ReadWriteThink: Love of War in Tim O’Brien’s “How to Tell a True War Story”

Students explore texts on camaraderie among soldiers as an introduction to the theme of love of war. As a culminating activity, students compose a visual collage depicting their own beliefs about the relationship between love and war. The lesson was submitted by Ellen Greenblatt, of San Francisco, California. It was developed as a companion for The Mystery of Love, a PBS documentary featured in the lesson.

My Writing: Six-Week Roundup

Following the path of procrastination, instead of finishing the edit on the lesson plan I’ve been working on, I’ve been catching up on some blog entries. I’ve sent out a number of pieces, and it seems like a summary is in order (if only to prove to myself that I really have accomplished something recently). Here goes.

  • “Rosetta Stones” published in the October 2006 Classroom Notes Plus in the “Focus on Language” section. The article describes an activity I’ve used to invite students to craft their own Rosetta Stones to show off their abilities with different language and dialects. It’s a great activity for ELL/ESL students.
  • “Effective Writing Assignments in the Age of Standardized Writing Assessment” was rejected by English Journal. I completely restructured and revised it, turning it into Chapter 5 of the book manuscript.
  • “Write Like You Talk” accepted for the Snapshots column of English Journal, to be published in the March 2007 issue. The article describes an wonderful experience I had when I urged students to use their own language, rather than the language of the academy in a writing assignment.
  • “Bridging Television and Literature: Literacy Practices that Matter In and Out of the Classroom” accepted for the Fall 2006 issue of California English. The article lists ten activities that explore television and literature with today’s media-savvy students.
  • “Judged by Language” tentatively accepted for the January 2007 issue of Classroom Notes Plus. The article describes a first-person narrative assignment that introduces some of the political and cultural ways that language affects who we are and how others react to us.
  • Proposed an article on YA novels that deal specifically with e-mail, text messages, and blogs for the Bold Books column of English Journal. Proposal accepted. Need to have the piece written by early to mid December.
  • AND MOST IMPORTANTLY, submitted the six-chapter book manuscript, which has only taken me three years to write. More accurately, it took me 2 years to research and focus my ideas. It was primarily written from June 1 to Nov 1. Now I’m in the waiting stage to see if the reviewers respond positively and it gets accepted.

Depression: Today’s Lesson

Do not ask questions about things that you suspect are going on. When you find out that you were right, it’s just as hurtful as not being sure. Best advice? Just give up on what you want or thought was right. In this great scheme, you’re always going to be just not quite important enough. That is all.

ReadWriteThink: Creative Problem-Solving with Ezra Jack Keats

Students explore problem-solving in this new ReadWriteThink lesson, which explores the challenges faced by characters in Ezra Jack Keats’ picture books. After reading a variety of Keats’ books, students explore the problems that the characters face and solutions that they choose through classroom discussion, story mapping, and comparison and contrast of several Keats’ books. The lesson was written by Vanessa Udry of Tolono, Illinois.

Inbox: Exploring Literature with ELL and ESL Students

As the number of English language learners in our classrooms increases, teachers are challenged to find meaningful ways to teach language in context. These resources suggest ways to discuss language issues in the context of literary discussions, giving teachers the chance to connect with these students in pedagogically useful ways.

Silliness: Tengrrl’s Voting Record

Because I did not want to vote for Republicans, I chose these write-ins:

Sheriff: my manager’s spouse
County Treasurer: my officemate’s spouse
Regional Superintendent of Schools: my manager
Judge of the Circuit Court: my officemate

I couldn’t help it. I did stop the silliness at voting for a motion to impeach Bush and Cheney anyway.

ReadWriteThink: The Children’s Picture Book Project

In this new ReadWriteThink lesson, students evaluate published children’s picture storybooks. Students then plan, write, illustrate, and publish their own children’s picture books. The lesson was submitted by Junius Wright of Charleston, South Carolina.

ReadWriteThink: Bio-graph: Graphing Life Events

This writing activity integrates mathematical graphing with writing and can be used to generate a number of different kinds of writing activities, but lends itself well to biographical and narrative writing. Students interview other students, choose significant life events, rate them, graph them, and write about one or more. The lesson plan was written by Susan Spangler of Fredonia, New York.

My Writing: The Book Manuscript!

A manuscript has been submitted. Deadline met. And now, I’m allowed to sleep.

Inbox: Focus on Native American Heritage

National American Indian Heritage Month is recognized each November as a time to learn more about the history and heritage of Native American peoples. These resources provide strategies to explore Native American literature and heritage in your own classroom.