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Gary Soto – English Journal, 2019
Poet and essayist Gary Soto considers the senses while reading and the purpose of maintaining a reading life. According to the author, it's the pleasure of a story, and the intimacy of getting to know the characters well enough to exercise tenderness (or dislike) toward them. It's to weigh but not judge the behavior of characters, who are like…
Descriptors: Reading Habits, Reading Motivation, Reading Attitudes, Reader Text Relationship
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Dawan Coombs – English Journal, 2020
Research demonstrates that intrinsic motivation "drives students' amount of reading" and that students who read for pleasure, to explore topics they care about, and for interest "read a lot and achieve greatly" (Guthrie 2). As teachers incline their pedagogy to student interests, ownership, self- efficacy, social interaction,…
Descriptors: Learning Motivation, Student Interests, Self Concept, Team Sports
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Narter, David – English Journal, 2013
David Narter has taught English and AP Language and Composition at Leyden High School for 19 years. As a high school English teacher, it breaks his heart to see a gradual shedding of pleasure reading and its academic benefits. Yet, it is a trend he says he has grown familiar with among his best students, who, as they grow older, are taught that…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Recreational Reading, Metacognition, Reading Instruction
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Heverly, Jerry – English Journal, 2011
It's one of those assumptions of the English teaching game that students must learn and store up vocabulary as a precondition of tackling literature or history or any of those fields that feature big words. How, some ask, could a child read a challenging passage if he or she didn't understand those key, usually multisyllabic, words often sprinkled…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, English Instruction, Educational Strategies, Context Effect
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Meth, Jessica Matthews – English Journal, 2010
In her role as supervisor to middle school and high school student teachers, the author has observed dozens of students who avoid reading at every turn. She has also known frustrated teachers, daunted by the challenge of getting student readers up to speed. To better encourage a desire in students to read, she sets out to experiment with themes,…
Descriptors: Reading Motivation, Middle School Students, High School Students, Self Efficacy
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Quinn, Timothy; Eckerson, Todd – English Journal, 2010
One of the most important challenges a teacher faces is motivating his or her students to complete reading assignments and to complete them carefully. After all, if students bring to class a basic understanding of the text up for discussion, much deeper learning can occur than if the teacher is forced to spend time explaining the reading to…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Reading Assignments, Discussion, Reading Tests
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Gomes, Cheryl – English Journal, 2010
The authors, a ninth-grade teacher in a Special Education English class (Cheryl) and a teacher educator (Bucky), know of each other's work through a mutual interest in graphic novels. This article describes what happened in Cheryl's class when her students read "American Born Chinese" and discussed that text in a blog with its author, Gene Luen…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Norms, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Novels
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Dredger, Katie – English Journal, 2008
Katie Dredger was a successful AP English Literature and Composition teacher when she began questioning the exclusivity her course represented. Here she shares how she was able to open her course to all students willing to attempt the challenge, while maintaining and even raising her intellectual standards. (Contains 5 figures.)
Descriptors: English Literature, Reflective Teaching, Advanced Placement Programs, Reading Strategies
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Kohn, Alfie – English Journal, 2010
The author suggests that it is impossible to motivate students. He said that in fact, it's not really possible to motivate anyone, except perhaps oneself. What a teacher "can" do--"all" a teacher can do--is work with students to create a classroom culture, a climate, a curriculum that will nourish and sustain the fundamental inclinations that…
Descriptors: Reading, Role, Classroom Environment, Teacher Effectiveness
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Adams, Megan Glover – English Journal, 2009
Cross-age tutoring, in which older and younger students work together to improve their ELA skills, is not a new concept; Linda D. Labbo and William H. Teale explored it as a tool for poor readers as early as 1990. The author has found that using tutoring with video games also works well. Students have the opportunity to read aloud collaboratively…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Video Games, Adolescents, Cross Age Teaching
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Jolley, Kristie – English Journal, 2008
Junior high school teacher Kristie Jolley believes students become more willing and motivated to practice reading strategies when they are "comfortable within their realm of literacy." Background knowledge of video games helps students succeed in understanding and enjoying game-based texts, which she incorporates into her classroom library as…
Descriptors: Video Games, Reading Strategies, Reading Motivation, Junior High School Students
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Eikmeier, Ginger M. – English Journal, 2008
Students in Ginger M. Eikmeier's high school classes link themes and terms from their readings to episodes of "The Simpsons." Because students are already familiar with "The Simpsons," Eikmeier believes that using the show supports students' comprehension and retention by activating prior knowledge. Additionally, it shows students that she cares…
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Reaction, Reader Response, Prior Learning
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Smith, Donald G. – English Journal, 1999
Presents 10 specific reasons in response to a student's question "Why should we read literature?" Answers the question from 10 angles: escape, empathy, mirror, time machine, cultural heritage, language, art, "lifesaver,""reading of life," and fear of change. (NH)
Descriptors: Language Processing, Literature, Literature Appreciation, Reading Motivation
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Jacobs, Dale – English Journal, 2007
Historically, comics have been viewed as a "debased or simplified word-based literacy," explains Dale Jacobs, who considers comics to be complex, multimodal texts. Examining Ted Naifeh's "Polly and the Pirates," Jacobs shows how comics can engage students in multiple literacies, furthering meaning-making practices in the classroom and beyond.
Descriptors: Cartoons, Literacy, Literary Genres, Visual Literacy
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Early, Maureen – English Journal, 2004
Many students hate reading and they see reading as a chore. Opinions and suggestions of many teachers are given for the most effective and successful reading one, which states that book sharing motivates and excites students about reading.
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Attitudes, Reading Achievement, Reading Motivation
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