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Barrett Rosser; M. E. Talian; Angela Crawford; Reed; Katie Burrows-Stone; June Freifelder; Jennifer Freed; Amy Stornaiuolo – English Journal, 2024
The digital is inextricably woven across people's everyday lives and literacy practices, and English educators are tasked with preparing students to be critical, ethical, and agentic inventors and consumers of digital text. What has crystallized for English educators is an awareness that facilitating "digital discourse"--or the multiple…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, Ethics, Literacy
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Darren Crovitz; Clarice Moran – English Journal, 2020
In this article, the authors examine how social media memes can manipulate and polarize audiences and provide teaching approaches for student learning, understanding, and action. The authors describe the four-step instructional approach they use to guide preservice English language arts (ELA) teachers and their secondary students in recognizing…
Descriptors: Social Media, Visual Aids, Computer Mediated Communication, Teaching Methods
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Luke Rodesiler; Meenoo Rami; Gary Anderson; Cindy Minnich; Brian Kelley; Sarah Andersen – English Journal, 2014
Nudged by scholars to make their practice public and to "put [themselves] out there" by participating in professional conversations online, many English teachers are turning to the Web to enhance their professional development. This article draws from a qualitative study investigating five English teachers' experiences participating…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Computer Mediated Communication, Faculty Development
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Goodson, Lori Atkins; Skillen, Matt – English Journal, 2010
Student motivation is difficult to measure, manage, initiate, and control. Teachers control many aspects of classroom environments, including student interaction and cooperation, by the rules and procedures they establish and maintain. But, there is often little classroom teachers can do to predict what will motivate students to move beyond the…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Interaction, Teachers, Student Attitudes
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Frey, Nancy; Fisher, Douglas – English Journal, 2008
In this article, the authors address a high school's need for an updated technology policy that would allow educators to move from confiscating technology to teaching students how and when to use it. By replacing their technology policy with a courtesy policy, the authors describe how they made a huge step toward teaching students to do the right…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, High Schools, Technological Advancement, Interpersonal Relationship
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Rochette, Laura Christine – English Journal, 2007
The availability of new technology and a willingness to experiment led Laura Christine Rochette to re-imagine a successful high school English curriculum. A SMART Board, individual laptop computers, and blogs became essential tools to enhance the learning of all students and to renew her excitement about teaching.
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Computer Uses in Education, English Instruction, High Schools
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Kahn, Elizabeth – English Journal, 2007
According to a growing body of research, discussion-based instruction, in the context of high academic demands, significantly enhances student achievement in reading. The effects apply to below- as well as above-average-ability students. These findings confirm what secondary English teachers have believed all along about the value of discussion.…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion, English Teachers, Reading Achievement
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Jewell, Vivian – English Journal, 2005
A considerable use of technology to supplement classroom instruction could improve student learning. A high school teacher reveals the ways in which the use of online discussions of literature assignments increases student participation by extending dialogue beyond the physical space and time of a single class.
Descriptors: Student Participation, Distance Education, Computer Mediated Communication, Teaching Methods