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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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David Slomp; Rita Leask; Taylor Burke; Kacie Neamtu; Lindsey Hagen; Jaimie Van Ham; Keith Miller; Sean Dupuis – English Journal, 2018
According to the authors, Horizon Writing Project (HWP), is a collaborative research project that emerged from a mentorship program implemented for language arts teachers in southern Alberta, Canada. Seven English teachers participated in the project: Rita, Sean, Jaimie, Taylor, and Kacie, who teach senior high, and Keith and Lindsey, who teach…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grants, Program Proposals, Middle School Students
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deGravelles, Karin H.; Bach, Jacqueline; Hyde, Yvette; Hebert, Angelle – English Journal, 2012
How might team teaching, young adult novels, and zines work together to engage students in thinking about, writing about, and building community? Four researchers worked with three eighth-grade English teachers and one student teacher to find out. The four eighth-grade English teachers teach as a team, meeting formally at least once a week to plan…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Novels, Team Teaching, Student Teachers
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Potter, Reva; Fuller, Dorothy – English Journal, 2008
Grammar checkers do not claim to teach grammar; they are tools to bring potential problems to the writer's attention. They also offer only formal and Standard English preferences, limiting the freer expression of some literary forms. Without guidance, students may misuse the checker, become frustrated, and feel discouraged. Users must be…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Action Research, Grammar, English
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Donovan, Jeanne M. – English Journal, 1990
Surveys 40 middle-school language-arts teachers in 3 local public school districts. Finds that (1) most teachers believed it was important for their students to master grammar; and (2) teachers spend considerable time teaching grammar. Argues that grammar deserves a prominent place in the middle school curriculum. (RS)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Research, Grammar, Junior High Schools
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Ketter, Jean; Buter, Diana – English Journal, 2004
Literary experiences were provided to students to help them connect with characters whose lives and experiences differed vastly from theirs and to see the way in which their own race, class and gender shaped their understanding of the world. However, the findings indicate that a focus on critically reading multicultural literature students helped…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Middle School Students, Student Attitudes, Cultural Awareness
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Neubert, Gloria A.; McNelis, Sally J. – English Journal, 1990
Studies the effectiveness of teaching middle school students to give focused and specific responses to their peers during collaborative writing response groups using the organizational technique called "Praise-Question-Polish" (PQP). Finds that the number of specific comments rose significantly while the number of vague comments dropped…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Collaborative Writing, Instructional Effectiveness, Junior High Schools
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Hudson, Tate – English Journal, 1987
Argues against direct formal grammar instruction in middle school. Notes that even students with high IQ's frequently score low on cognitive development measures, with children in the concrete stage of thinking usually unable to identify simple subjects and verb phrases. Recommends that until students achieve a level of formal reasoning they…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Educational Research, English Curriculum