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Maya Pindyck – English Journal, 2017
The author was invited as a teaching artist into a first-grade classroom in New York City to teach a 14-session poetry residency culminating in an anthology of student writing. They began by sitting together on a carpet by the interactive whiteboard and read aloud several examples of "I wish" poems from Kenneth Koch's (1970) wonderful…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Literacy, Literacy Education, Educational Theories
Jie Y. Park; Lori Simpson; Jesse Bicknell; Sarah Michaels – English Journal, 2015
In this article, a team of university-based researchers and ESL teachers describes how English learners in a high school responded to Poetry Inside Out -- a poetry -- and translation-based literacy curriculum.
Descriptors: High School Students, English Learners, Poetry, Translation
Harmon, Janis M.; Buckelew-Martin, Elizabeth; Wood, Karen D. – English Journal, 2010
English teachers face myriad demands every day that include not only helping students read literature in interesting and engaging ways but also attending to the needs of students challenged by the demands of more complex and sophisticated texts. Vocabulary learning is at the heart of this struggle for many students, especially for English language…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Vocabulary Development, Metacognition
Susan R. Massey – English Journal, 2015
Picture books are often seen as a valuable tool for younger readers. In this article, the author suggests that the multiple literacies required to read a picture book can provide scaffolding and transmission of additional concepts for older readers.
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Middle School Students, High School Students, High School Teachers
Chadwick, Jocelyn A. – English Journal, 2012
In his foundational work, "English Composition and Rhetoric," Alexander Bain set forth the framework for what students and teachers now routinely refer to as the five-paragraph essay. Teachers were so inculcated with Bain's paradigm for the "perfect" essay format, they in turn have inculcated their students, and they just say now, "Write an…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Writing Skills, Writing (Composition), Process Approach (Writing)
Sovereen, Deanne – English Journal, 2013
"Research for the Classroom" publishes mini-studies of ELA classroom practices and suggests ways in which high school and middle school English teachers may study the effectiveness of their pedagogy. The author of this mini-study notes that it takes around six minutes per day of instructional time for students to remember most of the…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Teaching Methods, Recall (Psychology), English
Heverly, Jerry – English Journal, 2011
It's one of those assumptions of the English teaching game that students must learn and store up vocabulary as a precondition of tackling literature or history or any of those fields that feature big words. How, some ask, could a child read a challenging passage if he or she didn't understand those key, usually multisyllabic, words often sprinkled…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, English Instruction, Educational Strategies, Context Effect
Goodman, Barbara A. – English Journal, 2011
Shakespeare molded language to meet his needs. Can students learn from his example? In this article, the author suggests studying Shakespeare's creative use of functional shift, spelling, and vocabulary to help students develop greater control of their own writing. The author is advocating that teachers approach Shakespeare as descriptive…
Descriptors: Drama, English Literature, Language Usage, Student Writing Models
Faulkner, Julie – English Journal, 2010
Many people, particularly teachers and students, associate vocabulary instruction with long lists of ambiguous words, copying the definitions from the dictionary by rote, completing accompanying analogies, or matching the words with their meanings and taking a quiz at the end of the week. This approach to vocabulary instruction is typical to many…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Vocabulary Development, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
Tiered Texts: Supporting Knowledge and Language Learning for English Learners and Struggling Readers
Moss, Barbara; Lapp, Diane; O'Shea, Mary – English Journal, 2011
One of the most persistent challenges facing teachers is the need to provide effective literacy instruction for adolescent English language learners (ELLs). The literacy crisis for these students is a compelling one; only 4% of eighth-grade ELLs scored at the proficient or advanced level on the reading portion of the 2005 National Assessment for…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Second Language Learning, Literacy Education, English (Second Language)
Shanley, Roger W. – English Journal, 2007
Ideally, one's talk segues into ways the precision of crafted phrases or stylized sentences amplifies messages, sharpens concerns, or frames praise. People pursue how words and their selective combinations illuminate and illustrate, persuade and perplex. For many, this intricate puzzle with language is a frolic, simple wordplay. In this article,…
Descriptors: Word Order, Language Styles, Semantics, Teaching Experience
Kahn, Elizabeth – English Journal, 2008
When thinking about teaching vocabulary, what typically first comes to mind is having students learn new words or learn strategies for inferring the meanings of unfamiliar words, such as analyzing context clues or studying affixes and roots. Another aspect of teaching vocabulary is enriching students' understanding of words or concepts for which…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Vocabulary Development, Critical Thinking, English Instruction
Crovitz, Darren; Miller, Jessica A. – English Journal, 2008
To "help students think carefully about specific words and their uses," Darren Crovitz and Jessica A. Miller conceive a diagram that visually expresses the spaces and ties between words. Students eagerly explore contextual connotations and defend subtle shifts in word meaning, discovering how time, use, and circumstance all influence meaning.…
Descriptors: Semantics, Concept Mapping, Instructional Materials, Cues
Whitaker, Sandra – English Journal, 2008
Within the walls of their classroom, high school teacher Sandra Whitaker and students take on the challenge of language acquisition. They play with morphemes and etymologies and examine how authors craft meaning. Whitaker observes that it is possible for students to "learn more words than teachers can teach directly."
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, High School Students, English Teachers, English Instruction
Kail, Suzanne R. – English Journal, 2008
High school teacher Suzanne R. Kail and her students uncover the relevance of learning Latin and Greek roots to enhance vocabulary and spelling. Kail reflects on her experience of combining what might be seen as an old-school practice of memorization with promoting higher level thinking skills and anticipates what she will revise for the next…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Latin, Thinking Skills, English Instruction