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Showing 1 to 15 of 119 results Save | Export
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Everardo Pedraza; R. Joseph Rodríguez – English Journal, 2018
The feeling of voicelessness creates a sense of internalized powerlessness for students in their schooling and preparation for learning and success. The San Joaquin Valley is surrounded by farms as well as correctional institutions and service industries. Each of these industries is interconnected with students' lives, with some having family…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Student Participation, Critical Literacy, High Schools
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Emma Smith – English Journal, 2018
Throughout a unit of study about survival, students and their teacher engaged in individualized learning. Discussions of teacher-dictated curriculum versus student-driven learning, design of the unit, and students' and teacher's experiences and takeaways from the unit are included.
Descriptors: Grade 7, English Instruction, Individualized Instruction, Student Participation
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Ricki Ginsberg; Wendy J. Glenn; Kellee Moye – English Journal, 2017
Young adult literature (YAL) provides readers with a multivoiced palette that embraces cultures, genders, ages, sexualities, and experiences. Within this array are stories that feature characterswho deny elements of their identities or experiences that they find challenging or difficult. Multivoiced literature's treatment of these attempts takes…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Literary Devices, Self Concept, Reader Text Relationship
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Deirdre Faughey – English Journal, 2019
In this article Deidre Faughey shares an experimental classroom project that she developed with a diverse group of students in three ninth-grade English Language Arts (ELA) classes. Podcasts provide a unique opportunity for students to embrace experimentation and to take risks with their own voices, explore the school building and community, and…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, English Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Leah M. Reed – English Journal, 2017
Through a case study of a seventh-grade ELA teacher, this article examines New Literacies pedagogy and more specifically a digital video project amid high-stakes testing pressures that often place limitations on teaching and learning.
Descriptors: Poetry, English Instruction, Grade 7, Multiple Literacies
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E. Suzanne Ehst; Lewis Caskey – English Journal, 2018
According to the authors, teachers often read about inspiring lessons in which historically marginalized students find their voices through assignments and projects that centralize issues of importance to the student. This article describes the authors' revision of a persuasive writing unit to scaffold not only writing skills but also students'…
Descriptors: Democracy, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Citizen Participation, Minority Group Students
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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
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Rachel Malchow Lloyd; Scott Wertsch – English Journal, 2016
Nonfiction texts demand critical literacy, as evidenced by these teachers' experience teaching Phillip Hoose's "Claudette Colvin: Twice toward Justice" with ninth graders. In addition to selecting high-quality nonfiction, the authors are committed to high impact teaching of those texts. For the authors that means supporting students'…
Descriptors: Grade 9, High School Students, Nonfiction, Critical Literacy
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Steven Wolk – English Journal, 2013
One of the primary aims of schools is supposed to be to educate children and young adults to be caretakers of our fragile and complex democracy. School is the one common American experience with the hope to inspire students to participate in the ongoing pursuit of a more caring and thoughtful society and a more harmonious world. Young adult…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature, Democracy, Social Responsibility
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Ostenson, Jonathan; Gleason-Sutton, Elizabeth – English Journal, 2011
This article discusses how to make the classics matter to students through digital literacies and essential questions. The authors share their experiences with planning and delivering a unit that ultimately gave "The Scarlet Letter" real meaning for their students--and helped them do the same for other classics they taught. Students read "The…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Literature Appreciation, Units of Study, English Instruction
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Webb, Pam – English Journal, 2009
The more the author delved into forming her poetry unit, the more poetry opened up to her. She began to appreciate it for its creative ability to help readers and writers understand texts, experiences, and ideas. It was the length of time involved that concerned her most. She was mainly trying to work out the pace needed to cover as much as…
Descriptors: Creativity, Poetry, Males, Writing Instruction
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Kloehn, Lori W. – English Journal, 2009
In this article, the author discusses how she developed an innovative, interdisciplinary unit in eighth-grade English that links with the history teacher's Civil War studies. When constructing lesson plans, the author needed to rely on her sympathetic connection with students. To determine the best way to help students learn, the author had to ask…
Descriptors: Imagination, War, Interdisciplinary Approach, United States History
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Rice, Mary – English Journal, 2007
Junior high school teacher Mary Rice designs a consumer research unit that cultivates students' critical reading and thinking skills. As students learn how to develop and revise criteria for evaluating the reliability of online information, they read customer reviews, research products, and present their findings orally.
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Thinking Skills, Reading Skills, Units of Study
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Coulter, Shannon E.; Groenke, Susan L. – English Journal, 2008
Shannon E. Coulter and Susan L. Groenke recognize that student differences in interests, learning styles, and readiness for certain knowledge necessitate individualized processes for effectively learning vocabulary. They offer strategies and word games that help students make meaningful connections and improve comprehension. They also give advice…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Individualized Instruction, Literature, Vocabulary
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Nelson, Deanna L. – English Journal, 2008
Students in Deanna L. Nelson's high school classroom study vocabulary gradually over a period of time. Students begin by collecting words from readings and listing them on a designated whiteboard. They prepare practice quizzes to exchange with peers and engage in frequent vocabulary discussions that emphasize recognition of context clues and other…
Descriptors: High School Students, Tests, Teaching Methods, English Instruction
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