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Promoting Reading Among Mexican American Children
Grade Level(s): Submitted by: by Yvonne Murray - Jose Velazquez This digest identifies key challenges, recommends classroom strategies, provides literature selection guidelines, and suggests reading lists for various grade levels. Plan: Literature addresses the universal need for stories. Stories are most meaningful and best able to promote literacy when they speak to a student's world. Good books can help children develop pride in their ethnic identity, provide positive role models, develop knowledge about cultural history, and build self-esteem. However, Mexican American students in the United States often do not experience literature in this way. This Digest identifies key challenges, recommends classroom strategies, provides literature selection guidelines, and suggests reading lists for various grade levels. Mexican American Children's Literature... Literary works written for or by Mexican Americans were not represented in mainstream children's publications in the United States until the 1940s. Beginning in the 1940s, Mexican American literary characters were developed largely by European American writers who were removed from the cultural experience of the Mexican American minority. Consequently, portrayals of Mexican Americans reflected a rural existence and stereotypical images (Harris, 1993). Between 1940 and 1973 there were only four or five books a year published on Mexican American themes by the major publishers of children's literature. Analyses from the late 1980s and early 1990s showed even fewer-only one to three books a year (Schon, 1988; Cortes, 1992). Of the approximately 5,000 children's books published annually by major publishers in the United States, books about or by Mexican Americans made up one tenth of 1%. These statistics reveal the persistent dearth of children's literature by Mexican American authors through the early 1990s. The literary genres were limited, too. Most were folklore, legends, and protest pieces (Barrera, Liguori, & Salas, 1993; Harris, 1993; Tatum, 1990; Schon, 1988). In the early 1990s awareness of these issues resulted in the publication of growing numbers of books with Mexican American themes and authors. Small publishing houses such as Arte Publico, Pinata Books, and Bilingual Review Press have increased dissemination of minority literature and helped launch writers such as Tomas Rivera, Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, and Sandra Cisneros to national recognition (Barrera, Liguori, & Salas, 1993). Classroom Strategies... Using effective classroom strategies and selecting the best literature for particular groups of students are the two pivots for promoting reading among Mexican American children. The following strategies can help Mexican-origin and other teachers improve both their methods for promoting reading in the classroom and their students' cultural understanding (Murray, 1998a; Barrera, Liguori, & Salas, 1993; Escamilla, 1992; Galda, 1991; Diaz, Moll, & Mehan, 1986):
Reviewing Literature and Selecting the Best... The following checklist provides a few important guidelines for selecting appropriate classroom literature (Murray, 1998b; Escamilla, 1992; Diaz, Moll, & Mehan, 1986):
Suggested Selections by Grade Levels... The following authors and works have been reviewed (Murray, 1998a) and represent some of the authentic within-the-culture perspectives available today. GRADES PRE-K-3
GRADES 4-6
GRADES 7-9
GRADES 10-12
References... Cortes, O. G. de. (1992). United States: Hispanic Americans. In L. Miller-Lachmann, Our family, our friends, our world: An annotated guide to significant multicultural books for children and teenagers (pp. 112-154). New Providence, NJ: R. R. Bowker. Diaz, S., Moll, L., & Mehan, H. (1986). Sociocultural resources in instruction: A context-specific approach. In C. E. Cortes & California Office of Bilingual Education (Ed.), Beyond language: Social and cultural factors in schooling language minority students (pp. 299-343). Los Angeles: California State University, Evaluation, Dissemination, and Assessment Center. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED 304 241) Escamilla, K. (1992). Integrating Mexican American history and culture into the social studies classroom (ERIC Digest). Charleston, WV: ERIC Clearinghouse on Rural Education and Small Schools. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED 348 200) Galda, L. (1991). Literature for literacy: What research says about the benefits of using trade books in the classroom. In J. Flood, International Reading Association, & National Council of Teachers of English (Eds.), Handbook of research on teaching the English language arts (pp. 529-534). New York: Macmillan. Harris, V. (Ed.) (1993). Teaching multicultural literature grades K thru 8. Norwood, MA: Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc. Huizenga, J. (1995). Arrivals: Cross-cultural experiences in literature. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. Meltzer, M. (1982). The Hispanic Americans. New York: Crowell. Miller-Lachmann, L. (Ed.). (1992). Our family, our friends, our world: An annotated guide to significant multicultural books for children and teenagers. New Providence, NJ: R. R. Bowker. Montejano, D. (1987). Anglos and Mexicans in the making of Texas 1836-1986. Austin: University of Texas Press. Murray, Y. (1998a). How Mexican American children used Spanish to construct meaning for English text comprehension. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Texas Association of Bilingual Teachers, San Antonio, TX. Murray, Y. (1998b). Mexican American literature as instructional material. From roundtable forum conducted at the annual meeting of the National Reading Association, Austin, TX. Pinchot, J. (1989). The Mexicans in America. Minneapolis: Lerner Publications. Schon, I. (1988). A Hispanic heritage, series III: A guide to juvenile books about Hispanic people and cultures. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Publishers. Tatum, C. (Ed.). (1990). Mexican American literature. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ERIC Identifier: ED438150 Yvonne I. Murray, Ph.D., manages the Performance Assessment Center at Harcourt Educational Measurement. Jose A. Velazquez works as a bilingual education specialist in AEL's Region IV Comprehensive Center. This publication was prepared with funding from the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, under contract no. ED-99-CO-0027. The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the positions or policies of OERI, the Department, or AEL. ERIC Digests are in the public domain and may be freely reproduced THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC |