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Showing 1 to 15 of 256 results Save | Export
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Patti Forster – English Journal, 2019
According to the author, prior to a move, their classroom was overflowing with stuff on the walls, on the shelves, under the tables, in the file cabinets, and in the folders upon folders in their computer drive. It wasn't just the author's physical and virtual spaces that were full; their curriculum units were packed with lessons and activities,…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Secondary School Curriculum, Lesson Plans, Curriculum Evaluation
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Katie Sluiter – English Journal, 2024
The author's eighth-grade ELA curriculum is rich with opportunities for students to bear witness to a variety of experiences. Besides the Holocaust unit, they read "Ghost Boys" by Jewell Parker Rhodes (2018) while exploring police brutality and segregation; "The Giver" by Lois Lowry (1993) while investigating government…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Shekema S. Dunlop – English Journal, 2021
Teachers sharing music in their classrooms is all about establishing a sense of mutual trust and respect for their students. Shekema S. Dunlap invites her students into the innermost sanctums of her world and humbly ask that they allow her into theirs. The sharing of music becomes an exchange among equals, forcing their learning space. In this…
Descriptors: Music Activities, Teaching Methods, English Curriculum, African American Teachers
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Deirdre Faughey – English Journal, 2019
In this article Deidre Faughey shares an experimental classroom project that she developed with a diverse group of students in three ninth-grade English Language Arts (ELA) classes. Podcasts provide a unique opportunity for students to embrace experimentation and to take risks with their own voices, explore the school building and community, and…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, English Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Andrew McNally – English Journal, 2019
The personal essay remains pervasive in high school classrooms, but many curriculum leaders have shifted to stressing the importance of evidence-based, argumentative writing. Some teachers have rightfully lamented this shift, noting that the evidence-based turn in writing instruction comes at the expense of student voice and expression. Students…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Self Concept, Writing (Composition), Educational Objectives
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Keisha McIntyre-McCullough – English Journal, 2020
Overall, the author wanted to teach using culturally responsive approaches. The ELA teacher can fuel social justice teaching. In this article, the author discusses how their personal biases affected their classroom instruction and how they shifted their educational philosophy to consider the needs and interests of their students. In US education,…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Advanced Placement, Social Justice, Course Content
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Allisyn Mills; Seungho Moon – English Journal, 2014
The implementation of Common Core State Standards (CCSS) across the country necessitates revising the English curriculum, asking teachers to incorporate and analyze more perspectives in the classroom as society becomes more diverse. The authors wondered if this reform might provide an opportunity to examine social equity by studying an anchor…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, High School Students, High School Teachers, Grade 11
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James S. Chisholm; Jeffrey Jamner; Kathryn F. Whitmore – English Journal, 2021
In this article, the authors describe how integrating music with reading and writing practices stimulated transmediation to (1) honor musical students' identities, (2) deepen readers' meaning making with literature, and (3) invite writers' memories to generate emotional grist for composing poetry. The authors share examples to inspire teachers to…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Self Concept, Teaching Methods
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Lori D. Ungemah – English Journal, 2017
Research in English education needs further exploration on the purposeful implementation of death and grief within English curriculum. In this article Lori D. Ungemah examines how, as a high school English teacher, she integrated death and grief into a unit of study with her eleventh- grade English class. She discusses how her curriculum…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Death, Grief
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Lamar L. Johnson; Johnnie Jackson; David O. Stovall; Denise Taliaferro Baszile – English Journal, 2017
In this article, the authors argue that the racial violence that unfolds against Black youth in various communities seeps into English language arts (ELA) classrooms. They offer a theoretical framework that centers on Black literacies that secondary ELA teachers can use to disrupt the violence and curricula and pedagogical inequities against Black…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Racism, Violence
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Christina Melly – English Journal, 2018
This article describes the implementation of blogging in ninth-grade pre-advanced placement language arts classes to support strong writing practices. In particular, the writing workshop's elements of student choice, continuing revision, discussion of craft, publication, and process orientation meshed well with digital composition. Blogging in the…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Web Sites, Student Empowerment, Language Arts
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Lyschel Shipp – English Journal, 2017
The author argues that, by revolutionizing the literary canon, we are revolutionizing the English classroom, and urges us to shift from focusing exclusively on required texts to equally acknowledging the urgent need for consciousness and activism from our students.
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Culturally Relevant Education, Learner Engagement, Popular Culture
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Judith A. Hayn; Karina R. Clemmons; Heather Olvey – English Journal, 2017
Choosing a text that offers students the chance to empathize with a character from a sociocultural background different from their own and that is based on an understanding of universal challenges all adolescents face offers the opportunity to change minds. The preservice teachers who field tested the use of "Moon at Nine" in middle…
Descriptors: Novels, Adolescent Literature, Secondary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers
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Rice, Mary – English Journal, 2012
In 2006, the author entered the crucible of trying to use graphic novels in her classroom to promote her students' artistic sensibilities. In this article, she discusses benefits and some problems--including access, content, and expense--of teaching graphic novels.
Descriptors: Novels, Secondary School Curriculum, Classroom Techniques, Teaching Methods
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Samuel Elliott; Geoffrey Elliott – English Journal, 2014
This article reports on an ethnographic analysis of students who play chess at a mixed comprehensive school in England. The authors explore how children learn when playing chess and speculate about how the appeal of the game could be used by secondary teachers to improve English lessons.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Curriculum, Secondary School Students, Secondary School Teachers
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