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Michelle G. Bulla – English Journal, 2025
This article describes how one department journeys from introduction to incorporation of climate fiction and an ecocritical lens in a program for grades 9-12. It explains the department's endeavors, ensuing projects, future intentions for individual and collective climate work, and ways educators can join in the movement.
Descriptors: Climate, Fiction, High School Teachers, English Departments
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Brady L. Nash – English Journal, 2025
Drawing from the author's own teaching, this article explores beginning steps for incorporating video games in English classrooms and details the logistical and pedagogical challenges that occur when teachers include digital interactive texts in the curriculum.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Video Games, English Instruction, English Teachers
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Toby Emert – English Journal, 2025
This article describes how four high school English teachers and a college professor engaged in an "instructional experiment" that focused on the verbatim docudrama "The Laramie Project." An overview of the research project is provided, along with selected moments from the experiences of the participating teachers and their…
Descriptors: High School Teachers, English Teachers, College Faculty, English Instruction
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Sean P. Connors – English Journal, 2025
We live in what a growing number of scientists call the Anthropocene. Combining the Greek root word anthrop- (human) and the suffix -cene (new or recent), the Anthropocene is a period of time in which human activity is understood to have grown so impactful as to alter Earth's conditions. Examples of these planetary changes include (but are not…
Descriptors: English Instruction, World Problems, Depleted Resources, Natural Resources
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Barrett Rosser; M. E. Talian; Angela Crawford; Reed; Katie Burrows-Stone; June Freifelder; Jennifer Freed; Amy Stornaiuolo – English Journal, 2024
The digital is inextricably woven across people's everyday lives and literacy practices, and English educators are tasked with preparing students to be critical, ethical, and agentic inventors and consumers of digital text. What has crystallized for English educators is an awareness that facilitating "digital discourse"--or the multiple…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, Ethics, Literacy
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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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Andrew Rejan – English Journal, 2024
Close reading, as Paula Moya (2016) writes, may remain the "most powerful discipline-specific tool we have at our disposal" (p. 9). At a time when the work of English teachers is threatened by many factors, including political polarization and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), close reading may be the soundest way of unifying and…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, English Instruction, Educational History, Literary Criticism
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Claire Cothren – English Journal, 2025
A high school teacher advocates for the use of the CARE method in the selection and teaching of fiction about disability in the English language arts classroom, considering the centrality, agency, and respect afforded disabled characters, as well as the expertise of the author.
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Fiction, Disabilities
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Catherine Lammert; Julianna Lopez Kershen – English Journal, 2025
This article details a unit of study bringing together shared reading, place-based pedagogies, and climate-centered texts to engage students in youth participatory community action (YPAR). The authors envision an English classroom where youth read, write, and argue for change as activists as they encounter climate justice literature through YPAR…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Action Research, English Instruction, Activism
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Marek Oziewicz; Afton Northrup; Colleen Redmond; Jalen Giles; Maya Symonanis; Genesis Garcia Newinski – English Journal, 2025
There is a growing body of research arguing that, alongside education in climate science literacy, our education systems need a deeper, broader, and more interdisciplinary education in climate literacy. Specifically, the push is to reframe climate literacy from a narrow competence taught in science classes to a broad socioscientific and cultural…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Cultural Awareness, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Childrens Literature
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Kristina Peterson; Dennis Magliozzi – English Journal, 2024
It's clear that the transformative potential of artificial intelligence (AI) programs such as ChatGPT (generative pre-trained transformer) will significantly impact education, and it is natural for teachers to feel apprehensive about this change. This article explores the role of ChatGPT in a high school English classroom and discusses how it can…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Artificial Intelligence, Natural Language Processing, Workshops
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Jinan El Sabbagh; Sarah J. Donovan – English Journal, 2025
Two teacher educators offer several activities for youth to examine representations of adolescence by writing poetry, studying social media, and analyzing young adult literature through a youth lens.
Descriptors: Poetry, Social Media, Adolescent Literature, English Instruction
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Dan Stockwell – English Journal, 2024
Many secondary English language arts (ELA) teachers are aware of the recent bills aimed at controlling which texts are available to students, how those texts are taught, and classroom discourse on issues like racism and rights for members of LGBTQIA+ communities. In the face of book bans and attempts to control classroom discourse, this article…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Teachers, Teaching (Occupation), Reading Material Selection