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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
Genée Ciurus Major – English Journal, 2017
In 2007, Jake, the author's 14-year-old son, died. Though he had a known heart condition, Jake was vibrant and lived a life with no restrictions. The heart attack that killed him was unexpected. As a teacher, the author was left with the question of how to return to the classroom and what she would share with the students. This article explores…
Descriptors: Death, Grief, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Language Arts
Elsie Lindy Olan; Julie A. Pantano – English Journal, 2020
In this article, the authors explore multimodal literacies and how they use literacy contracts and quadrants to help students to examine their identities via writing and the creative arts. A notable outcome of their joint efforts is that when teachers and students transacted with multimodal literacies, they showed value for their personal and…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Student Attitudes, Multiple Literacies, Creative Writing
Victoria Johnston Boecherer – English Journal, 2018
Thomas Nunnally equates five-paragraph format essays with square cucumbers found at farmer's markets: they have an established structure but no argument. The real square cucumbers are students who need a formula to write competently. By providing students with a real audience, a teacher can show that he or she takes students' desires -- and…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Self Esteem, Writing Instruction, Essays
Darren Masserman – English Journal, 2015
This article argues that the goal of an educator is to help students realize they can be effective writers by giving them the ability to demonstrate their skills. Scene writing can make writing seem less like a chore and more like an opportunity to express ideas. As students write scenes that include both dialogue and action, they gain a deeper…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Language Arts, Writing (Composition), Dramatics
Amy Maupin – English Journal, 2016
The nonfiction letter offers students an opportunity to study a dying art while also gaining insights about people, places, and eras. Teaching students the value of letters teaches community, caring, and connection. Whereas reading great works of literature can and does provide insight into life's purpose and meaning, the nonfiction text of a…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Nonfiction, Language Arts, Self Concept
Kristine E. Pytash – English Journal, 2016
This article draws on the experiences of two young adults, Sean and Jerome, who participated in a writing workshop at a juvenile detention center. The young adults composed screenplays to explore how writing could call on their unique perspectives and life experiences to amplify their beliefs. While some educators emphasize a skills-based…
Descriptors: Film Study, Young Adults, Juvenile Justice, Delinquency
Connolly, Maureen; Giouroukakis, Vicky – English Journal, 2012
According to a 2009 AP-MTV survey of 1,247 people ages 14-24, 50% of those surveyed have experienced cyberbullying (Gatti 1). Victims were twice as likely to need help from a mental health professional and were three times more likely to drop out of school than those surveyed who did not report being cyberbullied (5). Given this alarming social…
Descriptors: Bullying, Computer Mediated Communication, Adolescents, Victims
Goebel, Bruce A. – English Journal, 2009
In this time of high-stakes tests and school accountability, English classrooms have been pushed to become increasingly serious places. Combining NCLB pressures with desires to use literature to do important cultural work--such as fighting ethnic, gender, and social-class discrimination--virtually bans humor from the classroom. This is unfortunate…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Teachers, Writing Assignments, Sentences
Brown, Stacey – English Journal, 2007
Stacey Brown energizes high school students with "brain-twisting" writing prompts, word games to hone vocabulary and spelling skills, and art to show complex ideas. Additionally, reading aloud to her class models fluent reading, expands students' vocabularies, builds community, and stimulates student-led discussions about the novel. (Contains 1…
Descriptors: Spelling, High School Students, Educational Games, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewedBenson, Sheila; And Others – English Journal, 1998
Presents 13 short descriptions from 13 different English teachers describing the most effective writing assignment they have ever given. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness, Language Arts
Peer reviewedMcMahon, Maureen – English Journal, 1999
Argues that humor is an invaluable teaching tool in English classes. Describes how the author and her students: found humor an important means of discovering profound truths in Shakespeare's dramas; enjoyed the epic "Paradise Lost"; worked with satire in Chaucer; and used humor in students' own creative activities. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classics (Literature), English Instruction, Humor
Peer reviewedBingen, Mark J. – English Journal, 2000
Describes a very successful writing assignment the author uses with his high school English students, in which students write about a letter of the alphabet. Notes that this assignment grants freedom for exploration and voice, the raw material for shaping and can be used to teach everything from the writing of poetry to essays for college…
Descriptors: English Instruction, High Schools, Language Arts, Student Writing Models
Peer reviewedNilsen, Alleen Pace; Nilsen, Don L. F. – English Journal, 1999
Counters six arguments against humor in English classes. Presents arguments in support of studying humor in English classes, noting its usefulness and benefits. (SR)
Descriptors: Censorship, Cultural Differences, English Instruction, Grammar
Peer reviewedGreco, Norma – English Journal, 1999
Discusses writing assignments in response to literature that encourage adolescent female students to construct knowledge by allowing the self back into the process of knowing and in so doing to discover their own voices and a position of authority. Argues that through such authentic engagement with texts, young women can become more active,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, English Instruction, Females, Language Arts
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