbi Houtchens and her
students tour LA's Chinatown with poet Russell Leong and explore the relationship
between poetry and Tai Chi. Leong reads excerpts of his poem "Aerogrammes" and
leads the class in creating Japanese Renga poems. 107.
Workshop 7. Critical Pedagogy: Octavia E. Butler and Ruthanne Lum McCunn - In
Part I, Cathie Wright-Lewis's students at Benjamin Banneker Academy in Brooklyn,
New York, investigate the political, social, technological, and environmental
issues in Octavia E. Butler's novel, Parable of the Sower. In Part II, Sandra
Childs's students at Franklin High School in Portland, Oregon, discuss cultural
and political issues as they relate to Ruthanne Lum McCunn's novel, Thousand Pieces
of Gold. Lum McCunn reads from her novel and discusses it with students. 108.
Workshop 8. Critical Pedagogy: Abiodun Oyewole and Lawson Fusao Inada - In Part
I, Cathie Wright-Lewis and her class explore the tradition of spoken word and
the works of poet Abiodun Oyewole. In Part II, Sandra Childs's class studies the
history of Japanese-American internment in the United States through the works
of Lawson Fusao Inada. Inada reads his poetry to the students and addresses their
questions. | Air
Dates Mon, Sep 10, 2007 02:00:00 #001 03:00:00 #002 04:00:00
#003 Tue, Sep 11, 2007 02:00:00 #004 03:00:00 #005 04:00:00
#006 Wed, Sep 12, 2007 02:00:00 #007 03:00:00 #008 Wed,
Mar 05, 2008 02:00:00 #001 03:00:00 #002 04:00:00 #003 Thu,
Mar 06, 2008 02:00:00 #004 03:00:00 #005 04:00:00 #006 Fri,
Mar 07, 2008 02:00:00 #007 |