Posted inAsk a Teacher, Fine Arts, Literacy

Shakespeare and Americans: The Relationship Starts in the Classroom

“Ill met by moonlight, proud Titania,” reads Karl off the script. He looks confused, “I’m ill?” he looks puzzled. “Am I sick?” “You’re not sick…We are having a fight!” responds an irritated Nicole, who is playing the fairy queen. She continues to read: “What, jealous Oberon! Fairies, skip hence:/I have forsworn his bed and company.” […]

Posted inFeatured, From the Front Lines, Literacy, Social Studies

Profanity: Putting F.U.N. Back in the Discussion of F.U.

It seems, as of late that profanity is used excessively in schools without reservation. Students swear so comfortably, so often that they often pepper classroom responses with many four letter favorites. Maybe I have become old fashioned but the argument that the “f” word is a reasonable noun, verb, an adverb and an adjective has […]

Posted inCommon Core, Featured, Instruction & Curriculum, Literacy, Social Studies

Primary Source Documents—An Easy Tool for Implementation

“Primary source documents”…reading this phrase in the Common Core Standards I felt a bit of fear creep into my mind.  I teach fourth grade.  We are just mastering how to read maps and keys and legends.  Primary source documents?  How on earth would I incorporate those into our classroom and make it meaningful?  Students at […]

Posted inBook Review, Current Events in Education, Featured, High School, Literacy, Opinion

"A Walk in the Woods" – A Great Choice for High School Non-Fiction

There is not enough non-fiction reading assigned in high schools. There are textbooks and fiction,  mostly assigned by English Departments, but there is a dearth of good non-fiction texts offered to students. However, there is one safe text to assign, Bill Bryson’s A Walk in the Woods first published in 1998. [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” […]

Posted inCommon Core, Featured, From the Front Lines, Instruction & Curriculum, Literacy, Uncategorized

On This State Standardized Test, the Story Is Not Literature

March in Connecticut brings two unpleasant realities: high winds and the state standardized tests. Specifically, the Connecticut Academic Performance Tests (CAPT) given to Grade 10th are in the subjects of math, social studies, sciences and English. There are two tests in the English section of the CAPT to demonstrate student proficiency in reading. In one, students are given […]

Posted inCommon Core, Featured, From the Front Lines, Instruction & Curriculum, Literacy

Informational Texts: Speeches Delivered with Love from Bruce and Steve

For teachers who are looking for guidance on how to teach informational texts at the high school level, there is a model lesson on Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address at the EngageNY website. The text of the speech delivered by Lincoln on November 19, 1863, is short enough to fit on two pages or two bronze plaques on a memorial […]