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Showing 1 to 15 of 46 results Save | Export
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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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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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Peaches Hash – English Journal, 2021
Student enjoyment is important when creating any unit, but teachers should also consider if an activity will enhance learning. In addition to being enjoyable, drama-based activities enrich learning by disrupting passivity, encouraging participation, and enhancing comprehension. This article showcases ways to include these activities in a unit…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Classics (Literature), Drama, Teaching Methods
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Elizabeth Walsh-Moorman – English Journal, 2018
The visual reality of the world is often not reflected in the classroom experiences of students, creating little opportunity for them to learn how to be critical "readers" of the visual texts that fill their lives. After participating in a provocative summer workshop on Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) at the Cleveland Museum of Art, the…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Faculty Development, Museums, High School Teachers
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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
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Tamra W. Ogletree; David Bryson; Laura Resau; Esmey Benitez – English Journal, 2020
A movement is taking place in school districts and classrooms as teachers are embracing engaged learning environments in which they are listening to the often-silenced voices of their students. This article chronicles moments from the journeys of four learners who represent a range of experiences and perspectives on re-envisioning the work done in…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Learner Engagement, Educational Environment, Teaching Methods
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Mandie B. Dunn; Antero Garcia – English Journal, 2020
Nearly every teacher will experience loss and grief during their years in the classroom. And yet, too often the profession assumes that English language arts (ELA) teachers must hide the emotions that accompany loss. In this article the authors share strategies for supporting English teachers in making sense of their grieving experiences and…
Descriptors: Grief, English Instruction, Language Arts, Teaching Methods
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Mackenzie O’Connor Kaspar – English Journal, 2018
Blended learning is a pedagogical approach where students have agency over what they are learning and how they are learning. It allows teachers to embed the participatory, collaborative practices many students use outside school while--when paired with literature and nonfiction readings that challenge dominant narratives--allowing students to be…
Descriptors: High School Teachers, High School Students, Blended Learning, Digital Literacy
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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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Michelle Wagner – English Journal, 2021
"Transcendentalism" refers to philosophical, religious, and literary beliefs held by Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, Amos Bronson Alcott, and other writers in New England during the 1830s and 1840s. Emerson believed in the significance of one's intuition and individuality. He expresses these beliefs in his…
Descriptors: Singing, Teaching Methods, English, Grade 11
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Amy (Amanda) Cavanaugh – English Journal, 2019
Although plagiarism is not new, the rate and frequency of plagiarism has steadily (and somewhat alarmingly) risen in the past twenty years, coinciding with the ease of access to the Internet. The current generation of students - Gen Z, they've been labeled - is growing up in a world of sharing, a world where, with a quick tap of a button,…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Grade 9, High School Teachers, High School Students
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Eir-Anne Edgar – English Journal, 2020
In this article, the author discusses how teachers can develop empathy in students through reading and writing about literature, which contributes to their development as citizens in a global community. By choosing texts that trigger empathic reactions, English teachers can help students better understand others' experiences with oppression and…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Citizenship Education, Empathy, 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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Ah-Young Song – English Journal, 2019
While teaching in Taiwan, Ah-Young Song found that asking students for midterm self-reflections helped them to be more attuned to their distinct educational trajectories and that their comments provided useful insights into adjustments that could be made as a teacher. This article describes how two of those English language learners from the…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Poetry, Creative Writing, Reflection
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Jennifer Penaflorida; Vicki Collet – English Journal, 2019
As an educator, according to the author, the most important objective is to know what they want students to take away with them after the unit ends, the enduring understandings that will stay with them long after they leave the classroom. The author states they wanted their students to understand that writing is a journey, one that starts with the…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Process Approach (Writing), Writing Processes, Lesson Plans
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