Skip to main content

Home/ English Teachers/ Group items tagged youth

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Cindy Marston

Youth Voices - 0 views

  •  
    A site for students to share their digital work
anonymous

Blog: Boys blokes books - 0 views

  •  
    boys, blokes, books and bytes promotes reading. It is a project of the Centre for Youth Literature,
Gloria Custodio

Center for Digital Storytelling - 0 views

  •  
    "The Center for Digital Storytelling is an international not-for-profit community arts organization rooted in the craft of personal storytelling. We assist youth and adults around the world in using media tools to share, record, and value stories from their lives, in ways that promote artistic expression, health and well being, and justice."
Rick Beach

Research Findings Released: Engaging Youth in Social Media - Is Facebook the New Media ... - 2 views

  •  
    research on the value of a social networking environmental-action tool on Facebook on civic engagement
Van Piercy

Mrs. Dutta Writes a Letter (Part Two) - 0 views

    • Van Piercy
       
      Show Tagore Youtube video of his music.
  • scissors- knives-choppers, scissors- knives- choppersto bring the children running.
    • Van Piercy
       
      Funny contrasts here--children running and scissors.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • ust tidy grass and a few pale- blue flowers
  • whose name she doesn't know
    • Van Piercy
       
      Her alienation from even knowing names of local plants.
  • privacy
  • she disapproves of smoking, especially in women
  • She does not wave back or smile.
  • Khoka
  • d it is as though merciful time has given her back her youth, that sweet, aching urgency of being needed again.
Andrew Spinali

Was Dickens's Christmas Carol borrowed from Lowell's mill girls? - Ideas - The Boston G... - 0 views

  • Dickens had encountered that narrative trope in the stories written by the Lowell mill girls, who typically published either anonymously or under pseudonyms like “Dorothea” or “M.” In one anonymous story called “A Visit from Hope,” the narrator is “seated by the expiring embers of a wood fire” at midnight, when a ghost, an old man with “thin white locks,” appears before him. The ghost takes the narrator back to scenes from his youth, and afterward the narrator promises to “endeavor to profit by the advice he gave me.” Similarly, in “A Christmas Carol,” Scrooge is sitting beside “a very low fire indeed” when Marley’s ghost appears before him. And, later, after Scrooge has been visited by the ghosts of Christmases Past, Present, and Future, he promises, “The spirits of all Three shall strive within me. I will not shut out the lessons that they teach.”
  • That’s not how the scholars see it. Literary borrowing, even quite detailed borrowing, was accepted practice at the time—“It was just a different way of looking at things back then,” says Archibald. (“American Notes,” for instance, includes many pages of writing by the famed 19th-century physician Samuel Gridley Howe, all without attribution, and apparently without any thought by Dickens that he was doing something improper.)
Cindy Marston

Response Guides | Youth Voices - 0 views

  •  
    Great resource for teaching students how to respond to online posts
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page