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Kate O'Brien Collins – English Journal, 2021
In this article, Kate Collins begins by explaining how she discovered that "Hamilton: An American Musical," a Broadway show that incorporates a mix of musical genres: hip-hop, jazz, classic show tunes, and show-stopper numbers based on the life of Alexander Hamilton, could be brought into her teaching as a rich resource for her high…
Descriptors: Music, Popular Culture, Teaching Methods, High School Students
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Stephen R. Flemming – English Journal, 2021
Having students read news articles or novels, watch television snippets, engage in class discussions, essay-writing, emailing, and drafting letters are excellent ways to broach any number of society's systemic and oppressive social maladies. Engaging in these activities in the English language arts classroom can serve as a catalyst to encourage…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Scripts, Social Problems, Social Justice
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Jazmen Moore; Django Paris – English Journal, 2021
Chosen spaces are community organizations and programs, elective classes, and/or extracurricular clubs that students choose to participate in and have the agency to refuse their membership in. The youth's chosen spaces represent an alternate possibility for what English language arts (ELA) education could look like and how it might better sustain…
Descriptors: Singing, Self Concept, English, Language Arts
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Gustave Weltsek; Noel Patrick Koontz – English Journal, 2018
Throughout this article, we explore how multiple arts-based learning strategies (ABLS) helped subvert traditional literacy methods. We ask two large questions: (1) How, as critically conscious educators, might we break down inherent institutionalized oppressive structures and have an education of liberation and freedom? (2) What can we say about…
Descriptors: Art Education, Social Justice, Personal Autonomy, Power Structure
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Jennifer Ansbach – English Journal, 2016
Using memorials and related nonfiction print and nonprint texts, students explore elements involved in creating a memorial and learn to think critically about the relationship between these elements.
Descriptors: High School Students, High School Teachers, American Studies, Nonfiction
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Jaclyn Christine Burr – English Journal, 2017
This article explores using spoken word poetry and song analysis in the classroom to inspire students to analyze their identities and strive for social justice in their research efforts. Poetry is empowering. It can show students how people express themselves, push them to consider their own identities, and inspire them to seek social change.…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Music, Singing
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Brianna R. Burke; Kristina Greenfield – English Journal, 2016
This article details a unit designed for a high school English classroom to address social injustice and the silencing of LGBTQ individuals. The authors believe teachers have a civic duty to help students become critically aware and informed citizens. Creating active citizens means fostering critical thinking skills relevant to the political…
Descriptors: High Schools, Social Justice, LGBTQ People, Language Arts
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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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Allisyn Mills; Seungho Moon – English Journal, 2014
The implementation of Common Core State Standards (CCSS) across the country necessitates revising the English curriculum, asking teachers to incorporate and analyze more perspectives in the classroom as society becomes more diverse. The authors wondered if this reform might provide an opportunity to examine social equity by studying an anchor…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, High School Students, High School Teachers, Grade 11
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Young, Sara Lewis-Bernstein – English Journal, 2009
This article explores the ways that students in a humanities class talked about, researched, and disrupted homophobia at Jones School, a public combined middle school and high school in a small New England town. It includes strategies that move beyond discussions of right and wrong to a place of critical inquiry and support for the human rights of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Middle Schools, Social Action, Integrity
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Golden, John – English Journal, 2008
High school teacher John Golden interviews social justice educator Linda Christensen. Golden and Christensen begin by expanding on an understanding of social justice and a teacher's role in the social justice classroom. They continue by addressing complicated issues of student empowerment, meeting state standards, and choosing appropriate texts…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Student Empowerment, State Standards, Cultural Pluralism
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Gorlewski, Julie – English Journal, 2008
High school teacher Julie Gorlewski considers the complexities of multicultural education and the challenges of realizing its potential as a social movement. She explains how students became "powerful users of language" by writing to the editors of their literature anthology to question what appeared to be censorship through alterations to text…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Cultural Pluralism, Anthologies, Censorship