Found this website during our TEMS314 class.
It is a great site that students can use to help them create persuasive websites. They log in using a specific teacher code, and their work is saved on the site, allowing the teacher to check it as the students work.
It seems pretty neat, and I'd love to try it someday in my own classroom.
Found this site while searching for instructional strategies for my group research project. There are a lot of awesome strategies on this site!!! I found some of the ones that we've covered in class, but there's a bunch of new ones too. I bookmarked this site, and I recommend that you all do too. :)
Thought this was an interesting article that deals with two issues: social racism and reading comprehension. Many teenagers have read Hunger Games (we took a poll in my 9th grade class today and over half of the class had read the books and about a third had seen the movie) and many are also going to see the movie that was just recently released on Friday. It's interesting to talk to students about the differences between the two, but this article points out an even deeper issue when people do not read closely. It's fascinating, and the racist issues this article presents are disgusting, but it is something that we may deal with as teachers in a diverse world.
Journal Article #1
Summary: Student's identities are formed through their social interactions and their literacy experiences. Literacy identity is often narrow: "good reader", "poor writer", etc. These are very inflexible descriptions and can lead students to be stuck in roles instead of growing their literacy skills. This article explores the development of identity through both students social interactions and their literacy experiences. Through three studies, it shows how these two concepts are interconnected. This article also discusses how literacy is a form of language and communication, how people interact because of literacy and the way that people define and construct themselves in order to accomplish life goals. This article also explores the role that teachers have in forming their students' literacy identities. It gives examples of three different and diverse classroom experiences with teachers who have different approaches to teaching literacy.
Link to PDF: http://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1218&context=gse_pubs&sei-redir=1&referer=http%3A%2F%2Fscholar.google.com%2Fscholar%3Fstart%3D30%26q%3Dliteracy%2Bschools%2Beducation%26hl%3Den%26as_sdt%3D1%2C23%26as_ylo%3D2010%26as_subj%3Dsoc%2Beng#search=%22literacy%20schools%20education%22
Citation: Hall, L. et al. (2009) "Teacher Identity in the Context of Literacy Teaching: Three Explorations of Classroom Positioning and Interaction in Secondary Schools." Teaching and Teacher Education. Vol. 26(2). p. 234-243.