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Showing page 1 of 3 (21 total posts)
  • Teaching the Diction Analysis

    This week my students are working on the diction analysis, which is an assignment requiring the students do the following: choose a section of text containing about 150 words, identify at least 6 literary devices, persuasive techniques, or logical fallacies, explain the effect of each device, compose a paragraph explaining the context of the ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on October 5, 2008
  • Happy As A Clam

    My students know I am a fan of word and phrase etymologies, so they routinely ask me from where words and phrases stem. One of my favorites is “happy as a clam” because it’s one that mystifies the students. From what I have been told and read, the original phrase was “happy as a clam at high tide” when the clams are ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on August 6, 2008
  • Reading in the Contemporary World

    Two of my favorite teachers, both journalism instructors, are admittedly not the typical readers. One reads only non-fiction books, newspaper and magazine articles, and online list serves while the other contends he’s “not the typical English teacher” because he only reads online articles, list serves, and blogs. Even though they ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 27, 2008
  • Creating Relevance in the Classroom

    One aspect of teaching, which can be quite difficult, is how to make what we teach relevant to students today. Kids seem to think they cannot possibly connect the writings of yesteryear with the hectic, technological, global lives led today; however, creating relevance need not be too difficult. I teach English and one of my favorite [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 22, 2008
  • The Purpose of Assessment

    During my student teaching my mentor teacher asked a seemingly straight-forward and simple question: why did you give a test after reading that novel? My response, an obviously silly and meaningless one (even after some thought), was “because it ends the unit.” I thought that unit closure required a test. A test meant we are finished ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 10, 2008
  • The Year in Review

    I’m such a geek when it comes to teaching. Two weeks after the school year concludes, I’m ready to start again. Since I can’t have a classroom full of students to teach, I go back and revise and adapt my curriculum lessons during July and August. This year I have some more revisions to make, [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on June 19, 2008
  • Time for Persuasive Speeches

    With my Sophomore Honors students, the final unit remaining is the persuasive speech unit. Generally, the students do quite well with these 3-5 minute speeches, and I require the following: three types of sources (i.e. periodical, internet source, survey, scientific study, interview, etc.), a minimum of eight solid facts, an anecdote on the ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on June 1, 2008
  • Two Novels of Race Relations

    Two novels I taught this year were To Kill A Mockingbird and A Gathering of Old Men. Prior to and during reading these novels, I had the kids look at some songs, poems, and historical context. Here are a few of my favorite things concerning the race relations in the novels. Prior to reading To Kill [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 26, 2008
  • The Matrix in Class - Part II

    Today we started the film The Matrix and the kids are enthralled. What a great feeling to know they are learning the literary devices and analyzing while enjoying the process. Also, I introduced the double-entry journal, the Christ-like character attributes, and the heroic cycle. Everyone dove right in to the the work. While watching the film I ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 23, 2008
  • The Matrix in Class

    I purchased some movie units from Michael Vetrie, an alternative high school teacher in Sun Valley, CA, and I’m going to try one tomorrow. I will show The Matrix in half-hour segments, so the students can do the following: compose a double-entry journal, study the film using literary terms, analyze critical quotations in the novel plot how ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 22, 2008
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