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Showing 1 to 15 of 220 results Save | Export
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Henry Miller; Christian Hines; René M. Rodríguez-Astacio – English Journal, 2024
In this article, the authors work to illustrate how "Miles Morales Suspended" by Jason Reynolds, an author whose work has been targeted by book ban efforts (Knight, 2022), can be positioned in English classrooms to teach about contemporary attacks on Black literature through book bans. The teaching outlined in this article is part of a…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, African American Literature, Language Arts, Reading Material Selection
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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
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Meredith N. Sinclair – English Journal, 2018
This article uses Daniel José Older's Shadowshaper as the core of a unit challenging students and teachers to confront and dismantle systems of oppression.
Descriptors: Decolonization, English Instruction, Language Arts, Advantaged
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Michelle Ann Abate – English Journal, 2018
In this article, Michelle Ann Abate examines the typographical features of the comics and graphic novels frequently finding their way into English Language Arts (ELA) classrooms and challenges the viewpoint that they are secondary to prose-only texts, arguing instead that many comics can be seen as requiring more advanced levels of literacy…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Novels, Language Arts, English Instruction
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Bryan Gillis – English Journal, 2018
For almost thirty years, Alleen Pace Nilsen, in collaboration with an illustrious cast of scholars, including Kenneth Donelson, James Blasingame Jr., and Don Nilsen, have authored the yearly Honor List for prize-winning YA books. Their contributions have helped thousands of teachers and librarians select appropriate quality literature for their…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Awards, Self Concept, Individual Development
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Ann Marie Quinlan – English Journal, 2017
What to assign students to read in a literature course--or a writing course for that matter--is one of the core questions that faces those who teach English. This article imagines that the world itself is a text, and to teach students to become critically literate in the classroom has important consequences beyond it, arguing that English teachers…
Descriptors: Literature, Writing Instruction, English Instruction, Reading Material Selection
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Karly Marie Grice; Rachel L. Rickard Rebellino; Christine N. Stamper – English Journal, 2017
Texts that challenge the narrative status quo -- from introducing new ways of authoring to showcasing historically overlooked experiences - have garnered increasing notoriety, specifically through literary prizing. Altogether, these books not only diversified the form of the awards' histories but also the characters, content, and authors. As…
Descriptors: Course Content, Reading, Multicultural Education, Cartoons
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Stephanie R. Logan; Terri A. Lasswell; Yolanda Hood; Dwight C. Watson – English Journal, 2014
There has been lots of quality young adult (YA) literature that addresses queer identity and has the potential for curriculum integration, bibliotherapy, and overall reading pleasure. However, unlike multicultural literature, there are no tools or a set of criteria that can help guide educators through the process of selecting the best of the YA…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Adolescent Literature, Criteria, Reading Material Selection
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Leah M. Van Vaerenewyck – English Journal, 2017
Because we live in an increasingly globalized world, teachers are tasked with cultivating social and cultural competencies in their students to prepare them to act as responsible global citizens. This article explores how including diverse global literary narratives in the English language arts (ELA) classroom is an important step toward preparing…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Aesthetics, Reading, Global Approach
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Laurel Taylor – English Journal, 2016
This article discusses one teacher's efforts to give their students a mentor text for a persuasive, research-based writing project. The author's shift from assigning predominantly fiction to focusing more on nonfiction came as a result of their efforts to help their students move from students' current writing style -- that of a five-paragraph…
Descriptors: Reading Assignments, Nonfiction, Mentors, Books
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Barry Gilmore – English Journal, 2017
The Bechdel test, the author's student Marley explained, is named for the US graphic novelist and cartoonist Alison Bechdel. To pass the test, a work of fiction must contain at least one scene in which two or more women (preferably named characters) discuss something other than a male. Students who read from the canon of works regularly encounter…
Descriptors: High School Teachers, Language Arts, Reading Teachers, Adolescent Literature
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Michael Macaluso; Anne Russo – English Journal, 2016
This article respectfully challenges the metaphor of "open doors as resistance" by reconceptualizing power in the English classroom. It also offers an alternative metaphor -- open doors as acts of love and possibility -- through different theoretical and practical underpinnings. When we, according to the authors, conceive of teaching…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Language Arts, English Teachers, Teacher Empowerment
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Michael Pagliaro – English Journal, 2014
Graphic novels are an important literary mode with a complex history and practice, and provide struggling readers of all kinds with a visual (but equally rigorous) reading experience. English teachers must determine the criteria for quality examples of this mode to provide the highest quality texts possible to every student. This article uses…
Descriptors: Novels, Cartoons, Reading Material Selection, Instructional Material Evaluation
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Dana Huff – English Journal, 2017
According to the author, as our abilities to combine image and text become more sophisticated and ubiquitous, digital storytelling is a powerful means for sharing those stories. Digital storytelling is a perfect way to remix stories. To present American literature as relevant to students' lives, the author rewrote their curriculum using backwards…
Descriptors: United States Literature, Curriculum Development, Relevance (Education), Story Telling
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Jemimah L. Young; Marquita D. Foster; Dorothy Hines – English Journal, 2018
The authors discuss how Black girls can engage with literary texts through counter fairy tales (CFT) as a resistive literary strategy to reclaim Black girls' narratives and to be reflective of their experiences. The racial violence that Black girls encounter in school cannot be separated from the remnants of the afterlife of slavery within PreK-12…
Descriptors: Fairy Tales, Childrens Literature, Culturally Relevant Education, African American Students
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