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Showing page 1 of 3 (22 total posts)
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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, [...]
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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 [...]
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While I assess diction analysis papers, personal essay, and literary analysis essays this week in the evening, I have scheduled enrichment films for my students. Here they are:
Reading A Gathering of Old Men
Malcolm X
Separate But Equal
Mississippi Burning
Reading Frankenstein
Edward Scissorhands
Frankenstein
Reading The Iliad
Troy
300
Any ...
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Here is a list of my favorite literary works of length to teach:
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey
The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare
The Crucible by Arthur Miller
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
What are your favorite pieces of literature to teach?
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I love using film clips or outside of class movies to enrich my students’ learning experiences, and the kids respond enthusiastically when I do use the cinema to enhance units. Any suggestions?
I have the following novels to teach this semester:
To Kill A Mockingbird,
Frankenstein,
Fahrenheit 451,
A Gathering of Old Men, and
Beowulf.
I ...
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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 [...]
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What do Brutus (from The Tragedy of Julius Caesar) and John Anderton (from Minority Report) have in common?
The answer is: pre-crime, preemptive action. And this is why my Sophomores will have the opportunity to watch Minority Report after school with popcorn and pop. I don’t tell the kids why they are watching the film, and [...]
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I took a few pictures of projects for the end of The Great Gatsby unit. Each pair of students had to create an artistic rendition based on a quotation (Eckleburg’s eyes were popular) with an explanation, a sonnet connecting three characters, three essay question answers, and everything compiled into a display of some sort.
Here are a few ...
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A while ago I mentioned that I had my students research topics for the era in which our novels take place. We then used their findings to create visually pleasing bulletin boards. The requirements were:
to include at least one image for each researched item,
to type up a 6-8 sentence description or history for each selected item,
to cite each ...
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The Grapes of Wrath
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Tragedy of Julius Caesar
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