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Tom McHale

Putting It Into Words: The Future of Writing Instruction | EdSurge Guides - 0 views

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    "Sometimes there's nothing more inspiring to aspiring authors than seeing their names in print. The following list of organizations that publish youth work was curated and developed by Lizzy Lemieux, herself a young writer. It was originally published by The Telling Room, which has generously shared it with EdSurge. If you're looking for even more motivation to get your students started, check out The Telling Room's list of 30 books penned by kids"
Ms Vaks

Washington Post suspends columnist for Twitter hoax | The Upshot Yahoo! News - Yahoo! News - 1 views

  • publishing fabricated information on Twitter
  • prove a point about how reporters will run stories in today's fast-moving news environment without  independently verifying the information.
  • ther news outlets went with the apparent scoop
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • guidelines on correctly using social media.
  • why Twitter users (including other journalists) assume respected journalists are publishing accurate information on the medium
  • nobody checking facts or sourcing
  • credibility
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    Credibility of info posted on social media. Role of reposrteers: fact checking sources.
Meg Donhauser

Arts & Humanities - Helium - 0 views

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    Besides being an interesting resource for information (depending on article and author), this might be a way for students to get some work published on the web.
Tom McHale

Maryland Voices: Publishing Students' True Stories - National Writing Project - 0 views

shared by Tom McHale on 08 Jul 17 - No Cached
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    "Teacher-consultant Rus VanWestervelt describes how he founded a journal designed and edited by high school students and devoted entirely to publishing creative nonfiction written by teens throughout Maryland."
Tom McHale

Common Core Practice | - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Each Friday we collaborate with a classroom in New Jersey to test and publish three short writing ideas that address Common Core Standards and that are grounded in New York Times content. This week, all three prompts focus on the common theme of life on a coastline - a topic of great importance to our classroom collaborators, who recently went through weeks of disruption because of Hurricane Sandy."
Tom McHale

Paris Review - The Art of Nonfiction No. 3, John McPhee - 0 views

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    "McPhee has now published more than thirty books, work that first appeared in the pages of The New Yorker, where he has been a staff writer since 1963. He's written about Alaska (Coming into the Country), the Swiss Army (La Place de la Concorde Suisse), and an island in Scotland's Inner Hebrides (The Crofter and the Laird). His subjects have included the atomic bomb, the environmental movement, the U.S. Merchant Marine, Russian art, and fishing. Four books on geology. Three on transport. Two on sports. One book entirely about oranges. He has received an Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and he won the Pulitzer Prize for Annals of the Former World, his comprehensive survey of North American geology. His work has inspired generations of nonfiction writers, and he has distinguished himself especially as a teacher of literary journalism." This is an interview with him about writing and teaching.
Tom McHale

College Essays That Stand Out From the Crowd - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Back in January, when I asked high school seniors to send in college application essays about money, class, working and the economy, I wasn't sure what, if anything, would come in over the transom. But 66 students submitted essays, and with the help of Harry Bauld, the author of "On Writing the College Application Essay," we've selected four to publish in full online and in part in this column. That allowed us to be slightly more selective than Princeton itself was last year. What these four writers have in common is an appetite for risk. Not only did they talk openly about issues that are emotionally complex and often outright taboo, but they took brave and counterintuitive positions on class, national identity and the application process itself. For anyone looking to inspire their own children or grandchildren who are seeking to go to college in the fall of 2014, these four essays would be a good place to start."
Tom McHale

13 Stunning Places to Publish Student Art and Writing | Cult of Pedagogy - 0 views

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    "These publications are the real deal - online and print periodicals that showcase work by student artists and writers, some as young as age five. Many are run by a staff that is partly or completely made up of students. Each one is beautifully designed and features high-quality work. Some even pay. If you know a student who aspires to become a serious writer or artist, encourage them to take the next step and start working toward publication."
Tom McHale

Poetry Pairing | 'viewfinder' - The New York Times - 0 views

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    Happy National Poetry Month! Not only do we offer this month's Poetry Pairing, featuring Kirby Knowlton's "viewfinder" matched with a 2014 article, "Tangled Web of Memories Lingers After a Breakup," by Nick Bilton, but we are also currently running a Found Poem Student Contest as well as an open poetry discussion forum. Join us. To view all of the Poetry Pairings we've published in collaboration with the Poetry Foundation since 2010, and to find activity sheets to help with teaching them, visit our collection.
Tom McHale

9 Tools That Will Help You Become a Better Writer - Product Hunt - Medium - 0 views

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    "If one of your goals for 2017 is to become a better or more frequent writer, there are plenty of tools you can use to help you along the way. We scoured Product Hunt to curate some of our favorite apps for writers at every level. Whether you're looking to improve your grammar, overcome writer's block, or publish your writing anonymously, there's something on this list for you."
Tom McHale

Student Contest | Write an Editorial on an Issue That Matters to You - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Every day during the school year we invite teenagers to share their opinions about questions like these - on topics from hip-hop to climate change - and hundreds do, posting arguments, reflections and anecdotes to our Student Opinion feature. With this, our first-ever Student Editorial Contest, we're asking you to channel that enthusiasm into something a little more formal: short, evidence-based persuasive essays like the editorials The New York Times publishes every day."
Tom McHale

The Grapes of Wrath speaks to our time - Other Views - MiamiHerald.com - 0 views

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    "The Grapes of Wrath was published 75 years ago this month, a seminal masterpiece of American literature that seems freshly relevant to this era of wealth disparity, rapacious banks and growing poverty."
Tom McHale

Teenagers in The Times | May 2014 - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    " five articles that use photography and narrative to reveal the texture of teenage life; next, 11 articles about young people making a splash in the world; and, finally, three news articles about teenage life that we think might provoke interesting classroom discussions. Let us know what you think and how we could make this feature more useful for your classroom. The next installment will be published on July 11."
Tom McHale

J.D. Salinger: The Early Years | English Language Arts and Literacy | Classroom Resourc... - 0 views

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    "This media gallery from American Masters: Salinger features a series of videos that explores how Salinger felt about his writing, his struggle to be published in The New Yorker magazine, and how Holden Caulfield was a reflection of his own life. The associated materials include a background essay, discussion questions and a student activity."
Tom McHale

Good teaching, poor test scores: Doubt cast on grading teachers by student performance ... - 1 views

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    "In the first large-scale analysis of new systems that evaluate teachers based partly on student test scores, two researchers found little or no correlation between quality teaching and the appraisals teachers received. The study, published Tuesday in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Educational Research Association, is the latest in a growing body of research that has cast doubt on whether it is possible for states to use empirical data in identifying good and bad teachers."
Tom McHale

Student Contest | 15-Second Vocabulary Videos - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "We've been publishing a Word of the Day every school day since our blog began, and sometime this December we'll reach our 1,000th. A perfect time, we thought, to celebrate with a contest. So here's the challenge: Along with our collaborators for Word of the Day - the linguists who run Vocabulary.com and Visual Thesaurus - we invite you to create a short video that defines or teaches any of the words in our collection. You have until Dec. 3 to do it, and all the rules and regulations, plus some inspiration from other students and teachers, are below."
Tom McHale

Year-End Roundup, 2014-15 | Language Arts, Journalism and the Arts - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    "Below, all our E.L.A. and arts-related posts. On June 11 we'll publish a list of all of the Student Opinion questions we have asked this year. And if you'd like to go further, here are five more years' worth of lesson plan collections for English language arts, from 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014."
Tom McHale

Gone Home: A Video Game as a Tool for Teaching Critical Thinking Skills | MindShift - 0 views

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    "A recently published game called "Gone Home" is testing the traditional progression of learning by flattening the story. Players have questioned whether it qualifies as a game since it doesn't include traditional points, prizes and leveling up (the game is self-titled as "a story exploration video game"). Critics have praised "Gone Home" as a new way of storytelling, and it's beginning to make its way into the classroom, as a viable substitute for traditional text. The game is non-linear and players have a great deal of agency for filling in the gaps to arrive at their conclusions.*"
Tom McHale

Kurt Vonnegut graphed the world's most popular stories - The Washington Post - 0 views

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    "Vonnegut spelled out the main argument of his thesis in a hilarious lecture, where he also graphed some of the more common story types. (Vonnegut was famously funny and irreverent, and you can hear the audience losing it throughout.) He published the transcript of this talk in his memoir, "A Man Without a Country," which includes his own drawings of the graphs."
Tom McHale

Great writing that's hiding - The Coffeelicious - Medium - 0 views

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    "Somewhere in this stuff lie the real treasures. Full-length articles just published into the air that - it seems - haven't found a 'real' home where the words would meet thousands and thousands of eyes. Often it's obvious why: the topic might be too esoteric, too personal; a rant even. But again, that's what makes it great: unedited, unadulterated, free of compromise, lighter. The highest proof of a mind's music and voice. As I mulled all this the other day, I thought back to the best I read recently. Four came to mind on the spot:"
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