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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results Save | Export
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Sean Hackney – English Journal, 2020
For the past ten years, the author has been teaching a dual credit college first-year writing course to seniors in high school. In this article, the author presents a framework for writing instruction and evaluation that centers on students responding to current topics and issues through digital writing for an authentic audience.
Descriptors: Digital Literacy, Dual Enrollment, College Credits, High School Seniors
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Harrison Michael Campbell – English Journal, 2021
In this article, classroom researcher Harrison Campbell recounts his research into the literacy experiences of eight junior high (grades 8 and 9) students over the course of a school semester in Western Canada. Using phenomenological inquiry, Campbell invited students into a process of making meaning through experience. These experiences, brought…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 8, Grade 9, Drama
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Kira Leekeenan; Holland White – English Journal, 2021
In this article, the authors share what they learned from their study of writing communities, which they refer to as writing groups, during the 2017-18 school year. The authors propose a conceptual framework for writing groups that engages students in the process of designing and participating as writers with their peers. The framework emphasizes…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Peer Relationship
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Sarah Chanski; Lindsay Ellis – English Journal, 2017
Little research has been done on key concepts related to peer feedback, including whether learners are able to transfer skills learned to future related tasks or to other classes and content areas, and whether the gains observed through peer feedback are the result of "giving" peer feedback or of "receiving" peer feedback. The…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Critical Thinking, Reflection
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Sarah W. Beck; Karis Jones; Scott Storm – English Journal, 2019
Dynamic and responsive methods enable teachers to assess students' writing skills precisely and equitably, and to empower students of diverse skill levels to develop their writing. Assessing writing with equity-minded precision requires paying close attention to students' performances as writers, identifying challenges in those performances, and…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Writing Evaluation, Student Empowerment, Writing Skills
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Nicole Sieben – English Journal, 2017
This article shares what the author has learned as a high school English teacher and researcher from speaking with teachers and high school and college students over the past five years about what sort of feedback has been most helpful in students' development as writers. When examining the data and looking for overlapping themes in responses, six…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Secondary School Students, High School Teachers
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Christina Melly – English Journal, 2018
This article describes the implementation of blogging in ninth-grade pre-advanced placement language arts classes to support strong writing practices. In particular, the writing workshop's elements of student choice, continuing revision, discussion of craft, publication, and process orientation meshed well with digital composition. Blogging in the…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Web Sites, Student Empowerment, Language Arts
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Raymond Pape – English Journal, 2015
As close reading assessment becomes ubiquitous in secondary education, so too does our interest in new literacies. Though online reading may seem to be at cross purposes with "on paper" close reading, this author suggests how the two may successfully intersect. The close reading initiative at Hamilton-Wenham Regional High School in…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Secondary Education, Electronic Learning, Technology Uses in Education
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Bickens, Sarah; Bittman, Franny; Connor, David J. – English Journal, 2013
This article provides an overview of the Autobiography Project, listing the topics of the ten chapters and the targeted skills that accompany them. The authors discuss the purposes of each chapter and describe the methods incorporated to promote the four broad components of literacy. This unit also addresses almost all components of the Common…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, State Standards, Academic Standards, Language Arts
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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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Guler, Nilufer – English Journal, 2013
This article suggests effective approaches to teaching English language learners in ways that can be of benefit to all students in mainstream middle and high school English classes. The five approaches described herein that mainstream ESL teachers can do to make assessments more accurate and reliable, as well as to address heterogeneity, are: (1)…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, Mainstreaming, Teaching Methods, Literacy
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Mayer, Melanie – English Journal, 2009
After 20 years in the classroom, the author recently returned to graduate school. It wasn't by choice. It was to prove to the "powers that be" at the college where she adjuncts that she is "current" on issues of basic writing. Her master's degree, earned decades before, was insufficient. She was a reluctant student, to say the least; having taught…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Theory Practice Relationship, Writing Instruction, Reading
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Scimone, Anthony J. – English Journal, 2010
Like many other dimensions of everyday life, people's need to satisfy themselves with stuff derives from deep impulses and responds to both obvious and subtle images. Ultimately, it isn't the commodities people buy so much as the behaviors they exhibit that are worth critical examination. What better way, then, to understand this phenomenon than…
Descriptors: Life Style, Purchasing, Consumer Economics, Young Adults
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Miller, Jeanetta – English Journal, 2009
The author believes that imagination is alive in the high school classroom, but it is pale and sickly, suffering from a long decline in which teachers have confined it to its most decorous forms of expression--inference and interpretation--and become ambiguous about whether or not it is truly welcome. To rouse imagination in the high school…
Descriptors: Imagination, High Schools, Assignments, Writing (Composition)
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Graff, Nelson – English Journal, 2009
Some scholars writing about improving students' reading and integrating reading and writing instruction suggest using think-aloud techniques to teach students reading comprehension skills. Using think-alouds to teach reading comprehension and then the read-aloud protocol technique (which is based on think-alouds) for peer review has two major…
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Peer Evaluation, Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction
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