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Showing 1 to 15 of 41 results Save | Export
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Rich Novack – English Journal, 2025
This article describes literacy practices and outdoor activities in high school English classrooms--framed as critical rambling, a pedagogy seeking to raise awareness of issues like climate justice--with illustrations from a dissertation of teacher research and additional student work.
Descriptors: Language Arts, High School Teachers, Climate, Justice
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Brandie Bohney – English Journal, 2019
A surprising conversation with her young daughter inspired author Brandie Bohney to incorporate mentor texts to help students make sense of convention rules. Since struggling and reluctant readers tend to also be struggling and reluctant writers, the author designed activities that would concentrate on the conventions students most needed to…
Descriptors: Literary Devices, Grammar, Reading Writing Relationship, Language Arts
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Arianna Drossopoulos; Danielle King-Watkins – English Journal, 2018
This article details a project that centered on perceptions of Islam, teacher development, and student engagement, all through the use of young adult (YA) texts containing characters that self-identify as Muslim. It created a space and opportunity to engage in discourse that has the potential to challenge and expand understandings held by…
Descriptors: Islamic Culture, Cultural Awareness, Adolescent Literature, Muslims
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Matthew Bourjaily – English Journal, 2018
The tension between teachers' desires to instill independence in students, and students' desires for teachers to provide answers, is a complex one. This article explores a lesson that, with virtually no guidance from the teacher, enhances student independence, engagement, and insight.
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Learner Engagement, Grade 9, Learning Activities
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Christopher Mazura; Jacqueline Rapant; Mary Sawyer – English Journal, 2018
Revision is arguably the heart of the writing process, but teachers and students may sidestep the complexities in favor of the quick finish. By surfacing the classroom ecologies and practices involved in supporting student writers, the authors discover revision as a site for the development of agency. To more closely examine what happens in the…
Descriptors: Revision (Written Composition), Personal Autonomy, Student Empowerment, Writing Processes
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Jennie L. Hanna – English Journal, 2018
Many teachers develop oral communication skills through questioning, discussion, Socratic seminars, think-pair-shares, jigsaws, and small-group projects. To these activities the author has added poetry under the auspices of Poetry Out Loud, a national program that asks students to memorize and recite poems. On its website (www.poetryoutloud.org/),…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Poetry, Language Arts, Public Speaking
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William Visco – English Journal, 2019
In this article, the author describes three strategies they have used to bolster interest and make use of popular culture to enhance readers' interactions with texts: pop culture pairings, musical connections, and multimodal projects. The author addresses the cultivation of pop culture awareness, the importance of multimodal pedagogy, the…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Learner Engagement, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Comprehension
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Theodore F. Fabiano – English Journal, 2017
Overland Park, Kansas, may seem like an unlikely setting for using the "New Yorker." While it is not the "Wizard of Oz" Kansas -- more suburban sprawl than expansive wheat fields -- the ethos is far from the cosmopolitan aesthetic of New York City. The "New Yorker" covers can raise questions that may lead to relevant…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Illustrations, Periodicals, Printed Materials
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Mary Amanda Stewart – English Journal, 2016
This article details how one teacher-researcher developed a relationship with a refugee student through literacy activities.
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Caring, Refugees, English Language Learners
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Dawn Latta Kirby – English Journal, 2016
This article considers how relationships in the English classroom are influenced by the types of literacy activities, the role of the teacher, the tone of oral comments, and the types of writing students share with peers.
Descriptors: English Instruction, Writing Instruction, Literacy, Teacher Role
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Gustave Weltsek; Noel Patrick Koontz – English Journal, 2018
Throughout this article, we explore how multiple arts-based learning strategies (ABLS) helped subvert traditional literacy methods. We ask two large questions: (1) How, as critically conscious educators, might we break down inherent institutionalized oppressive structures and have an education of liberation and freedom? (2) What can we say about…
Descriptors: Art Education, Social Justice, Personal Autonomy, Power Structure
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Ashley K. Dallacqua; David E. Low – English Journal, 2019
Located in the suburbs of a large midwestern city, Trail Middle School serves a predominantly middle-class population. The data the authors feature in this article include group discussions and interviews with students, as well as recordings of in-class lessons, student work, and fieldnotes. The authors focus on the theme of gender as it emerged…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Gender Issues, Gender Bias, Student Attitudes
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Cara Mumford – English Journal, 2016
With a poem by Dr. Leanne Simpson, Anishinaabe scholar and storyteller, at its foundation, this article discusses the impact on Métis filmmaker Cara Mumford of creating a short film based on the poem, while exploring connections between women, language, and land within Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg territory. The author's epiphany about the…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Feminism
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Christina Saidy – English Journal, 2017
This piece describes an extended workshop in which reading, writing, listening, and speaking were used to build and sustain a feminist ecology intended to open up access to future lives in science for ethnically and linguistically diverse girls in an urban secondary school. The girls in the description above participated in a project called Girls…
Descriptors: Females, Secondary School Students, Writing (Composition), Science Education
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Steven H. Bills; Lisa Bond; Janet Cascio – English Journal, 2014
In Chapter 3 of Moby Dick, Ishmael, in a "towering rage," questions his landlord concerning Queequeg, the savage "purple rascal" harpooner, he has yet to meet. "What sort of bamboozling story are you telling me?" he nervously asks after learning that Queequeg is peddling shrunken heads-- and on the Sabbath, no less…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, High Schools, Novels, Reading Materials
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