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Showing 1,321 to 1,335 of 5,954 results
Peer reviewedBaines, Lawrence; Baines, Coleen; Kunkel, Anthony; Stanley, Gregory Kent – English Journal, 1999
Describes three basic variations on the process approach to teaching writing witnessed while observing over 300 secondary English teachers: the "classic" process approach, the "antigrammarian" approach, and the "five paragraph" approach. Argues that the idea of error must be allowed back into the classroom, and that lockstep allegiance to a set of…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Teachers, Error Correction, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedDickson, Randi – English Journal, 1999
Describes a community project (based on Kenneth Koch's book "I Never Told Anybody") in which students in a ninth-grade English class paired up with nursing home residents, making regular visits to encourage them to write poetry. Discusses finding a place, getting ready, working together, and what students learned about writing poetry and about…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Class Activities, English Instruction, Frail Elderly
Peer reviewedBrockman, Elizabeth Blackburn – English Journal, 1999
Relates a student's experience writing a college application essay. Argues that switching topics should be redefined as global revision, a "pregnant pause" providing evidence of recursivity, and that adolescent writers who talk about their emerging texts are more likely to reconceptualize their written documents. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, College Admission, English Instruction, Essays
Peer reviewedDonelson, Ken – English Journal, 1999
Offers comments from collectors and dealers on the wonders and all-around fun of collecting books. Presents a short annotated list of books about book collecting and notes one book that will make readers want to collect books. Lists a baker's dozen of other sources on book collecting and presents three quotations to end the matter. (SR)
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Books, English Teachers, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedCrowe, Chris – English Journal, 1999
Discusses the attitudes and issues of reluctant readers by describing the author's son Jonathan, an intelligent young man who came to hate reading. Offers advice for teachers from Jonathan regarding how they can help students enjoy reading more. Presents annotations of 11 new or overlooked young adult books worth reading. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Reading Attitudes, Reading Instruction, Reading Material Selection
Peer reviewedNotman, Tania Sale; Megyeri, Kathy A. – English Journal, 1999
Offers (from the perspective of a first-year teacher) five guidelines to student teachers to help make their student teaching semester more useful and enjoyable. Includes a response from a veteran English teacher. (SR)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Cooperating Teachers, English Instruction, English Teacher Education
Peer reviewedMatthews, Rene; Mingrone, Maria Conti; Zuidema, Leah A.; Mascia, Elizabeth G.; Panousis, Gracie Conway; Perrin, Robert; Franklin, Yolanda; Downing, Karen; Martin, Terry; Schreck, Mary Kim; Giorgis, Cyndi; Pollak, Judy – English Journal, 1999
Presents 10 short articles written by high school and middle school teachers about specific picture books they recommend and how they use them in their classrooms. Concludes with an extensive list of picture books containing examples of specific literary devices. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Writing, Cultural Awareness, English Instruction
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 reviewedBackes, Anthony – English Journal, 1999
Argues that lists of great books ought to reflect both the comic and tragic sides. Discusses problems of censorship and of translation when presenting comic works to classrooms full of teenagers. Describes how the author approaches the teaching of Aristophanes'"Lysistrata," offering students a bowdlerized text and inviting them to improve it. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classics (Literature), English Instruction, High Schools
Peer reviewedMorris, Barbara S. – English Journal, 1999
Describes how the author uses the character George from the television comedy "Seinfeld" to offer her students a challenging inquiry into cultural studies in relation to television character analysis. Describes how the author uses a particular episode to discuss the relation between George's workplace travails and broader issues of cultural…
Descriptors: Characterization, Comedy, Critical Viewing, English Instruction
Peer reviewedRuggieri, Colleen A. – English Journal, 1999
Describes how one high school English teacher used humor when teaching Shakespearean tragedy. Describes how this improved students' attitudes and appreciation of the tragedies, helped them appreciate literature devices in the plays, and helped them review prior to their exam. (SR)
Descriptors: English Instruction, High Schools, Humor, Language Arts
Peer reviewedSoles, Derek – English Journal, 1999
Describes how high school students can give J. Alfred Prufrock (from T.S. Eliot's serious poem "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock") a "makeover" so he can acquire more self-confidence. Shows how this makeover exercise can lead students to a deeper general understanding and appreciation of complex literary characters and of a poem, story, or…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classics (Literature), English Instruction, High Schools
Peer reviewedTatum, Tom – English Journal, 1999
Describes how one high school English teacher uses puns on a regular basis to augment his vocabulary reviews. Argues that doing so aids in developing students' vocabulary, since it compels students to pay closer attention and gives many students a chance to display their creative-thinking skills. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, High Schools, Humor
Peer reviewedBoerman-Cornell, William – English Journal, 1999
Compares the effects of different types of humor in the classroom: humor drawn from literature, humor at the expense of literature, humor that puts someone down, humor that builds up or shapes identity, and humor as a classroom-management tool. Shows how teachers can use laughter as a conduit for students to find humor in what they read and write.…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Humor
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


