I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot By the Taliban
Use the contemporary story of the youngest nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize in order to teach the power of autobiographies.
By Elijah Ammen
Cultural Context
As with most biographies, cultural context is crucial. Because Malala's stance for education and the conflict she faced were so tied to the social, religious, and political background of her country, she spends a lot of time describing the people and culture of Pakistan, and the Middle East in general. While many highschoolers might have a basic understanding of Middle Eastern culture, there is an incredible amount of nuance between different regions and people groups that an insider like Malala is able to clarify. Because she is sixteen, her explanations, while thorough, are easy to understand. Even though she goes through struggles that the average reader will never face, she also goes through the normal problems of adolescence, which makes her story very relatable.
When your classes read through this biography, or any other, it's important for them to study the subject's background in order to understand the perspective of the subject.
Famous Biographies
Because Malala's story is very accessible, it makes it a great jumping point to other biographies and autobiographies. Even if you don't have the time to invest in a longer text, there are shorter texts with biographical content. Sites like Biography Online are great resources for short summaries of famous people. This is great for compare/contrast activities, or for research projects like video biographies on famous historical figures.
Autobiographies are also great for book reports. It's similar to a jigsaw discussion where each reader studies one person in-depth and as they report back to the whole class, the overall knowledge of the assigned time period or culture grows. For instance, learners could be split between autobiographies like Elie Wiesel's Night, Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl, and Corrie Ten Boom's The Hiding Place. Each approaches the Holocaust from a different perspective, but contributes to the overall knowledge of the group. Each presenter is able to compare and contrast his/her text as they listen to the others.
Writing Your Own Autobiography
Reading biographies elucidates how stories communicate history and culture better than a strictly historical text. Having a subjective account helps the reader understand and empathize with what's happening. It connects the reader on a personal and emotional level—not just through objective facts.
Students need to realize that they are in control of their own life stories—that writing their own stories helps them learn about themselves. Even using visual representations, like life maps, are ways of showing their growth and progress. Life maps can even be used as a beginning-of-the-year activity in order to get to know new classes.
For pre-writing, there are a number of outlines and graphic organizers to help collect ideas for personal autobiographies. You can use rubrics and peer editing for an immediate critiques, or have writers add to their autobiographies throughout the school year and analyze their growth when they review it at the end of the year. For more structured writing, they can use the Human Organization Theory to write their autobiographies.
The experience of writing an autobiography also helps as the young writers read more biographies. They can understand and empathize with someone like Malala, because they learn how even as a young person, they have the power to affect the world around them.