ALAN Volume 22, Number 3 - Table of Contents
Table of Contents
1 From The Editors Patricia P. Kelly2 Perfect
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.1
Best known for her novels and short stories, Asher shares with us a play about sadness and escape.
Sandy Asher5 Lights in the Windows
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.2
Poet and editor of the collection of international poems, This Same Sky, Nye speaks of poetry as sharing and understanding.
Naomi Shihab Nye7 From Dynamite Dinah to Dinah Forever :
Managing a Character's Growth through a Series
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.3
The author of four books about Dinah Seabrooke discusses how she developed her character's growing insights into herself and the world around her.
Claudia Mills11 Reflections on Multi-culturalism and the Tower of PsychoBabble
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.4
Levy, teacher of books from many cultures and author of novels that explore cultural differences, reflects on the impact of literature on the cultural understanding of its readers.
Marilyn Levy16 A Sense of Place in Dori Sander's Clover
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.5
Clover is a novel that reflects both Southern identification with place and a resolution of the clash of white and black cultures in the New South.
Laura M. Zaidman19 Signs in Speare's The Sign of the Beaver
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.6
A Native American boy and a white settler boy learn to respect each other's culture through an understanding of the roles that signs-graphic, oral, and written-play in human societies.
Ann Mosley31 Exploring Prejudice in Young Adult Literature through Drama and Role Play
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.7
Acting out scenes from or implied in Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry can help students to understand prejudice.
Barbara T. Bontempo34 Death and Drama of The Pigman
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.8
Transforming The Pigman into a drama can give students a profound understanding of both the literary elements of the novel and what it has to say about human relationships.
Larry Russick38 YA Literature Trivia questions
39 A Cautionary Tale
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.9
When high school students, college students, and teachers are asked to write to a prompt, they rarely write aobut literature, almost never about YA literature.
Silver Stanfill40 The Diversity Connections
Growing Up, Reaching Out: Multiculturalism through Young Adult Literature and Films
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.10
Through films, novels, letters, and other media, young readers can discover the value of multicultralism.
Gretchen Schwarz
ALAN Connection
23 THE BOOK CONNECTION Virginia Monseau and Gary Salvner, editors
40 THE DIVERSITY CONNECTION Ronn Hopkins, editor
44 THE LIBRARY CONNECTION
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.11 Betty Carter, editor
48 THE PUBLISHER CONNECTION
https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v22i3.a.12 M. Jerry Weiss, editor
51 THE MEMBERSHIP CONNECTION Kay Parks Bushman, editor
Published by the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents, National Council of Teachers of English, three times a year (fall, winter, spring). Member of NCTE Affiliate Information Exchange Agreement. Editorial offices are at the Office of the Dean, College of Education and Human Development, Radford University, Radford, Virginia 24142. Printed by the Virginia Tech Printing Services. Cover Design by Ann Hardell, Blacksburg, Virginia. Cover Printing by Virginia Tech Printing Services.Contributions of the following kind are solicited: Articles on YA literature and/or teaching of it; papers presented at meetings; abstracts of studies (dissertations included); summaries of surveys; reports from meetings, bibliographies on selected topics (YA books or professional articles).
Articles should usually be no more than twelve double-spaced typed pages and should be accompanied by a self-addressed envelope to which stamps are clipped. The author's name and affiliation should not appear on the manuscript. Receipt of manuscripts will be acknowledged promptly.
For more complete information on submitting manuscripts, send for Instructions for Authors, ALAN Review.
Subscription rates are $15 per year in the U.S. and $19 per (U.S. funds) in other countries. Membership applications and renewals should be sent to ALAN c/o NCTE, Attn. William Subick, 1111 Kenyon Road, Urbana, Illinois 61801. For information contact NCTE at 217/328-3870.
CO-EDITORS
Patricia P. Kelly
Virginia TechRobert C. Small, Jr.
Radford UniversityCOLUMN EDITORS
The Library Connection
Betty Carter
Texas Woman's University
The Publisher Connection
M. Jerry Weiss
Jersey City State College
The Book Connection
Virginia Monseau
Youngstown State UniversityGary Salvner
Youngstown State University
The Membership Connection
Kay Parks Bushman
Ottawa High School, Ottawa, KS
The Research Connection
Pamela Sissi Carroll
Florida State University
The Censorship Connection
Nancy McCracken
Kent State University
The Diversity Connection
Ronn Hopkins
Norfolk State University
EDITORIAL REVIEW BOARD
Hugh Agee
University of Georgia
James E. Davis
Ohio University
Sally Hellman
Community College of Southern Nevada
Norma J. Livo
University of Colorado at Denver
Al Muller
East Carolina University
Carole Williams
Mehlville School District
OFFICERS
President:
Diana Mitchell
Sexton High School, Lansing, MI
Immediate Past President:
Virginia Monseau
Youngstown State University
President Elect:
Arthea "Charlie" Reed
University of North Carolina-Asheville
Executive Secretary:
Theodore W. Hipple
University of Tennessee
DIRECTORS
John H. (Jack) Bushman
University of Kansas
Patricia Campbell
Twayne Publishers
Chris Crowe
Brigham Young University
Rosemary Ingham
Belmont University
John Mason
Scholastic, Inc.
Lois Stover
Towson State University
Alan Teasley
Durham, North Carolina, Schools
Ann Wilder
Southern High School, Durham, NC
Connie Zitlow
Ohio Wesleyan University