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Showing 1 to 15 of 37 results Save | Export
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Marek Oziewicz; Afton Northrup; Colleen Redmond; Jalen Giles; Maya Symonanis; Genesis Garcia Newinski – English Journal, 2025
There is a growing body of research arguing that, alongside education in climate science literacy, our education systems need a deeper, broader, and more interdisciplinary education in climate literacy. Specifically, the push is to reframe climate literacy from a narrow competence taught in science classes to a broad socioscientific and cultural…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Cultural Awareness, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Childrens Literature
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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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Phillip Wilder – English Journal, 2019
This article describes a writing assignment called Conversations with Myself (CWM) in which students "talk back" to subtractive dominant narratives through a two-part process of text analysis and autobiographical, dialogic writing. The author presents a case study of Stephen (all names are pseudonyms) to illustrate how literacy supported…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Instruction, Self Concept, Autobiographies
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Melissa Vosen Callens – English Journal, 2017
The author describes how the production and reception of popular culture can be studied in secondary classrooms using Wendy Griswold's cultural diamond to better understand the homogenizing of content and the limiting of alternative viewpoints.
Descriptors: English Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Popular Culture, Assignments
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Sarah K. Gunning – English Journal, 2018
Writing and communication skills are important in all fields of employment. During the course of everyday life, people have to perform tasks they have never done before, or learn a technology they have never used. Most tasks are processes, and it takes some time to learn how they work. Instructions are the most common method of explaining how to…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Relevance (Education), Technical Writing, High School Students
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Ben Roth Shank – English Journal, 2018
Revisiting the writing assignments that the author has given to his sophomores and juniors over the past four years, he can identify patterns that have complicated their writing development. This article explores how Aristotle's enthymeme can serve as an effective prewriting tool for literary analysis in the high school classroom. By foregrounding…
Descriptors: Prewriting, Literary Criticism, High School Students, Writing Processes
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Richard Beach – English Journal, 2017
The author describes two students creating narrative versions of an event from Tim O'Brien's "The Things They Carried" to portray conflicts in characters' interactions to address the issue of sex abuse. Through rewriting events in texts, students gain a sense of how use of dialogue can serve to portray larger underlying tensions between…
Descriptors: High School Students, Writing Assignments, Perspective Taking, Creative Writing
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Elsie Lindy Olan; Julie A. Pantano – English Journal, 2020
In this article, the authors explore multimodal literacies and how they use literacy contracts and quadrants to help students to examine their identities via writing and the creative arts. A notable outcome of their joint efforts is that when teachers and students transacted with multimodal literacies, they showed value for their personal and…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Student Attitudes, Multiple Literacies, Creative Writing
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Laura Aull; Madison Moseley – English Journal, 2019
The authors designed an assignment for a writing class for late-secondary and early-college students, one with a central goal of giving students the opportunity to engage with a controversial topic by identifying and representing views other than their own. The authors called it a "not my opinion" assignment, and they piloted it in a…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Learner Engagement, Cooperative Learning, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Brent Strom – English Journal, 2016
This article examines a service-learning project held in conjunction with a reading of the nonfiction text "The Other Wes Moore." The assignment asked for high school students to provide a day of service focusing on literacy skills for an elementary school different from their own background. Service learning became a tool for…
Descriptors: Nonfiction, Critical Literacy, Service Learning, Reading Instruction
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Erin Donovan – English Journal, 2017
This article, based on a study in a sixth-grade middle school classroom in the rural southern United States, details a writing project that questions the nature of text and how text might positively affect students' perceptions as they become change agents for their communities.
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Grade 6, Middle Schools, Writing Assignments
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David Alan Smith – English Journal, 2015
This article examines the influence of context on student writing and discusses how the author used one methodology, problem-based learning, to foster more contextualized writing practice in ninth-grade English classes. Both research and practical experience suggest that students can benefit from writing practice contextualized within specific,…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, English Instruction, Grade 9, Writing Instruction
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Gregory Shafer – English Journal, 2015
Much of the research writing done in high school and college lacks the personal and social component that is integral to student engagement. This author suggests that the research paper take the form of a national column that is authored by students, giving them authority and a sense of empowerment.
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Research Papers (Students), Student Empowerment, High School Students
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Larkin Weyand; Jon Balzotti; Derek L. Hansen – English Journal, 2019
Educational simulations provide students authentic contexts. These authentic contexts require situated and complex real-world arguments. Such writing scenarios help students recognize why there are often multiple interpretations of evidence, who their audience is, what they want, and what kind of genre is needed. Playable Case Studies help…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Persuasive Discourse, Writing Instruction
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Kyle Vaughn; Robert Kallos – English Journal, 2014
The article describes a collaborative project co-taught by a creative writing teacher and the theater department's technical director that required students to write an original script and perform it as toy theater or shadow theater.
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Theater Arts, Writing Assignments, Scripts
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