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Amber Jensen; Morgan Shaughnessy – English Journal, 2021
In this article, the authors share discoveries about how taking risks can expand students' and teachers' narrow experiences with academic writing. The article outlines four teaching strategies one of the authors implemented in her classroom, highlighting how these strategies fostered student and teacher flexibility, agency, and confidence in…
Descriptors: Experimental Teaching, Writing Instruction, Language Arts, English Teachers
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James S. Chisholm; Jeffrey Jamner; Kathryn F. Whitmore – English Journal, 2021
In this article, the authors describe how integrating music with reading and writing practices stimulated transmediation to (1) honor musical students' identities, (2) deepen readers' meaning making with literature, and (3) invite writers' memories to generate emotional grist for composing poetry. The authors share examples to inspire teachers to…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Self Concept, Teaching Methods
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Lamar L. Johnson; Johnnie Jackson; David O. Stovall; Denise Taliaferro Baszile – English Journal, 2017
In this article, the authors argue that the racial violence that unfolds against Black youth in various communities seeps into English language arts (ELA) classrooms. They offer a theoretical framework that centers on Black literacies that secondary ELA teachers can use to disrupt the violence and curricula and pedagogical inequities against Black…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Racism, Violence
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Elexia Reyes McGovern – English Journal, 2016
Visible teaching invites educators to bring activist and change-agent identities directly into their teaching, working collaboratively with a community to enact sustainable, albeit constantly transforming, societal change. This article uses data from a year-long ethnographic study to paint a portrait of one Chicana veteran teacher who enacts an…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Activism, Resistance (Psychology), Experienced Teachers
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Campbell, Robyn – English Journal, 2011
Communicating effectively is a skill that must be taught and practiced--and the act of listening is a large part of this skill. According to the "International Journal of Listening," listening skills are imperative to reading comprehension and are valuable enough for "38 out of the 51 government entities to include listening skills as part of…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Role Models, Listening Skills, Interpersonal Communication
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Bintz, William P. – English Journal, 2012
This article describes an instructional lesson the author developed to help students use parody to read and write original poetry. The author begins this article with an introduction to parody and a rationale for using it as an instructional strategy. Then, he describes materials and procedures he used and he shares samples of student writing. He…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Poetry, Graduate Students, Parody
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Denize, Donna E. M.; Newlin, Louisa – English Journal, 2009
This year marks the 400th anniversary of the publication of the first edition of Shakespeare's 154 sonnets--an excellent moment to focus on them, as well as on those written by others before and after 1609. Because these authors share an enthusiasm for poetry in general and the sonnet in particular, they want to encourage teachers to include…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Workshops, Literary Genres, Secondary School Teachers
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Kohn, Sheldon S. – English Journal, 2008
High school teacher Sheldon S. Kohn probes the conflicting dynamics that occur for educators who try to provide students with appropriate tools for thinking and living in a postmodernist, intellectual world, yet who must teach in antiquated school systems that support modernist philosophies and hierarchical practices. Kohn imagines students and…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Humanities, Secondary School Teachers, Philosophy
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Fanetti, Susan; Bushrow, Kathy M.; DeWeese, David L. – English Journal, 2010
This article focuses on writing instruction and seeks to: (1) define the expectations of first-year composition (FYC) programs; (2) consider the factors shaping high school writing instruction; and (3) explore the gap between the goals of each. The authors have interviewed secondary writing teachers and college first-year composition instructors…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, High Schools, Freshman Composition, Expectation
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Jacobs, C. Lynn – English Journal, 2008
High school teacher C. Lynn Jacobs noted that the long-term English language learners in her class had improved in reading comprehension but still lacked writing skills. Inspired by a state humanities project, she worked with the students to publish a collection of stories and poems. Writing about their lives provided the motivation, and writing…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Second Language Learning, Writing Skills, Humanities
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Monahan, Pat – English Journal, 2008
School administrators across the U.S. are asking literature teachers to become reading teachers, and not surprisingly, many secondary teachers are having difficulty with this transition. The author's transition to reading teacher was hurried by her dissatisfaction with lessons that featured question-answer discussions. Curious about how students…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement, Reading Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Administrators
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Sallee, Buffy; Rigler, Neil – English Journal, 2008
Rethinking homework is a necessary step in improving teaching. Effective homework benefits students by taking into account their individual differences, while offering teachers greater control in their planning. In essence, rethinking homework takes teachers back to teaching, and to the question of what educators want students to come away from…
Descriptors: Homework, High School Students, English Teachers, Secondary School Teachers
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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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English Journal, 2006
This article presents compelling reasons from teachers why they teach grammar. Amy Benjamin from Hendrick Hudson High School says, she teaches grammar for two reasons. The first is that grammar instruction gives students metalanguage, "language about language." The second reason is that students are interested in language--its changes and…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Grammar, Secondary School Teachers, Metalinguistics