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Catherine Burwell – English Journal, 2017
Currently, more than 50 of the top 100 YouTube channels feature gameplay, a popularity largely fueled by young audiences. Let's Play videos (often known simply as LPs) typically include gameplay footage accompanied by simultaneous commentary recorded by the player. This article explores three ways English educators might use Let's Play videos and…
Descriptors: Video Games, English Instruction, Literacy, Video Technology
Chris Gilbert – English Journal, 2014
The English Language Arts (ELA) standards are compositionally flawed and further distorted by a high-stakes environment that discourages balanced, meaningful pedagogy; to subvert this reality, teachers must practice subterfuge by foregrounding Personal Standards as the primary drivers of instruction. This author discusses how ELA instructors must…
Descriptors: Common Core State Standards, Language Arts, English Instruction, Standards
Gilbert, Chris – English Journal, 2013
The author critiques covers of "Ebony" and "GQ" magazines in order to expose race and class narratives, and he encourages teachers to help students to become more aware of the ways in which other images "connote cultural information." Because of the prevalence of images in contemporary society, it is imperative that…
Descriptors: Criticism, Periodicals, Visual Literacy, Race
Shoemaker, Brandon – English Journal, 2013
How teachers can use such materials as parallel-text editions, graphic novels, and film adaptations to increase students' understanding of and interest in Shakespeare was the impetus for a classroom action research project that examined the effects of teaching methods on student comprehension and engagement. The author of this article…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Cartoons, Films, Teaching Methods
Stanton, Christine Rogers; Sutton, Karl – English Journal, 2012
In two projects described in this article, the authors discuss the use of Photovoice and Elder Interviews to draw upon visual and spoken forms of community-based literacy, generate ideas for written projects, promote a connection to community and culture, and engage students in critical analysis of writing process. Both projects took place in…
Descriptors: Literacy, American Indians, American Indian Students, Criticism
Buehler, Jennifer – English Journal, 2009
Rarely do students and teachers see themselves as people who have the authority to talk back to the gatekeepers; instead, they are on the receiving end of a conversation begun by others. But the conversation about young adult (YA) books--like the authors who write them--is a living thing. Students and teachers can help to shape it. In this…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Interpersonal Communication, Young Adults, Books
Wilson, Maja – English Journal, 2010
In society, expertise bestows directive power--the authority to tell others what to do and how to do it, or simply to do it for them. In a school system that still operates on an authoritarian model, the author's expertise as a writer and teacher gives her directive prerogative when responding to student writing. Traditionally, teachers have used…
Descriptors: Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction, Teacher Role, Expertise
Franklin, Keri – English Journal, 2010
As teachers, the time they get to talk with peers, their friends, is an important time because there is never enough of it. Why not allow students the opportunity to chat with friends--the same courtesy the author appreciated in meetings with peers? Through talk, students can improve their conversational skills, which in turn would help their…
Descriptors: Conferences (Gatherings), Writing Skills, Writing Instruction, Interpersonal Competence
Dobson, Meaghan Hanrahan; Gillespie, Joanne S.; Fogle, Andy – English Journal, 2009
Three English teachers share their ideas on how their work as a writer helped them as a teacher. One teacher has found that the desire for meaningful response to her own writing has led her to evaluate her students similarly. A second teacher discusses how personal experience translates into teaching how to convey rejection in a useful and tactful…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Teacher Effectiveness, Writing (Composition), Authors
Wissman, Kelly – English Journal, 2009
When Don Imus made his infamous comments about the Rutgers University women's basketball team in 2007, he provoked widespread (yet short-lived) attention to the circulation of language practices demeaning to women of color. In an elective autobiographical writing course that the author designed with and for urban high school girls, the students…
Descriptors: Females, Poetry, Urban Schools, Authors
Burke, Jim – English Journal, 2009
Imagination is what the U.S. was built on and what it requires to achieve and maintain its status in the future. In this article, the author says that there is a failure of imagination in education in the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) era. Scores on tests do not translate into creativity or imagination; nor do such tests and the curriculum that…
Descriptors: Imagination, Federal Legislation, Education Work Relationship, English Teachers
Nelms, Ben F. – English Journal, 2008
As heated as the controversy is and has been, most opponents of homework actually support at least a modest amount of "independent study," and the most ardent advocates are likely to emphasize moderation in the amount of homework and emphasis on the quality of independent assignments. In this article, the author focuses on this troublesome issue…
Descriptors: Homework, Independent Study, Grade 8, Teacher Educators

Osburg, Barbara – English Journal, 2003
Considers how in the name of imagination, teachers often design activities and assignments that violate the text around which the lesson is focused and that mislead students about its meaning. Argues that imagination for its own sake is not the key to good classroom practice or profound understanding. Suggests that the best communication comes…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Criticism, Curriculum Problems, Imagination
Golub, Jeffrey N. – English Journal, 2004
The impact of Charles Weingartner's life and work on the English education and subversive activity is discussed. He collaborated on a book called "Teaching as a Subversive Activity", which criticized the outdated teaching methods and called for making the education relevant.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Relevance (Education), English Instruction, Criticism
Webb, Allen – English Journal, 2007
When the literature anthologies did not arrive, Allen Webb turned to the Internet, where he found a wealth of classic and contemporary e-texts. Using these online resources opened up possibilities for new ways of teaching and learning traditional skills of close reading and critical analysis. Students created blogs of poems and commentary,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Criticism, Anthologies, Internet
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