Sunday, June 21, 2015

Violence and Games

A few summers ago someone at the UCLA Writing Project handed me a Lucy Calkins book about accessing and teaching the Common Core. Calkins is known for working with lower grades and for working with teachers, but the book was interesting enough. She talked about handing out articles to read with teachers, not about teaching, but just good solid nonfiction. One she recommended was a piece called "Shoot Out" about a high school assassin game. Calkins walked readers of the book through a way to talk about the article and helped me frame some ideas about Close Reading.

I love to use this article both with students and in leading professional development. I think it is nuanced enough that the first read gives a misleading understanding. To have readers revisit the piece, multiple times, especially around the diction used to describe the game itself and then the students' skills really forces students to use a text to make sense of more ambiguous and nuanced reading.

This piece is especially great with an article by Steven Johnson that was in the LA Times. This piece is an ironic yet fact filled open letter to then-Senator Clinton about violence in videogames. Johnson is known for his book Everything Bad Is Good for You which my friend David and I used with a study group around pop culture in the classroom. In the op ed piece, readers are asked to deal with sarcasm, which is often tricky for them to do in writing and it serves as an interesting companion for the "Shoot Out".

As ever, text sets are so much more interesting and exciting to deal with because they offer students multiple ways to think about a topic. These two articles work together, but they are also strong pieces to examine individually. Morevoer, they avoid the pitfalls of thinking about violence and games solely in the context of videogames nor are they simplistic Violent-Games=Bad articles. If you want to see what sorts of writing, along with the other pieces (a satire that Lucy Calkins mentioned called "The Great Office War" along with a Mother Jones article and a PBS piece) then please feel free to see the handouts from a presentation I gave at the With Different Eyes conference.

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