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Showing 1,051 to 1,065 of 5,954 results
Peer reviewedWood, Susan Nelson – English Journal, 2001
Describes how Gary Paulsen's novels for young adults transformed the author's teaching, and caused her eighth-grade reluctant readers to read as if inspired. Relates how Paulsen's stories about his adventures and misadventures in education and in life stirred students to become active participants in the reading process. Offers a select…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, Books, English Instruction
Peer reviewedGeorge, Marshall A. – English Journal, 2001
Relates stories of three middle and high school teachers to describe how teachers can effectively integrate young adult literature into the curriculum. Notes a variety of strategies, including the particularly effective use of multiple genre thematic units, where a variety of texts are linked by some common theme, allowing students to use…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, English Instruction, Integrated Activities, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedO'Donnell-Allen, Cindy; Hunt, Bud – English Journal, 2001
Examines what happened when college students enrolled in an adolescent literature class met young readers encountering young adult literature in a Book Club setting. Describes this inquiry-based partnership between a university classroom and junior high and elementary classrooms, and the accompanying challenges and benefits for preservice…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, College School Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction
Peer reviewedDavis, Joy B.; MacGillivray, Laurie – English Journal, 2001
Examines narratives and novels written for young adults that deal with teenage pregnancy and parenting. Discusses eight common messages found in 17 such short stories and books, and notes three areas of significant silence. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Adolescents, Books, Early Parenthood
Peer reviewedWood, Susan Nelson; Quackenbush, Kim – English Journal, 2001
Presents results from an informal survey of 50 individuals of all ages about the Harry Potter phenomenon. Offers four suggestions for the English language arts classroom about a place "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" might have in a school's curriculum, dealing with transforming text, understanding genre, responding to texts with personal…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Childrens Literature, Class Activities, English Instruction
Peer reviewedCarroll, Pamela Sissi – English Journal, 2001
Collects and presents comments made by authors of young adult literature about their writing and about literature. Discusses how writing for young adults and teaching young adults might be related; why write books for adolescent readers; what their goals are as writers of young adult literature; and how they move from a blank page to a finished…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, English Instruction, Language Arts
Peer reviewedMurphy, Elaine – English Journal, 2001
Describes how the author's eighth-grade students went on a yearlong search to find the literature of the twenty-first century. Describes how the students read widely, chose their own books, evaluated them according to topic questions loosely based on the theme of breaking stereotypes, kept and shared journals, and carried out projects of their…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Class Activities, Curriculum, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewedNellen, Ted – English Journal, 2001
Offers some theory and practical tips from many teachers on incorporating technology smoothly and effectively into the classroom to create an interactive learning atmosphere. Notes that the single most important reason for success was reliance on the most valuable resource: the kids. Discusses teacher training and a technology team, web-based…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Educational Technology, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedTigner-Rasanen, Mary – English Journal, 2001
Describes how two teachers at the author's middle school went through a censorship challenge, a difficult experience that ultimately helped teachers and administrators clarify and improve the process of meeting such challenges in the future. Argues that having a written, district-supported procedure for handling challenges, with which all are…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Censorship, English Instruction, Language Arts
Peer reviewedCrowe, Chris – English Journal, 2001
Discusses and answers objections to young adult literature which generally fall into one of two categories: that young adult books are bad because they are not the classics, and/or they corrupt the young. Offers brief descriptions of 12 new or overlooked young adult books worth reading. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Classics (Literature), English Instruction, Language Arts
Peer reviewedWhiteman, Sherri A.; Gordon, Jay L. – English Journal, 2001
Discusses the issue of students buying papers on the Internet. Considers how educators reconcile their ability to teach effectively with their students' ability to cheat and steal without the teacher's knowledge. Suggests a solution by assigning essays that cannot be bought. (SG)
Descriptors: Cheating, Grade 11, Higher Education, Honesty
Peer reviewedVanoverbeke, Christina; Cavanaugh, Judy – English Journal, 2001
Considers, as a "sensitive person," how not to become emotionally involved with students. Notes that teachers learn to balance school and personal life and to handle the emotional baggage that students will sometimes expect teachers to share. (SG)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Psychological Needs, Secondary Education, Teacher Behavior
Peer reviewedDarvin, Jacqueline – English Journal, 2001
Argues for a richer, more varied English Instruction experience for "vocational track" students. Suggests several methods for creating a more powerful vocational/English curriculum. Concludes that it is not the place of any teacher or school to decide what kinds of literacy students will or will not need or want in their futures. (SG)
Descriptors: Career Academies, Curriculum Design, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Peer reviewedRobbins, Bruce – English Journal, 2001
Considers how in many school districts and states, English teachers are being influenced to more directly address the teaching of workplace literacy within the English curriculum. Suggests some functional ways that educators might weave workplace literacy into the existing fabric of the classroom without displacing the important things currently…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedCraig, Judith Cape – English Journal, 2001
Discusses how language arts skills are prerequisite for nearly every occupation. Considers the problem that many prerequisite skills remain hidden until the worker is actually on the job. Notes that for students, the link between school and work is unclear. Looks more in-depth at the language arts demands of police work. (SG)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Curriculum Design, English Instruction, Language Arts


