Branching off the DALN with Effective Literacy Narratives
Though this should be a reading response to focus on the articles, I would like to gear my discussion toward the DALN responses and the question on if the samples we collected were effective in telling their story explaining why or why not. To be honest, I’m mainly doing this because I ran out of room on my one page and wanted to continue writing on my four literacy narratives. The four narratives I picked out, I gathered from searching Young Adult literature in the search engine, or the variations of the key term like YA novels or YA. The four I picked out came in different formats: one was a stream of consciousness essay, one was a comic with several pages, and the last two were video interviews.
Of the four, I found the first piece (the essay) to be less effective at telling a compelling story when compared to the comic/video. Considering most classes require a literacy narrative in first/second year writing classes, I found it interesting that the written format that is commonly assigned, at least the one I typically see coming through the Writing Studio, was the least efficient. The content was engaging because the writer, Peter Shirts, explained that he established literacy as being able to out read his brother; which he accomplished by reading The Hobbit in third grade. Performing that act made him appear more literate in his eyes and his parent’s eyes (according to him that is).
Shirts’ need to appear “literate” shows up again in the videos by Cawp and Appel where they both discussed they wanted to read “high-brow” books. Appel started to read Jane Eyre because her friend was reading it but found that she had trouble with the language, and Cawp identified herself as an “English major snob” when it came to books and refused to read Harry Potter until she found a need for it which led her to fall in love with the story. Shirt’s discussion of his friend aversion of YA literature to “nature writings” or something that is true, and not being able to comprehend why someone would not enjoy this genre of literature is the weakest part of his narrative. Earlier in his text, which again is a stream of consciousness as shown with his sporadic examples, explains that he also found its previous reading interests to be undesirable. So, his supposed inability to understand why others would also be put off by it is weak at best.
Analyzing my four literacy narratives as effective, ineffective, and why helped me focus on what the author is trying to do as opposed to just taking what they say/write/draw as gospel. Sure, everyone can have their ideas on literacy, but are they utilizing their form of communication effectively? I’m about to start asking questions so I will move down to my questions section.
My list of literacy narratives:
Peter Shirts essay “Reading from Kid to Adult and Back Again.”
Connor Kilbarger comic “The Language of Paper.”
Kim Cawp casual video “Harry Potter is a Bridge.”
Erica Appel interview video “Writing Teenage Stories.”
As we can see in my list, different people communicate differently. How can we help students learn to take control over their means of communication?
How did looking at the effectiveness of the literacy narratives affect your response to them?
What are some literacy narratives that you didn’t find compelling? Why did you not find them effective?
I found a comic book, videos, and an essay. What are other modes of communicating a literacy narrative outside of these three?