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Showing 1 to 15 of 69 results Save | Export
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Lauren Esposito – English Journal, 2021
Authentic writing allows students to write for audiences other than the teacher for reasons that matter to them and that lead to changing how an audience thinks, feels, or acts. How can teachers prioritize authentic writing instruction and help students become successful writers? Lauren Esposito does this through improv, an art form that develops…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Creative Activities, Writing Instruction, Authentic Learning
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Michael L. Kersulov; Kelly Falch; Anna Hartwig – English Journal, 2021
During the fall of 2019, the chaotic American political landscape was charged with scandal, debate, and accusations. As a result, students would often bring local and national politics into the authors' high school English language arts (ELA) classes. Instead of ignoring the students' heated debates in the classroom, the authors decided to embrace…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Debate, Politics, High School Students
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Tamra W. Ogletree; David Bryson; Laura Resau; Esmey Benitez – English Journal, 2020
A movement is taking place in school districts and classrooms as teachers are embracing engaged learning environments in which they are listening to the often-silenced voices of their students. This article chronicles moments from the journeys of four learners who represent a range of experiences and perspectives on re-envisioning the work done in…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Learner Engagement, Educational Environment, Teaching Methods
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Jennie L. Hanna – English Journal, 2018
Many teachers develop oral communication skills through questioning, discussion, Socratic seminars, think-pair-shares, jigsaws, and small-group projects. To these activities the author has added poetry under the auspices of Poetry Out Loud, a national program that asks students to memorize and recite poems. On its website (www.poetryoutloud.org/),…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Poetry, Language Arts, Public Speaking
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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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Burke Scarbrough; Ben Pieper; And Hayley Vetsch – English Journal, 2018
This article explores the power and potential of a role-play collaborative argument project centered on a literary work that has been banned or challenged in schools. In the project, students read a banned or challenged novel as they prepared to play the role of a community stakeholder (parent, teacher, librarian, minister, etc.) at a simulated…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Simulation, Censorship, Books
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Marsha Arons – English Journal, 2016
This article demonstrates a step-by-step teaching method using a poem, a play, and a short essay to help students support each other and take responsibility for learning.
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Honors Curriculum, Cooperative Learning, Poetry
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Robyn Seglem; Jay C. Percell – English Journal, 2019
AP Literature students participated in a series of real-time online discussions to complement the in-class conversations they were having about "The Autobiography of Malcolm X." Thus, the front channel was comprised of the students who were discussing the class text aloud, and the backchannel was the online conversation the rest of the…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Discussion Groups, Electronic Learning, In Person Learning
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Rob Simon; Benjamin Lee Hicks; Ty Walkland; Ben Gallagher; Sarah Evis; Pamela Baer – English Journal, 2018
The authors examine photovoice projects created by students and teacher candidates who explored issues of gender in response to a young adult novel and co-researched that process. In this article, the photovoice projects the authors feature emerged from an ongoing initiative between the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Cooperative Learning, Middle Schools, Preservice Teachers
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Rebecca Shargel; B. P. Laster – English Journal, 2016
In this article, "havruta," the dominant strategy for textual higher learning where pairs pour over texts slowly to decipher and argue about the meaning with each other, is explored as an appropriate pedagogy. The author describes how to facilitate interpersonal and textual skills in the middle school and high school classrooms. Texts…
Descriptors: Students, Cooperative Learning, Text Structure, Dialogs (Language)
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Fogle, Andy – English Journal, 2012
The author had been assigned two sections of Contemporary Literature, a semester-long senior elective, and he wanted to do something new with poetry. He planned to teach Arthur Sze's "Quipu." Sze's poetry is nonlinear, adopting principles from science, anthropology, and history into a multilayered poetic texture--text unlike anything students…
Descriptors: Poetry, Creative Writing, High School Seniors, Teaching Methods
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Bush, Jonathan; Zuidema, Leah – English Journal, 2013
In this article, the authors report the importance of teaching students about collaborative writing. When teachers are effective in helping students to learn processes for collaborative writing, everyone involved needs to speak, listen, write, and read about how to write well and what makes writing good. Students are forced to "go meta"…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Skills, Collaborative Writing, Cooperative Learning
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Isaac, Megan Lynn – English Journal, 2012
Collaborative learning is something that all students will employ once they finish their formal education, and while it isn't something that can be objectively tested by standardized exams, it is something that can be taught. Learning to work in groups is simultaneously a way of learning and a skill worth learning. Teachers should acknowledge that…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Student Attitudes, Group Activities, Student Reaction
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Nelson, Trudi J. – English Journal, 2011
As teachers consider ethics, they find that it may often look like a student issue. It may be discussions of plagiarism, social justice, honesty, bullying, privacy, child labor, free speech, inequity. However, even as teachers struggle with ways to model ethics or "teach" ethics, they find that their teaching practices may warrant reflection. One…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Group Dynamics, Ethics, Teaching Methods
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Rish, Ryan M.; Caton, Joshua – English Journal, 2011
This article describes an assignment that encourages students to create collaboratively designed fantasy worlds. Inspired by the fanfiction genre, a teacher helps students create a world of interlinking stories and develop more detailed, sophisticated writing through in-depth collaboration. The authors present and discuss three salient forms of…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Collaborative Writing, Social Networks, Writing Assignments
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