TY - JOUR
T1 - “When Can We Make Paper Cranes?”
T2 - Examining Pre-Service Teachers’ Resistance to Critical Readings of Historical Fiction
AU - Apol, Laura
AU - Sakuma, Aki
AU - Reynolds, Tracy M.
AU - Rop, Sheri K.
PY - 2002/12
Y1 - 2002/12
N2 - There has been much recent scholarship on the importance of engaging students of all ages in the critical readings of texts. This study explores a group of pre-service teachers’ responses to a set of experiences designed to encourage them to respond critically to several picture book versions of the American-Japanese conflict in World War II, focusing particular attention on Sadako by Eleanor Coerr (1993). Although a presentation by a visiting scholar from Japan highlighted the “constructedness” of the Sadako myth and outlined the historical and cultural inaccuracies of Coerr's telling of the story, the pre-service teachers in the study chose to believe the truth of the story and based their choices about teaching this literature to children on their pre-existing assumptions. The study examines reasons the pre-service teachers may have responded as they did and challenges teacher educators to develop more effective methods to support pre-service teachers as they select literature and develop their own pedagogical strategies to promote thoughtful critical conversations.
AB - There has been much recent scholarship on the importance of engaging students of all ages in the critical readings of texts. This study explores a group of pre-service teachers’ responses to a set of experiences designed to encourage them to respond critically to several picture book versions of the American-Japanese conflict in World War II, focusing particular attention on Sadako by Eleanor Coerr (1993). Although a presentation by a visiting scholar from Japan highlighted the “constructedness” of the Sadako myth and outlined the historical and cultural inaccuracies of Coerr's telling of the story, the pre-service teachers in the study chose to believe the truth of the story and based their choices about teaching this literature to children on their pre-existing assumptions. The study examines reasons the pre-service teachers may have responded as they did and challenges teacher educators to develop more effective methods to support pre-service teachers as they select literature and develop their own pedagogical strategies to promote thoughtful critical conversations.
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U2 - 10.1207/s15548430jlr3404_3
DO - 10.1207/s15548430jlr3404_3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84990373709
SN - 1086-296X
VL - 34
SP - 429
EP - 464
JO - Journal of Literacy Research
JF - Journal of Literacy Research
IS - 4
ER -