Paul W. Hankins (he/him/his) Profile picture
Sep 2, 2019 18 tweets 5 min read Read on X
In my COMM 594 class, we are considering "conflict management" theory. In my discussion post, I cite connections to THE CRUCIBLE. Classmate, Kristi, responds: "It's pretty nifty how conflict management theory can be just a stone's throw away from literary analysis." New Idea. Go.
In interest of #DisruptText, we might miss that the text had already been disrupted as many are: by being innately disconnected from other possible "truths." This is one of the dangers of "covering" titles and texts. And one of the reasons for standards asking two or more texts.
Kristi suggests the Elizabeth Proctor we see in Act IV demonstrates what Omdahl and Fritz (2006) call "cognitive reappraisal" as a means of symbolizing her character's presence as a means to "characterize and sustain resilience." Whether Miller knew this or not isn't essential.
What is essential (and revealing) here is that, in seventeen years, I had never thought to pair text regarding conflict management theory to THE CRUCIBLE. This is how we might #DisruptText in bringing in more (thought not to be) connected content area into the book. Deeper look.
Part of the problem of canonized literature is that it only provides a "look back." And this can frame the book and its characters as a source of folly. Worthy of shame. And blame. What is missing are the the ability to "look in" and to "look forward" if we must cover the canon.
In order to #DisruptText, we can look, too, to disrupting the response to that text. Classic: How does John Proctor fit the descriptions of Aristotle's "tragic hero." Thirty responses come back to show you what any reader of the play would know with a little "front-loading."
Disrupted Response/#DisruptText example: Consulting and citing one or all of Omdahls social discourses in "The Role of Emotion in Problematic Relationships in the Work Space," analyze the thoughts, words, and actions of a character and the impact of these upon self and others."
With this "looking back to look in" we can use one text to explore more deeply another. Both are "disrupted" from their moorings as "literary canon" and "contemporary theory." They work together as one to center the deeper parts of a character to be explored/measured against.
In my head, having quickly explored the social discourses against what I know of Parris, Hale, and Danforth, we can bring in "conflict management theory" to disrupt those called to "keep the peace" and uphold the "sacred purpose." We move beyond analyzing John Proctor.
Challenging Question (for me too). For how many years have we read THE CRUCIBLE and kept John, by reflection and analysis, in the "cross" hairs even though he is seemingly delivered to self and in the eyes of his God within the play? It's September. Time to exhume Proctor again.
I think this is what my tangential (and heartened) participation within #DisruptTexts has been about since it was introduced. Not to replace literature, but to really investigate WHY this literature. If it's all look back and no look in or look forward, yes, it's suspect to me.
A fundamental piece, as I see it, of #DisruptTexts, is literature within a classroom is not a sort of effort to convert all users to My Pillow. But, to afford readers (those thinkers and dreamers and doers) a place to see and to explore and to talk and to push and. . .disrupt.
Consider a scenario wherein a teacher brings a text he, she, or they "love." They've "loved" it for years. What is the dynamic in the room now when the young people do not reciprocate this love? Or use love languages to express appreciation? Quiet shame? Relationship disrupt?
The big edu-mantra right now is to "Know the Why." Too many times, our focus (and what we seem to know or believe is on What (X).

X=It's on the List. X=We have a class set of these." X=We've always read this book in _____ grade."

Where is the wh(Y)?
Watch: "The treatment of X reveals Y suggesting Z." This is a thesis stem that will work all day. In #DisruptTexts, if the X is what we've listed above, the book never really mattered, did it? Y (issues) presenting after X has been nailed down means teaching eclipses learning.
It's a longer conversation around THE CRUCIBLE, but it is almost time for this play to resurface in many classrooms. From a group wherein teachers are contemplating building an "escape room" for the book, this is a suggested clue (give me another tweet to present it, please):
"Alone in a village of ghostly white, the weight of the whipping added to her fright; the trouble of the house falling on her back, she spends the play wrapped in black. Who is she?"

Who sees a problem with the puzzle here? And our need to really push. . .disrupt. . .the text?
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More from @PaulWHankins

Feb 2, 2021
New Picture Book by @mattdelapena and Christian Robinson. New picture book from Matt de la Peña with illustrations by Christian Robinson.

Milo boards the subway on a Sunday morning as nervous as a "shook-up soda."

A Tweet Thread Review.
While aboard the train, he observes the other passengers, imagining their lives in extended narrative as he renders them in pictures in the notebook he carries aboard with him.
From the creators of LAST STOP ON MARKET STREET comes a new story that asks the reader to ride with Milo as he draws as many inferences as he does illustrations, arriving at deeper truths that present as lesson to the reader by the book's end.
Read 9 tweets
Feb 2, 2021
We had an eLearning Day yesterday so the first order of business today in #Room407 was to center our work around the idea of Black History Month. This is not "claps" or "likes." It's the thing I can do inside of the classroom that centers, captures, and celebrates this month.
The way we did this was to present CARTER READS THE NEWSPAPER by Deborah Hopkinson with illustrations by Don Tate. The book not only features Carter G. Woodson. The endpapers become a visual wallpaper of important figures to consider and share.
Again. This is about the month. This is about celebration. It's also about centering people and assuring that they can be seen in our working and learning space. Friends, this is work I was NOT doing in 2004. I can do it today. I will do it today. I will keep on doing it.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 31, 2021
Please forgive a few food prep and feel-good Tweets in the moment. Remember, about three weeks ago, I didn't give two figs for this subject (but still felt urgings/leanings). What I might offer is this. A Paul who feels better starts to share creative ideas and approaches again.
For me (first) and then I might speak to the men. Friends and followers here read/saw me through a very difficult 2020. You didn't unfollow. You didn't block. You could have. I am grateful to all of you. I have little to offer, but I offer it earnestly and freely.
Men: I lost the handle on my own program. I was doing great about three years ago. So, I have put all of the weight back on. And it seemed like maybe I would not be able to take it off again over 50. These feelings that become beliefs can become damn near fatal.
Read 9 tweets
Nov 24, 2019
Let me have a couple of tweets to get some images to the #toetagmonologues group who performed this afternoon @ncte's Annual Conference. #NCTE19 #NCTE2019. Powerful powerful performance. These young people should have had a larger space.
Read 7 tweets
Oct 26, 2019
This is the Gold Star by our light switch in #Room407. Purchased at Goodwill for a quarter, it is a symbol of affirmation for our students as they leave each day. For two months, I watched as students would touch, tap, or gently palm the star as they left. But, then, one day. . .
I came back after an absence. I turned on the light switch to find the Gold Star still on the wall but fractured. I was very upset. I felt as though a positive initiative on its way to new tradition had failed. All that held the Star together was the sticker and Command Strips.
I brought the fractured star home and I have kept it in this state for a few weeks now. Students have been upset. They wanted to know when the star would come back. I just didn’t know. Could we put it back and not acknowledge it’s having been broken? I couldn’t see how we could.
Read 17 tweets
Sep 8, 2019
I'll break down this collage inspired by @halseanderson's SPEAK in the next few tweets. #SpeakLoudly #DisruptTexts #Room407 #THIS407
@halseanderson First, I want you to know that this "exquisite corpse" (some of you might call these floor or table "storms) came together in ten minutes. Tops. From one brand new magazine delivered yesterday (I didn't want you to think I had been sitting with this and pre-composed in process.
@halseanderson Artist friend Melissa Sweet asked me about "exquisite corpses" in the classroom yesterday. I had been thinking about floor storms in the past couple of weeks. Artists. In community. We seem to know how to tap into something latent in another. The question/invitation is the tap.
Read 30 tweets

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