April 14, 2016 Most know Superman and Supergirl are adopted, along with Peter Parker as Spiderman, Dick Grayson as Robin, and heck even Bamm Bamm Rubble from the Flintstones...but all too often in media, characters depicted as adopted get the ‘cartoon’ treatment even when they’re not cartoons. From language used in journalism coverage, to controversial Avengers punchlines in … [Read more...]
Supergirl’s Adoption Lens: Swooping Past Stereotypes
Filed Under: Pro-Social & Positive Picks Tagged With: adoption, adoption at the movies, adoption stereotypes, adoptive families in media, anti-bullying, Brave Girls Alliance, Bullied, Bystanding vs upstanding, Carrie Goldman, Chyler Leigh, Comic Con, Comics, Curse of the Good Girl, Empowering girls, female superheroes, girlpower, media impact on girls, media portrayal of adoption, Melissa Benoist, pop culture anti-bullying, pop culture hero coalition, portrait of an adoption, Rachel Simmons, relational aggression, sheroes, SuperGirl, SuperGirls Speak Out, superheroes, Upstanding
The Girls Q&A Book: 50 Ways to Fix A Friendship
Nov. 13, 2014 "There is no girls’ friendship drama that can’t be made WORSE… through staying silent, venting behind a friend’s back, or pretending things are just peachy," writes tweens and teens parenting pro Annie Fox in this interview that probes Annie Fox's latest new book "The Girls Q&A Book: 50 Ways to Fix A Friendship Without the Drama."“What part of friendship gives … [Read more...]
Filed Under: Media Literacy Tagged With: #DigCit, #GirlDramaChat, Annie Fox, anti-bullying, Brain insights, Carrie Goldman, complicated friendships, Cyberbullying, digital citizenship, Digital Literacy, empathy, frenemies, girl culture, girl drama, mean girls, media-literacy, Rachel Simmons, relational aggression, Rosalind Wiseman, secret language of Instagram, SEL, Social Emotional Learning, Start Empathy, The Girls Q&A Book on Friendship, Trudy Ludwig, tweens