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You Don’t Know Jack - A Storyteller Goes to School

You Don’t Know Jack

A Storyteller Goes to School

By Kevin D. Cordi
Hardcover : 9781496821249, 234 pages, February 2019
Paperback : 9781496821256, 234 pages, February 2019

An examination of storytelling and story making using Jack tales as a metaphor to talk about teaching and telling

Description

“Jack and the Beanstalk,” “Little Jack Horner,” and “Jack the Giant Killer” are all famous tales and rhymes featuring the same hero, a character who often appears in legends, fairy tales, and nursery rhymes. Unlike moralizing fairy tale heroes, however, Jack is typically depicted as foolish or lazy, though he often emerges triumphant through cleverness and tricks.

With their roots traced back to England, Jack tales are an important oral tradition in Appalachian folklore. It was in his Appalachian upbringing that Kevin D. Cordi was first introduced to Jack through oral storytelling traditions. Cordi’s love of storytelling eventually led him down a career path as a professional storyteller, touring the US for the past twenty-seven years.

In addition to his work as a storyteller, Cordi worked a second job in an unrelated field—a high school teacher—and for many years, he kept his two lives separate. Everything changed when Cordi began telling stories in the classroom and realized he was connecting with his students in ways he had not previously. Cordi concluded that storytelling, storymaking, and drama can be used as systems of learning instead of as just entertainment.

In You Don’t Know Jack: A Storyteller Goes to School, Cordi describes the process of integrating storytelling into his classroom. Using autoethnographic writing, he reflects upon the use of storytelling and storymaking in order to promote inquiry and learning. He argues that engaging with the stories of others, discovering that one voice or identity should not be valued over the other, and listening, especially listening to stories of difference, are of utmost importance to education and growth.

Reviews

"In You Don’t Know Jack: A Storyteller Goes to School, Kevin D. Cordi makes a strong case for storytelling as an effective tool for educating students. . . . As teachers look to engage students, improve learning, and enhance their face-to-face and online courses, they might well consider the seed that Kevin Cordi’s mother planted in the mind of her young son: never underestimate the power of stories."

- Kathy Merlock Jackson, Virginia Wesleyan University, The Journal of American Culture, Vol. 43, Issue 2, June 2020