Talk:Sj Miller

edits to sj Miller
Hi Pax-

Thanks so much. Here are a few edits. MY CV is really full-- so feel free to dialogue more with me... see your email. Below, the word transdisciplinary is important to add.

I. When you introduce me, please include: a transdisciplinary award winning teacher/writer/activist/scholar,

I. Add section on Research Miller's research areas includes Social justice, critical race theory, feminist theory, geospatial theory, spatiality and temporal theories, critical discourse analysis, anti-bullying theory/pedagogy and critical literacy. At the center of Miller's research are transdisciplinary perspectives on social justice which cut across theory, epistemology and pedagogy.

II. Awards--Reorder so it reads: 2005–Paul and Kate Farmer English Journal Writing Award, Article of the Year, "Shattering Images of Violence in Young Adult Literature: Strategies for the Classroom"[14][15] 2007-Richard A. Meade award, National Council on Teacher Education, "Unpacking the Loaded Teacher Matrix: Negotiating Space and Time Between University and Secondary English Classrooms"[15] 2015–Joanne Arnold Courage and Commitment Award, University of Colorado Boulder[2][15]

other awards:

2012 Essential Book for Professionals Who Serve Teens," by Voices of Youth Advocate Magazine Awarded to Generation Bullied 2..0 Generation BULLIED 2.0: Prevention and Intervention Strategies for Our Most Vulnerable Students ​2008 Best Book from International Writing Centers Association Scholarship Award for ​Creative Approaches to Writing Center Work ​2007 Most Outstanding English Education Advisor Indiana University of Pennsylvania 2007-08 2006 Awarded Excellence in Writing (2006 APEX: Awards for Publication Excellence) for issue of English Journal, for my contribution of ​Shattering Images of Violence in Young Adult Literature: Strategies for the Classroom 2004 PFLAG Honoring Diversity Award ​Santa Fe, NM 2001  Mayor’s Award For dedication to community service in Santa Fe, NM 2000 Human Right's Award ​Humanitarian and social justice award advocate for gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender youth, Santa Fe, NM 2000 Most influential teacher Santa Fe High School

III. Under Selected Pubs: These are not written as APA. Is that on purpose?

Please add my additional pubs Journal Articles- Refereed/Peer Reviewed Invite Miller, s. (submitted). Reframing schooling to decarcerate gender identity. Miller, s. (forthcoming). The CEE commission for social justice: A history of Its realization 2003-2010. Retrieved from… Miller, s. & Burns, L. (in press). Standard VI: Realizing social justice dispositions in teaching and teacher education. Scholar-Practitioner Quarterly, 9(3), Burns, L., & Miller, s. (2017). Social justice policymaking in teacher education from conception to application: Realizing Standard VI. Teachers College Record, 119(3). Retrieved from http://www.tcrecord.org/Content.asp?ContentId=21682 Miller, s. (2016). Trans*+ing Classrooms: The pedagogy of refusal as mediator for learning. Social Sciences, 5(34), 1-17. Miller, s. (2016). Ubuntu: Calling in the field. English Education, 48(3), 192-200. Conference on English Education. (2016). Resolution for Dismantling the School- to-Prison Pipeline. NCTE. Retrieved from http://www.ncte.org/positions/statements/school-to-prison Miller, s. (2015). A queer literacy framework promoting (a)gender and (a)sexuality self-determination and justice. GALA Journal: A Journal of the Gender in Literacy and Life Assembly, 21(1), 31-42. Miller, s. (2015). Why schooling must move into a trans*/post-trans* era. Journal of Language and Literacy Education. Retrieved from http://jolle.coe.uga.edu/scholars-speak-out/ Miller, s. (Guest Ed.) (2015). Labeling “GIFTED” or “SPECIAL”: Perpetuating the mis-measure of students. English Journal, 105(1). Miller, s., & Haberl, E. (2015). Repairing the Mis-measuring of Identity. English Journal, 105(1), 16-20. Miller, s. (2015). A queer literacy framework promoting (a)gender and (a)sexuality self-determination and justice. English Journal, 104(5). 37-44. Miller, s., Burns, L., & Johnson, T.S. (2015). Under The Radar: Special Interview with sj Miller, Leslie David Burns, and Tara Star Johnson, editors of the recently published Generation BULLIED 2.0: Prevention and Intervention Strategies for Our Most Vulnerable Students, Alan Review. Retrieved from http://www.alan-ya.org/publications/under-the-radar/ Miller, s. (2014). English is “Not just about teaching semi-colons and Steinbeck”: Instantiating dispositions for socio-spatial justice in English Education. Scholar-Practitioner Quarterly, 8(3), 212-240. Miller, s. (2014). Cultivating a disposition for sociospatial justice in English teacher preparation. Teacher Education and Practice, 27(1), 44-74. Alsup, J., & Miller, s. (2014). Reclaiming English education: Rooting social justice in dispositions. English Education, 46(3),195-215. Miller, s. (2014). Text complexity and “comparable literary merit” in young adult literature. Alan Review 41(2), 44-55. Miller, s. (2013). Losing and gaining a self: Affirming the body, mind and spirits of transgender youth. Educational Leadership Quarterly, 35(3), 12-13. Miller, s. (2013). AP Gatekeeping: Exploring the myths of using YAL in an AP English classroom. Alan Review, 40(2), 79-84. Miller, s. (2012). Flawed visions of democracy in the United States: Influences on current critical social justice research. Journal of 	Curriculum Theorizing, 28(2), 92-103. Miller, s. (2012, October 8). Power + wealth + structural reinforcement of the norm = Myth of poverty. (Essay Commissioned in Response to the 2013 Annual Meeting Conference Theme). Washington: DC, American Educational Research Association. Retrieved October 8, 2012 from http://www.aera.net/AnnualMeetingOtherEvents/EssayThemeCommentProject/MythofPoverty/tabid/13501/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/1168/Myth-of-Poverty.aspx. Miller, s. (2012). Mythology of the norm: Disrupting the culture of 	bullying in schools. English Journal, 101(6), 107-109. Miller, s., Bieler, D., Bolf-Beliveau, L., Charest, B., George, M.A., King, J., & 				Williamson, P. (2011). Applying the CEE position statement Beliefs 				about Social Justice in English Education to Classroom Praxis. English 				Education, 44(1), 63-82. Miller, s. (2011). Demythologizing “Real” ity TV: Critical implications for a 				new literacy. International Journal of Critical Pedagogy, 3(3), 135-152. Conference on English Education Commission on Social Justice. (2010). Resolution on social justice in literacy education. NCTE. Orlando: FL. Retrieved from http://www.ncte.org/press/2010resolutions Miller, s., & Slifkin, J. (2010). “Similar literary quality”: Demystifying the AP 	English Literature and Composition open question. Alan Review, 37(2), 	6-16. Conference on English Education Commission on Social Justice. (2009). CEE position statement: Beliefs about social justice in English education. First Biennial CEE Conference. Chicago: CEE. Retrieved from http://www.ncte.org/cee/positions/socialjustice Miller, s. (2008). Liberating grades/liberatory assessment. International Journal of 	Critical Pedagogy, 1(2). 160-171. Miller, s. (2008). “Speaking” the walk: “Speaking” the talk: Embodying critical 	pedagogy to teach young adult literature. English Education, 40(2), 145-	154. Miller, s. (2007). Foregrounding preservice teacher identity in teacher education. Teacher Education & Practice, 19(2), 164-185. Miller, S. (2005). Shattering images of violence in young adult literature:				Strategies for the classroom. English Journal, 94(5), 87-93. Miller, S. (2005). Students as agents in classroom change: The power of 	cultivating positive expectations. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 	48(7), 540-546 Miller, S. (2004). SLAM! poetry as a genre for social activism: Empowering 	discourses during troubling times- how to teach, 	assess and construct 	SLAM in the secondary classroom. The Utah English Journal, 32, 24-36. Miller, S. (1993). Jewish adult children of divorce; A support group. Journal of 			Jewish Communal Service, 70(2/3).

Invited Chapter and Peer-Reviewed in Books Miller, s. (forthcoming). Planning concept map for peace and sustainability. In Title TBA…… (pp XX-XX). UNESCO, TBA, Location TBA. Miller, s. (forthcoming). Trans*ing pedagogy: Recognition of trans* and gender creative youth in the secondary ELA classroom. In S.C. Carothers, D. Hucks, C. Lewis, V. Showunmi, and Y. Sealey-Ruiz (Eds.), Purposeful Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts:  Education for Access, Equity and Achievement (pp. XX-XX). Miller, s. (2016). Queer literacy framework. In N. Rodriguez, W. Martino, J. Ingrey, and E. Brockenbrough (Eds.), Critical concepts in queer studies and education: An international guide for the 21st century (pp. 259-272). New York: Palgrave MacMillan. Miller, s. (2015). Reading YAL queerly: A queer literacy framework for inviting (a)gender and (a)sexuality self-determination and justice. In D. Carlson and D. Linville (Eds.), Beyond borders: Queer eros and ethos (ethics) in LGBTQ young adult literature (pp. 153-180). New York: Peter Lang. Miller, s. (2015). Learning from equity audits: Powerful social justice in English education for the 21st Century. In L. Scherff & E. Morrelll (Eds.), New directions in teaching English: Reimagining teaching, teacher education, and research (pp.107-120). New York: Rowman & Littlefield. Miller, s. (2014). Moving an anti-bullying stance into schools: Supporting the identities of transgender and gender variant youth. In S. Steinberg and A. Ibrahim (Eds.), Critical youth studies reader (pp. 161-171). New York: Peter Lang. Miller, s. & Gilligan, J. (2014). Heteronormative harassment: Queer bullying and gender non-conforming students. In D. Carlson and E. Meyer (Eds.), Handbook of gender and sexualities in education (pp. 217-229). New York: Peter Lang. Miller, s. (2014). Hungry like the wolf: Gender non-conformity in young adult literature. In C. Hill (Ed.). The critical merits of young adult literature: Coming of age (pp. 55- 72). New York: Routledge. Miller, s. (2014). Spatializing social justice research in English education. In C. Compton-Lilly and Erica Halverson (Eds.), Time and space in literacy research (pp.122-133). New York: Routledge. Miller, s. (2009). (Dis)Embedding gender diversity in the preservice classroom. In S. Steinberg (Ed.), Diversity and multiculturalism: A reader (pp. 193-	209). New York: Peter Lang. Miller, S. (2008). ‘Literativity’: Reconceptualizing creative literacy learning. In S. Bruce, & K. Dvorak (Eds.), Creative approaches to writing center work 	(pp. 85-93). Hampton Press. Miller, S. (2008). Reeinvisioning preservice teacher identity: Matrixing 	methodology. In J. Flood, S.B. Heath, and D. Lapp (Eds.), Handbook 	of research on teaching literacy through the visual and communicative 	arts, Volume II (pp. 151-159). New York: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Miller, S. (2006). SLAM! Genre for social activism. In S. Steinberg, P. Parmar, & 	B. Richard (Eds.), Contemporary youth culture: An international 	encyclopedia (pp. 493-504). Westport: Greenwood.

Policy Briefs Miller, s. (2017). Transgender students facing erasure from schools under Trump. New York: Metropolitan Center for Research on Equity and the Transformation of Schools: New York University.

Miller, s. (2017). Why (a)gender identity matters now, more than ever: Perspectives during a Trump Era. New York: Metropolitan Center for Research on Equity and the Transformation of Schools: New York University.

Peer Reviewed Books Miller, s & Rodriguez, N. (Eds.). (2016). Educators queering academia: Critical Memoirs. New York: Peter Lang. Miller, s. (Ed.). (2016). Teaching, affirming, and recognizing trans and gender creative youth: A queer literacy framework. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. Miller, s., Burns, L., & Johnson, T.S. (2013). Generation BULLIED 2.0: Prevention and intervention strategies for our most vulnerable 	students. New York: Peter Lang. Miller, s. & Kirkland, D. (Eds.). (2010). Change matters: Critical essays on 	moving 	social justice research from theory to policy. New York: Peter 	Lang. Miller, s., Beliveau, L., DeStigter, T., Kirkland, D., & Rice, P. (2008). Narratives of 	social justice teaching: How English teachers negotiate theory and 	practice between preservice and inservice spaces. New York: Peter 	Lang. Miller, s., & Norris, L. (2007). Unpacking the loaded teacher matrix: Negotiating space and time between university and secondary English classrooms. New York: Peter Lang.

IV. I give talks all over the world- any chance I can send you my CV? I have attached it in the email. I give keynotes nationally and internationally. There are so many.. do you want me to highlight some?

V. I'd like a section on Media as well- see CV- (you can pull from my CV or website) Please note that I make TV and Radio Appearances

VI. Under Career: Please edit out (as this is not accurate-- it's a sliver of the story)- the fall of 2010, Miller helped draft a statement on social justice in education for the National Council of Teachers of English.[9][10]

To read: sj is The National Council Teachers of English (NCTE) Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues in Academic Studies Advisory Committee Board Member, AERA's Division G Affirmative Action Officer, and AERA's Queer SIG Co-Chair, and consultant for the College Board, AP English Literature Table Leader. sj helped draft the Beliefs Statement about Social Justice in English Education and helped pass the NCTE Resolution on Social Justice in Literacy Education, which informed the newly-vetted CAEP Social Justice Standard 6-the first ever standard in the United States that advances social justice work in teacher preparation. sj helped co-create the newly Conference on English Educations Commission and NCTE Resolution on Commission for Dismantling the School-to-Prison Pipeline, was recently appointed Peter Lang series co-editor of Social Justice Across Contexts in Education and the new series Queering Teacher Education Across Contexts.

Please also add: Miller is an Advisory Board Member and Curriculum Specialist for the LGBTQ Tolerance and Identity Collection on PBS LearningMedia.

— Preceding unsigned comment added by Sjmiller (talk • contribs) 02:01, 24 March 2017 (UTC)
 * Hi - I was happy to start this page as I felt you were notable enough for a Wikipedia biography, but I think you have a bit of a wrong idea about how things work on here. Wikipedia isn't like a web hosting site or press kit, and I'm not comfortable with someone (anyone - not just you) dictating to me (or any other editors) how their biography should read on Wikipedia. If there are major inaccuracies that need corrected (and have reliable sources for the correct information) that's fine to point out, but beyond that it's not really proper to dictate exactly how a page about you should read. Wikipedia biographies are written about people, not for people. I hope that makes sense. Funcrunch (talk) 04:02, 24 March 2017 (UTC)
 * Also see Core content policies for information on what can and can't be included in a Wikipedia page. Funcrunch (talk) 04:15, 24 March 2017 (UTC)
 * You would still be angry if I use they/them/their. Beebeenewan (talk) 01:26, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
 * @Beebeenewan: Are you personally connected with @Sjmiller? You seem to be taking a particular interest in editing this page. Funcrunch (talk) 16:52, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
 * I am interested in editing the page and I want to revert my edits. Beebeenewan (talk) 23:31, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
 * I think you meant you want to restore your edits. In any case, as I just noted on your talk page, you need to stop edit warring. This article does not misgender sj Miller, and it was already stated in the lead that Miller does not use personal pronouns. I won't revert your latest edit, but if someone else does and you restore it you might end up reported and blocked. Funcrunch (talk) 23:50, 29 October 2023 (UTC)
 * I moved the part talking about sj Miller not using pronouns down to the personal life section. Beebeenewan (talk) 00:09, 30 October 2023 (UTC)

I just changed "incorrect" to "wrong" as they are the same thing. 2001:8003:E9EE:1301:9194:8F7E:E189:D948 (talk) 09:09, 31 October 2023 (UTC)