Studying Sacred Texts as a Pathway to Positive Youth Development: Middle School Students Read Hebrew Bible
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Meaning and Texts
Rosenblatt points out that natural language has a rich history, words have inherent ambiguity and multiple meanings. As readers, we choose from those multiple meanings in accordance with our own associations and experiences, what literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin (1982) called heteroglossia: that language is “shot through with intentions and accents” (p. 324). To ignore this element of reading, says reader-response theory, is disingenuous.What happens [when] reading? The reader, drawing on past linguistic and life experience, links the signs on the page with certain words, certain concepts, certain sensuous experiences, certain images of things, people, actions, scenes. The special meanings and, more particularly, the submerged associations that these words and images have for the individual reader will largely determine what the work communicates to him.(p. 30)
2.1. Meaning and the Teaching of Texts
2.2. Meaning and the Teaching of Sacred Texts
3. Materials and Methods
4. Creating a Classroom Community of Interpretation
5. Data Collection
6. Data Analysis
7. Results
8. Deep Text Discussion as an Opportunity to Explore Issues that Matter Most
8.1. Abraham and Sarah
Jackie:I think God doesn’t actually seem mad at all. God is just like, ‘Why did Sarah laugh?’ (18:13) God was genuinely confused.
Zack:You think God’s not mad?
Jackie:Ya. You see God getting mad a lot [in the Bible]. So I feel like if God really was mad, I feel like He wouldn’t have made it that Sarah has a kid. But instead He gives Sarah a kid. He just seems genuinely confused.
Nir:I want to respond to Jackie. I think God could be mad. God is probably a bit hurt by this because Sarah is questioning Him. Sarah should know that even though she doesn’t know that that the three people are angels, she knows that God is always watching. So God does have a reason to be mad because she’s questioning God.
Melanie:That’s what I said. That’s why I said it wouldn’t really matter if she knew they were angels or not because she still knows God promised her kids way back in Lech Lecha (Genesis Chapters 12, 15 and 17).
Natan:I find it crazy that people here are saying that God would be mad that someone’s asking a question. I think no one should be mad for asking questions. Asking questions is good, isn’t it?Ali:She’s not asking a question, she’s doubting Him.Natan:Okay, so I agree. So why is doubting bad?Ali:It’s like doubting your parents.Natan:That’s how a ton of things start, like in the Holocaust, the Nazis had blind trust, and that’s what started it.
8.2. Cain and Abel
In Lee’s mind, Abel’s silence in the text is evidence of just how unaware he was of his brother’s hostility towards him. But Lee’s classmate Ben has a different understanding of Abel’s silence in the text. In Ben’s mind, Abel is very much aware of his brother Cain’s hostility towards him and all of its toxicity.Lee:Okay, I’m going to go that pasuk (biblical verse) … Abel gets killed by Cain, in pasuk chet (eight). I believe Abel had no clue that this would have happened, otherwise he would have said something like, “I don’t want to die, don’t take me, don’t kill me.”
The way Ben reads the biblical text, Abel’s silence is a reflection of Cain’s hostility. It is not that Abel does not know the threat his brother poses, but rather that the proper response to Cain’s particular form of hostility, bullying, is silence. Ben then explains how he determined that Cain was bullying Abel:Ben:Lee said, “Why didn’t Abel say anything?” Abel didn’t say anything because what is there to say in response to bullying?
Ben addresses the glaring omission in the biblical text’s account of this altercation between the brothers that ends in Abel’s death: What exactly did Cain say to his brother in the field before getting up to kill him? Ben has already stated that Cain was bullying Abel, now he elaborates on this interpretation. To make sense of the textual omission, Ben applied his own interpretive principle—Torah Censorship. For him, an omission may signal Torah Censorship and Torah Censorship happens around horrible acts committed against protagonists. Finally, Ben turns the final action in the text (“and he killed him” 4:11) into figurative action—Cain did not literally kill Abel but he drove him to suicide. After presenting his comprehensive and counter-intuitive interpretation of the scene of brotherly confrontation, his classmate, Melanie responds.Ben:Then there’s something said in the field. And I believe that it couldn’t be written in the Torah (Hebrew Bible) because it was so bad. It couldn’t be written in the Torah because it’s sacrilegious and blasphemous. And then vayehargehu “and he killed him” (4:8), it doesn’t mean that he was the one that killed him. It does, but it doesn’t mean that he was the one that physically killed him. It means he only came to the realization that he’s been doing all of this stuff after the suicide. He realizes vayehargehu “and he killed him (4:8).”
Melanie:Just like overall, I think that based on this text, I think that Abel hasn’t done anything wrong, I think that Cain’s just taking out his anger on him. Because Cain’s mad at God, and he takes all of his anger out on Abel. Like sometimes, when somebody favors somebody else, people get mad at the person that they favor even though they didn’t choose to be favored.
9. Discussion
10. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Organization of the Curricular and Pedagogical Intervention
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- Exposure to necessary background
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- Previewing vocabulary and grammatical constructs
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- Read-aloud
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- Pair translation
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- Question generation
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- Close reading and Reading strategies
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- Performance
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- Whole class discussion
Class | Literacy Component | Class Activities |
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Appendix B. Discussion Transcript Code Book
- An episode comprised of a single student comment.
- If a student used his/her talk turn to make two distinct comments, each comment was counted as its own episode.
- If I asked a clarifying question after a student comment, the student’s clarification was included in the same episode as an extension of the comment.
Code | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Text-Intensive: Word Analysis | Student comment specifically analyzes and cites a word in the biblical text. | Jake: I think that Cain said to Abel, “brother” instead of “my brother” which woke him up, and then he killed him. |
Text-Intensive: Verse Analysis | Student comment quotes the text and analyzes the quote in the context of the class discussion. | Eva: Okay so this is a really weird theory and I don’t really believe it, but someone said yesterday that this is all a test. I think it is true, and Abel is probably an angel or something, because it says “vatahar vateled,” (“and she conceived and she gave birth”) but then in pasuk bet (verse 2) when she gives birth to Abel it never says that she conceived. |
Text-Expansive (Not Text-Intensive): Specific Reference in Text | Student comment references a specific event from the text but does not quote the text. | Sam: I don’t think Avraham was going to go through with this because it just says he was taking out the knife it doesn’t say he was raising it above Yitzhak… the artwork is an imagination. |
Text-Expansive (Not Text-Intensive): Plot Analysis Broadly | Student comment is about the plot of the text but does not have any more specific connection to events or words of the text. | Kate: I think the test between Avraham and God there’s kind of two ways—does he have enough faith in God but also does he have enough faith in his son. This is more of an Avraham son story than an Avraham God story. |
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1 | This study was overseen by the author’s academic institution and all video-recording was done with attained parent consent and student assent. |
1. God appeared to him in Elon Mamre. He was sitting at the opening of the tent in the heat of the day. 2. He lifted his eyes and saw that, behold, there were three people standing near him. He saw and he ran to greet them at the opening of the tent. And they bowed down to the ground. 3. He said, “My lords, if I have found favor in your eyes, please do not pass by from your servant. 4. Let a little water be brought and wash your feet and relax under the tree. 5. I will take fresh bread and you will feed yourselves and after that you can pass by. Because that is the way you pass by your servant.” And they said, “Do as you have spoken.” 6. Abraham hurried to the tent, to Sarah and said, “Hurry! (Get) three seahs of choice flower! Kneed and make cakes.” 7. Then Abraham ran to the herd, took a calf, tender and choice, and gave it to a young lad (who worked for him), who hurried to prepare it. 8. He took curds and milk and the calf that had been made and gave them to them (the three people) and he stood near them under the tree while they ate. 9. They said to him, “Where is your wife Sarah?” He said, “Here in the tent.” 10. One said, “I will surely return to you in some time and behold there will be a son to Sarah, your wife.” Sarah was listening at the opening of the tent which was behind him. 11. Abraham and Sarah were old, advanced in years. Sarah had stopped having her menstrual cycles. 12. And Sarah laughed to herself saying, ‘Now that I am withered, will there be enjoyment with my old husband?’ 13. And God said to Abraham, “Why did Sarah laugh saying, ‘Is it really believable that I will give birth? I am so old?’ 14. Is anything too wondrous for God? I will return to you at this same season next year and to Sarah there will be a son.” 15. and Sarah denied it saying, “I did not laugh,” because she was afraid. And (God) replied, “You did laugh.” |
1. And HaAdam knew Eve his wife, and she became pregnant and birthed Cain and she said “I have acquired a man with God.” 2. And she additionally birthed his brother, Abel, and Abel was a shepherd and Cain was a worker of the ground. 3. And it was, after a period of days, Cain brought an offering to God of the fruit of the ground. 4. And Abel also brought from the choicest of the firstlings of his flock, and God paid attention to Abel and his offering. 5. And to Cain and his offering He didn’t pay attention to, and Cain got very mad and his face fell. 6. And God said to Cain, why are you mad and why did your face fall? 7. If you improve you will be forgiven, and if you don’t improve, sin rests at your door, its desire is towards you yet you can conquer it. 8. And Cain spoke to Abel his brother when they were in the field and Cain rose up against Abel his brother and he killed him. |
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Hassenfeld, Z. Studying Sacred Texts as a Pathway to Positive Youth Development: Middle School Students Read Hebrew Bible. Religions 2019, 10, 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10060379
Hassenfeld Z. Studying Sacred Texts as a Pathway to Positive Youth Development: Middle School Students Read Hebrew Bible. Religions. 2019; 10(6):379. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10060379
Chicago/Turabian StyleHassenfeld, Ziva. 2019. "Studying Sacred Texts as a Pathway to Positive Youth Development: Middle School Students Read Hebrew Bible" Religions 10, no. 6: 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10060379
APA StyleHassenfeld, Z. (2019). Studying Sacred Texts as a Pathway to Positive Youth Development: Middle School Students Read Hebrew Bible. Religions, 10(6), 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10060379