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Gregory Shafer – English Journal, 2017
To invite students to write about death is to explore an opulent and rich world of sorrow and emotion. It is a world that demands understanding and that engages students in a truly visceral way. And, it is an assignment that incorporates personal discovery with social and political issues, stretching writers in ways that many assignments do not.…
Descriptors: Death, Writing Assignments, Essays, Grief
Richard Beach; Faythe Beauchemin – English Journal, 2020
Trust is a central component of caring, reciprocal relationships among teachers and students. It goes beyond teachers caring solely about students' academic achievement and includes caring about what matters deeply to students, their families, and their communities. To examine the importance of teachers creating trusting relations with their…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Teacher Student Relationship, Writing (Composition), High School Seniors
Amber Warrington; Lauren Graeber; Holland White; John Saxton – English Journal, 2018
This article describes how four English language arts teachers formed an inquiry group to design approaches to writing assessment that would support and foster student writers' agency, empowerment, and freedom. They hoped that by focusing assessment on students' articulation of their writing processes rather than on rubrics or final products, they…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Student Empowerment, Writing Processes
Victoria Johnston Boecherer – English Journal, 2018
Thomas Nunnally equates five-paragraph format essays with square cucumbers found at farmer's markets: they have an established structure but no argument. The real square cucumbers are students who need a formula to write competently. By providing students with a real audience, a teacher can show that he or she takes students' desires -- and…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Self Esteem, Writing Instruction, Essays
Deidre Faughey – English Journal, 2020
The author pushes two desks together in the front of the class and pile supplies on them: markers, drawing paper, rulers, and pencils. As the students enter a combined English language arts (ELA) and English as a New Language (ENL) tenth-grade classroom, they select what they need and settle in to their work. As an ELA educator who is also a…
Descriptors: Restorative Practices, Teaching Methods, Grade 10, High Schools
Cherie Parsons – English Journal, 2014
If Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences is taken seriously, then teachers ought to capitalize more often on what has been learned: many students are oozing over with extraordinary bodily-kinesthetic intelligence, and teachers ought to encourage them to explore in writing the physical work and coordinated efforts their bodies are…
Descriptors: Athletics, Writing Instruction, Intelligence, Essays
Benjamin Schwartz; Jeffrey Schwartz – English Journal, 2018
Process and product are always in tension. In authentic writing, they can be messy and hard to assess. Because writing is recursive and generative, every word written opens new possibilities. Not only that, but writing is influenced by ability, time allowed, task definition, rhetorical situation, relationship to reading, and helpful thinking…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Process Approach (Writing), Art Products, Exhibits
Sarah Chanski; Lindsay Ellis – English Journal, 2017
Little research has been done on key concepts related to peer feedback, including whether learners are able to transfer skills learned to future related tasks or to other classes and content areas, and whether the gains observed through peer feedback are the result of "giving" peer feedback or of "receiving" peer feedback. The…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Critical Thinking, Reflection
Marsha Arons – English Journal, 2016
This article demonstrates a step-by-step teaching method using a poem, a play, and a short essay to help students support each other and take responsibility for learning.
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Honors Curriculum, Cooperative Learning, Poetry
Emily Wender – English Journal, 2014
This author argues that developing the practice of empathy is fundamental to becoming an expert teacher.
Descriptors: Empathy, Teacher Characteristics, Expertise, Story Telling
Kathleen Dudden Rowlands – English Journal, 2016
The author, who teaches the English Methods class in the credential program, knew from entries in students' Writer's Reader's Notebooks (Rief) that they were struggling with the articles assigned about a five-paragraph essay. Following a discussion of form-first instruction and CCSS assessments, this article provides concrete suggestions for…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness, Teaching Methods, English Instruction
Sherry Seale Swain; Richard L. Graves; David T. Morse – English Journal, 2015
Picture a group of classroom teachers gathered around a table late one afternoon discussing the results of the statewide writing assessment, the returned scored papers scattered across the table top. This article details research exploring which rhetorical elements are associated with statewide assessment scores and considers the role and…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Standardized Tests, Scores, Writing (Composition)
Lisa Beckelhimer – English Journal, 2014
This article discusses how writing assignments focused on sports controversies provide students with opportunities to read, write, research, and debate in ways that feel authentic and meaningful. Athletes dominate the headlines about everything from dog fighting to domestic violence. Sports controversies are appropriate material for teaching…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Athletics, Writing Assignments, Rhetoric
Nancy Pekter; Bruce McAskill – English Journal, 2014
Two teachers of different subject areas (English and mathematics) describe their experiences with a multidisciplinary research paper for senior high school students.
Descriptors: English Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Teaching Methods, Interdisciplinary Approach
David Peter Noskin – English Journal, 2013
The author describes the complex process one teacher goes through to create meaningful formative and summative assessments to define and support student learning.
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Student Evaluation, Summative Evaluation, United States Literature