Chapter 4: Traveling with a Rabbit: Finding the Hook to Engage Young Readers
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Published:2020
Christy L. Howard, MAT, 2020. "Traveling with a Rabbit: Finding the Hook to Engage Young Readers", Living History in the Classroom: Performance and Pedagogy, Lisa Liberati Heuvel, EdD, Cheryl Yandell Adkisson, MA, Ron Adkisson, Rank I, Sheila Dolores Arnold, BA, Jill Balota Cross, MA, William J. Fetsko, EdD, Theodore D. R. Green, PhD, Valarie Gray Holmes, MFA, Christy L. Howard, MAT, Lawrence M. Paska, PhD, Teresa Potter, NBCT, Jocelyn Bell Swanson, MEd, Kathryn L. Ness Swanson, PhD, Darci L. Tucker, BA, Dale G. Van Eck, MEd
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Abstract
This chapter discusses an innovative teaching method using an avatar to engage young learners in United States geographic studies. While this technique does not call for a teacher to perform in character, it is directly related to storytelling. The educator successfully personifies an inanimate object for engagement and education, linking it to learning objectives. In the author's case, “Moffat the Traveling Rabbit” accompanies first-grade Colorado students in their study of all 50 states. By endowing such an object with human qualities, the teacher draws students in to standards-based instruction presented in a new way. The use of an icon or figure is familiar to video gamers in representing themselves and other players. In education, presenting nonvisual concepts in character form is a familiar strategy and has multiple benefits for young students. As chapter examples demonstrate, teaching history, geography, and writing skills through an avatar encourages creativity and a sense of accessibility to those subjects for the young child. As the author also points out, students who experience discomfort in some situations may feel supported by a nonthreatening “companion” accepted within the class, enabling them to participate. By teaching with an avatar, students are drawn into experiential learning while practicing grade-level skills across multiple curricula. Such experiential learning promotes meaningful curiosity and creates a foundational base from which to make further connections. The author outlines how she has used a stuffed rabbit in her classroom to make these connections, inspiring her students to write their own geography- and history-based stories.
