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Showing 1 to 15 of 150 results Save | Export
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Rich Novack – English Journal, 2025
This article describes literacy practices and outdoor activities in high school English classrooms--framed as critical rambling, a pedagogy seeking to raise awareness of issues like climate justice--with illustrations from a dissertation of teacher research and additional student work.
Descriptors: Language Arts, High School Teachers, Climate, Justice
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Breanne R. Lucy – English Journal, 2021
A teacher remembers her classroom as it used to be before the pandemic as she prepares for a new year of unknowns. Brieanne R. Lucy reflects how before COVID-19 and schools were closed, students in her English class would stand in a circle and read their first thoughts aloud. Students would showcase their command of repetition for effect, sensory…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Classroom Environment, Teaching Methods
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Katie Sluiter – English Journal, 2024
The author's eighth-grade ELA curriculum is rich with opportunities for students to bear witness to a variety of experiences. Besides the Holocaust unit, they read "Ghost Boys" by Jewell Parker Rhodes (2018) while exploring police brutality and segregation; "The Giver" by Lois Lowry (1993) while investigating government…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Adele Bruni Ashley – English Journal, 2021
When teaching a Drama and Theater class the author's students chose August Wilson's "Fences" to focus on the teaching of "dramatic" texts. As the author reread Wilson's play, she noticed that within the first pages is the n-word, used in conversation between two African American men, two friends, and it became an immediate…
Descriptors: Drama, Teaching Methods, Language Arts, Graduate Students
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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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Barrett Rosser; M. E. Talian; Angela Crawford; Reed; Katie Burrows-Stone; June Freifelder; Jennifer Freed; Amy Stornaiuolo – English Journal, 2024
The digital is inextricably woven across people's everyday lives and literacy practices, and English educators are tasked with preparing students to be critical, ethical, and agentic inventors and consumers of digital text. What has crystallized for English educators is an awareness that facilitating "digital discourse"--or the multiple…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, Ethics, Literacy
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Elizabeth Brockman – English Journal, 2020
After ten years of public school teaching and countless student teaching observations, the author knows firsthand that English language arts (ELA) teachers are committed to teaching researched argumentative writing and, further, they often frame their assignments as questions. In this article, the author proposes that ELA teachers accelerate…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Prompting, Persuasive Discourse
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Ben Lathrop – English Journal, 2021
After watching his fifth-grade son perform in "The Taming of the Shrew," Ben Lathrop realized that having learned the play through performance, his son found the experience enjoyable. Moreover, his acting decisions (movements, gestures, vocal inflections) demonstrated that he had at least some understanding of his lines, suggesting that…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Empathy, Academic Achievement, Language Arts
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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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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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Brandie Bohney – English Journal, 2019
A surprising conversation with her young daughter inspired author Brandie Bohney to incorporate mentor texts to help students make sense of convention rules. Since struggling and reluctant readers tend to also be struggling and reluctant writers, the author designed activities that would concentrate on the conventions students most needed to…
Descriptors: Literary Devices, Grammar, Reading Writing Relationship, Language Arts
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Suzanne Kail – English Journal, 2020
An inservice training session triggered a crisis of confidence for the author, a veteran teacher, but it also inspired the author to rethink their approach to teaching reading and writing. While the author attended a conference, the state presenter explained that the new curriculum represents "shifts" in philosophy about teaching…
Descriptors: Common Core State Standards, Writing Instruction, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Ross Collin – English Journal, 2020
Since "English Journal's" (EJ's) founding in 1912, contributors have asked how literature shapes students' ethics, or morals. Ethics, on this account, is about people's ways of imagining and leading good lives. EJ authors explore how reading literature can help students see themselves and the wider world in light of visions of the good…
Descriptors: Models, English Instruction, Ethics, Language Arts
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Mandie B. Dunn; Antero Garcia – English Journal, 2020
Nearly every teacher will experience loss and grief during their years in the classroom. And yet, too often the profession assumes that English language arts (ELA) teachers must hide the emotions that accompany loss. In this article the authors share strategies for supporting English teachers in making sense of their grieving experiences and…
Descriptors: Grief, English Instruction, Language Arts, Teaching Methods
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Charles D. Carpenter – English Journal, 2020
The UK's "Prime Minister's Questions"--a television program that shows parliamentary proceedings and banter between House of Commons members--can be a free, real-world resource for rhetorical analysis opportunities. In this article, the author presents the inherent value of these sessions in the classroom as a means of creatively…
Descriptors: Public Officials, Television, Programming (Broadcast), Discourse Analysis
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