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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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Lauren Esposito – English Journal, 2021
Authentic writing allows students to write for audiences other than the teacher for reasons that matter to them and that lead to changing how an audience thinks, feels, or acts. How can teachers prioritize authentic writing instruction and help students become successful writers? Lauren Esposito does this through improv, an art form that develops…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Creative Activities, Writing Instruction, Authentic Learning
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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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Jessica J. Jasper; Laura L. Dvorak; Steven Z. Athanases; Sergio L. Sanchez – English Journal, 2021
For the last several years, teacher-researchers Jessica Jasper, Laura Dvorak, Steven Athanases, and Sergio Sanchez have partnered with a program called Globe Education, Shakespeare's Globe London. Practitioners in the program use teaching practices that engage learners with Shakespeare's works and other complex texts through drama practices. Jess…
Descriptors: English Literature, Drama, Teaching Methods, Middle School Students
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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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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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Naitnaphit Limlamai – English Journal, 2018
Words are more than a string of sounds and letters that denote a particular meaning. Linguistic anthropologist Judith T. Irvine contends that speaking is a social activity where the relationship of language, culture, and society is enacted (249). Linguist Deborah Cameron defines language ideology in "Verbal Hygiene" as the notions,…
Descriptors: Language, Ideology, High School Students, Language Usage
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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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Lisa M. Barker – English Journal, 2016
"Improvisational theater" is a collaborative art form in which performers co-construct unscripted narratives, often based on audience suggestions, and always guided by a set of central principles. One practice common in improv instructional settings is "side-coaching," the move of providing immediate, public, verbal feedback…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Creative Activities, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Feedback (Response)
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Elaine Wang – English Journal, 2015
In the urban high school where the author was teaching, grade 11 AP Literature classes were studying Toni Morrison's novel "Beloved" through literature circles. She had noticed that students undertook the role of Illustrator with immense effort, purpose, and creativity. Moreover, the group discussions surrounding the Illustrator's visual…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Student Projects, High School Students, 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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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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Elsie Lindy Olan; Julie A. Pantano – English Journal, 2020
In this article, the authors explore multimodal literacies and how they use literacy contracts and quadrants to help students to examine their identities via writing and the creative arts. A notable outcome of their joint efforts is that when teachers and students transacted with multimodal literacies, they showed value for their personal and…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Student Attitudes, Multiple Literacies, Creative Writing
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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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