Fostering Mental Health Literacy through Adolescent Literature provides educators a starting point for engaging students in the study of adolescent literature that features mental health themes with the intended goal of developing students’ mental health literacy while simultaneously attending to English Language Arts content and literacy standards. Each chapter, co-authored by a literacy expert and mental health specialist, features a specific adolescent novel and provides middle and high school teachers background information on the novel’s featured mental health theme(s), along with pedagogical approaches for guiding readers into, through, and out of the novel. In doing so, this text seeks to raise awareness of mental health issues thereby reducing associated stigma and normalizing individual and peer mental health experiences for all adolescents. Reviews: Fostering Mental Health Literacy through Adolescent Literature is a perfectly timed answer to a critical issue in schools: the prominence of mental health challenges rising in the lives of our teens. Eisenbach’s vast knowledge of Young Adult Literature and Frydman’s mental health expertise helped to curate and edit a book that includes chapters from leading educators and counselors in the field, setting mental health literacy education in the authentic context of Young Adult Literature. As a former secondary language arts teacher and mental health counselor (and now parent to a teen), I recognize it as the book we’ve needed and wished for. The research-based solutions in Fostering Mental Health Literacy through Adolescent Literature help integrate the many facets of English Language Arts and literacy standards, with attention to mental health awareness. — Susan Densmore-James, PhD, Associate Professor; Director of the Emerald Coast National Writing Project; The Book Dealer In Fostering Mental Health Literacy through Adolescent Literature the editors have curated a helpful, practical guide for classroom teachers to navigate the sometimes tricky but incredibly important work of introducing and integrating mental health literacy into the classroom. They provide the reader with what we so often need to do this work - helpful and straightforward ways to approach these topics in the classroom with students in middle and high school. This text presents a continued step toward bridging the knowledge set of both teachers and mental health professionals to guide students through challenging and necessary conversations. — Sophia Hoffman, PhD, director of clinical training, School-Clinical Child Psy.D. Program, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University Some books are timely, and some books arrive at the perfect time. Eisenbach and Frydman’s Fostering Mental Health Literacy through Adolescent Literature is both. As teachers and students emerge from more than a year of COVID forced social isolation, they have gathered a powerful collection of essays by a remarkable group of contributors that address a range of Mental Health Issues using landmark YA texts from The Boy in the Black Suit to Hey, Kiddo. In these trying times teachers and students need hope and this edited collection provides this hope through pedagogical strategies for teachers who want to guide an entire class, establish book clubs, or to guide independent reading. — Steven T. Bickmore, Associate Professor of English Education, University of Nevada Las Vegas; curator, Dr. Bickmore’s YA Wednesday Blog This powerful collection of resources for the middle and high school English Language Arts teacher provides a richly researched scaffold for mental health awareness, using carefully selected adolescent books. This text will give the teacher the confidence to explore these important themes without becoming a school counselor themselves. Each chapter meticulously guides the reader into the particular mental health issue, demonstrating ways the teacher can engage the interest of students on the impact of trauma, abuse, poverty, and toxic stress on diverse individuals and indeed society at large. This book will excite teachers and provide them the tools they require to enhance their efforts in addressing the socioemotional needs of their adolescent students. Congratulations to the editors for fashioning a truly remarkable collaboration between mental health and education! — David Read Johnson, PhD, Co-Director, Post Traumatic Stress Center, New Haven, CT; Associate Clinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine; CEO, Miss Kendra Programs Table of Contents: CHAPTER 1 Introduction: Preparing to Engage with Mental Health Themes in Adolescent Literature Jason S. Frydman and Brooke B. Eisenbach CHAPTER 2 What’s Mined is Ours: Mental Health and American Rurality in Kristin Russell’s A Sky For Us Alone Jeff Spanke and Sara Tyner CHAPTER 3 Literacy and Loss: Examining Loss and Grief through Characterization in The Boy in the Black Suit Sherri Harper Woods and Terri Benton CHAPTER 4 First Person Perspective: Understanding Adolescent Eating Disorders Through the Text Good Enough Laura L. Wood, MaryBeth DeGennaro, and Brooke B. Eisenbach CHAPTER 5 Secrecy, Silence, and Transgenerational Trauma: Conflict and Character Development in I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter Daniela Bustamante and Katie Sciurba CHAPTER 6 Exploring graphic memoir trajectories: Processing the effects of substance use disorder and healing through art in Hey, Kiddo Grace Enriquez and Michelle Pate CHAPTER 7 Teaching When Reason Breaks: Understanding Depression and Interrogating Bias through Character Analysis Elsie Lindy Olan, Kia Jane Richmond, and Mary Mae Kelly CHAPTER 8 “I’m Not Like That”: Reading Heroine to Engage Students in Conversations and Research About Opioid Use Disorder Amanda Rigell, Arianna Banack, and Allen Rigell CHAPTER 9 Reading A Hero’s Journey through OCDaniel Caitlin Corrieri and Elyanna Genovese CHAPTER 10 Exploring Mental Health Literacy through Book Clubs Lesley Roessing and Jessica Traylor ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS SUBJECT INDEX ADDITIONAL RESOURCES ON MENTAL HEALTH About the Editors: Brooke Eisenbach is a former middle school teacher and current associate professor of middle and secondary education at Lesley University where she teaches courses in young adult literature, as well as middle school and high school methods of instruction Jason S. Frydman is a nationally certified school psychologist, registered drama therapist, and assistant professor of psychology at Lesley University. His research focuses on trauma-informed programming in educational settings and school-based creative arts therapies. |