The Art of Reading People: Character, Expression, Interpretation

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 11.01.02

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Objective
  2. Introduction
  3. Academic Rationale
  4. Curricular Plan
  5. Context
  6. Background Research
  7. Bibliotherapy
  8. Basic Structure of Class Time
  9. Strategies
  10. Classroom Activities
  11. Conclusion
  12. Endnotes
  13. Research Bibliography
  14. Teacher's Bibliography
  15. Implementing District Standards

Are You Talkin' to Me? A Bibliotherapeutic Realization of Intelligence and Self-efficacy in Traumatized Adolescents

Audra K. Bull

Published September 2011

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 11.01.02

The year two-thousand fourteen quickly approaches, the year all public school students are to be performing at grade level as measured on state assessments. Yet, according to the 2009 NAEP (National Assessment of Educational Progress) report the reading level of fourth and eighth graders has only risen 4 points (on a 500 point scale) since 1992. Millions of dollars have been spent in an attempt to alleviate skill deficiencies, yet very little comparative time or money has been spent understanding the source of the deficiency and thus designing a strategy to address the deficiency at its origin. The background research of this unit seeks to explain what the deficiency is not, an inherent lack of intelligence, but rather explore what, for an alarming percentage of students, the deficiency is, a product of an emotional trauma which has left the mind in a stasis, incapable of measurable emotional or academic growth. This unit seeks to address the emotional trauma of students using journal writing, collaborative grouping, and non-linguistic representation in a bibliotherapeutic approach. The goal is to begin an external and internal dialogue aimed at helping the child move forward emotionally and therefore clear a path for addressing the skill deficiency.

(Developed for Reading, grades 6-8; recommended for Language Arts and Reading, grades 4-12)

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