Jennifer Buehler, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Educational Studies
Education
Ph.D., English and Education, University of Michigan
M.A., English, Eastern Michigan University
B.A., American Studies, Yale UniversityPractice Areas
- Young Adult Literature
- The Teaching of Writing
- Ethnographic Research in Education
Research Interests
Buehler’s primary expertise is young adult literature. She has written author profiles, publisher reading guides, position statements, talking points to defend diverse books, and a book for teachers that centers the complexity of YA literary texts. During her years hosting a YA lit podcast for the National Council of Teachers of English, she interviewed many of the field’s most distinguished authors including Laurie Halse Anderson, John Green, A.S. King, Judy Blume, and Walter Dean Myers. Her current work on book bans is anchored in a study of the Judy Blume papers at Yale University. This project is supported by a Jockey Hollow Fellowship from Yale University, a Beaumont Scholarship Research Award from Saint Louis University, and a Sister Shirley Kolmer Memorial Grant from the Saint Louis University Women’s Commission.
Buehler is also an ethnographer. She received the NCTE Promising Researcher Award for her ethnographic study of how staff members produced “toxic” school culture at an underperforming, racially divided high school. She went on to examine the experiences of dropout and disconnected youth who chose to return to school after an interruption in their education. Buehler’s ethnographic research has been supported by a Presidential Research Fund Award, a Faculty Research Leave, a Beaumont Faculty Development Grant, and a Charter School Sponsorship Faculty Grant, all from Saint Louis University.
Publications and Media Placements
Books
Buehler, J. (2016). Teaching reading with YA literature: Complex texts, complex lives.
Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.
Journal articles
Buehler, J. (2013). “There’s a problem, and we’ve got to face it”: How staff members
wrestled with race in an urban high school. Race Ethnicity and Education, 16(5), 629-652.
Book chapters
Buehler, J. (2019). Positioning theory: Exploring power, social location, and moral
choices of the American dream in American Street. In R. Ginsberg & W. Glenn (Eds.),
Engaging with multicultural YA literature in the secondary classroom: Critical approaches
for critical educators (11-21). New York, NY: Routledge.
Position statements
Buehler, J., Davila, D., McClure, A., & Miller, D. (2018). Preparing teachers with
knowledge of children’s and YA literature. Position statement prepared for the National
Council of Teachers of English. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.
Quick reference guides
Buehler, J. (2019). Teaching reading with YA literature. Urbana, IL: National Council
of Teachers of English.
Op-Ed
Buehler, J. (2023, June 11). Speaking up for diverse books: Five rebuttals to the
most common arguments for limiting students’ choices. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Honors and Awards
- Spirit of the Billiken Award for Undergraduate Mentoring, Saint Louis University
- Undergraduate Faculty Excellence Award, Saint Louis University
- Woman of the Year, Saint Louis University
- Excellence in Graduate Faculty Mentoring Award, Saint Louis University
- Promising Researcher Award, National Council of Teachers of English
- Dimond Outstanding Dissertation Award, University of Michigan
- Rackham Predoctoral Fellowship, University of Michigan
- Mary Malcomson Raphael Fellowship, University of Michigan
- School of Education Scholar Award, University of Michigan
- Graduate Deans’ Award for Research Excellence, Eastern Michigan University
Professional Organizations and Associations
- American Educational Research Association
- National Council of Teachers of English
- ALAN (Assembly on Literature for Young Adults of NCTE)
- National Writing Project
Community Work and Service
Buehler is regularly asked to speak, write, and consult on young adult literature. She has led workshops on teaching YA lit in local school districts and regional educational consortiums, at state conferences, and at university literary festivals. She is also regularly asked to speak and write about YA lit for the National Council of Teachers of English. She served on the steering committee for Build Your Stack, an NCTE initiative designed to cultivate the reading lives of teachers, and she was asked to chair the committee tasked with revising the NCTE position statement on preparing teachers with knowledge of children’s and young adult literature. She served as President of ALAN (the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents of the NCTE) in 2016.