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  • 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
  • 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
  • Education Urban Legend

    Some urban legends are quite popular such as: the man with a hook on Lover’s Lane who loses it on a couple’s door handle, the kids who drive without headlights until flashed by another car, and then they follow and beat the person, the percentages of HIV positive donated blood, babies born in-flight are given free flights forever, ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on April 23, 2008
  • Movie and BBQ

    I turned the movie evening with my students into a hot dog feed. While they watched the movie (Minority Report because of reading Julius Caesar), I barbecued hot dogs and provided chips and pop. It was great! The best part was watching the kids figure out why I showed them this Tom Cruise action flick. Suddenly [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on April 16, 2008
  • Beautiful In So Many Ways

    Everyone deserves a dance. And, everyone deserves a chance to dance. This story is one of those which reinforces why I love working with educators and why I have faith in our youth. Students, alongside teachers and parents, made an often overlooked group of young people feel as lucky as the Prom King and Queen. [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on March 28, 2008
  • The Fish Bowl

    I use a lesson format I call the fish bowl. Really, it’s a modified Socratic Seminar except that every student is not required to be an active speaking participant. I have 8-9 students circle up in the middle of the room with their notebooks and texts while the rest of the students make a circle [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on February 13, 2008
  • Discovery and Decoration

    Eureka! I created a way to keep my bulletin boards changing frequently without increasing my workload. I know it’s not rocket science or a monumental unearthing of educational knowledge, but I got the students to do the work. I copied off a lengthy list of events, people, and items dealing with the 1920s in preparation for [...]
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on February 6, 2008
  • Great Week Ahead

    I have a fantastic week ahead. In my American Literature course we are finishing Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death” and “The Raven.” Then the students get to finish their final projects, which they created for themselves. In my College in the H.S. class we are reviewing for next week’s final, and then these ...
    Posted to The Doc Is In (Weblog) by Anonymous on January 21, 2008