Skip to main content

Home/ UWCSEA Teachers/ Group items tagged essays

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Katie Day

The Essay, an Exercise in Doubt - NYTimes.com - Philip Lopate - 1 views

  •  
    "The essay's job is to track consciousness; if you are fully aware of your mind you will find your thoughts doubling back, registering little peeps of ambivalence or disbelief. According to Theodor Adorno, the iron law of the essay is heresy. What is heresy if not the expression of contrarian doubt about communal pieties or orthodox positions? This is sometimes called "critical thinking," an ostensible goal of education in a democracy. "
Katie Day

Will Fitzhugh on writing good essays on Vimeo - November 2012 - 0 views

  •  
    Will Fitzhugh, founder/editor of The Concord Review, talks with Grade 11 history students about how to get published in his journal - and what makes a good history essay
Katie Day

Writing the Personal Essay - YouTube - 1 views

  •  
    good intro to writing personal essays -- all the best advice in a snazzy Animoto video
Katie Day

What Should Children Read? - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • There are anthologies of great literature and primary documents, but why not “30 for Under 20: Great Nonfiction Narratives?” Until such editions appear, teachers can find complex, literary works in collections like “The Best American Science and Nature Writing,” on many newspaper Web sites, which have begun providing online lesson plans using articles for younger readers, and on ProPublica.org. Last year, The Atlantic compiled examples of the year’s best journalism, and The Daily Beast has its feature “Longreads.” Longform.org not only has “best of” contemporary selections but also historical examples dating back decades.
  • Adult titles, like “The Omnivore’s Dilemma,” already have young readers editions, and many adult general-interest works, such as Timothy Ferris’s “The Whole Shebang,” about the workings of the universe, are appropriate for advanced high-school students.
  • In addition to a biology textbook, for example, why can’t more high school students read “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks”?
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • What Tom Wolfe once said about New Journalism could be applied to most student writing. It benefits from intense reporting, immersion in a subject, imaginative scene setting, dialogue and telling details. These are the very skills most English teachers want students to develop.
  • In my experience, students need more exposure to nonfiction, less to help with reading skills, but as a model for their own essays and expository writing,
  • Common Core dictates that by fourth grade, public school students devote half of their reading time in class to historical documents, scientific tracts, maps and other “informational texts” — like recipes and train schedules. Per the guidelines, 70 percent of the 12th grade curriculum will consist of nonfiction titles. Alarmed English teachers worry we’re about to toss Shakespeare so students can study, in the words of one former educator, “memos, technical manuals and menus.”
  •  
    "A striking assumption animates arguments on both sides, namely that nonfiction is seldom literary and certainly not literature. Even Mr. Coleman erects his case on largely dispiriting, utilitarian grounds: nonfiction may help you win the corner office but won't necessarily nourish the soul. As an English teacher and writer who traffics in factual prose, I'm with Mr. Coleman. In my experience, students need more exposure to nonfiction, less to help with reading skills, but as a model for their own essays and expository writing, what Mr. Gladwell sought by ingesting "Talk of the Town" stories. I love fiction and poetry as much as the next former English major and often despair over the quality of what passes for "informational texts," few of which amount to narrative much less literary narrative. What schools really need isn't more nonfiction but better nonfiction, especially that which provides good models for student writing. Most students could use greater familiarity with what newspaper, magazine and book editors call "narrative nonfiction": writing that tells a factual story, sometimes even a personal one, but also makes an argument and conveys information in vivid, effective ways."
  •  
    "What schools really need isn't more nonfiction but better nonfiction, especially that which provides good models for student writing. "  Totally supports my belief that nonfiction longreads are out there on the internet and are not being taken advantage of by teachers -- enough.
Katie Day

I, Pencil - 1 views

shared by Katie Day on 07 Mar 13 - No Cached
  •  
    Internet resources based on Leonard Read's famous essay, I, PENCIL
Katie Day

Big Questions Essay Series | The John Templeton Foundation - 0 views

  •  
    big names in science & humanities answer big questions, e.g., does moral action depend on reasoning? Does evolution explain human nature?
Katie Day

A Superhero Who Looks Like My Son - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    Chris Huntington's essay in the NYT re his son
Katie Day

Concord Review Showcases Student Writers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "His mood brightens, however, when talk turns to the occasionally brilliant work of the students whose heavily footnoted history papers appear in his quarterly, The Concord Review. Over 23 years, the review has printed 924 essays by teenagers from 44 states and 39 nations. "
Louise Phinney

Bringing "Traditional" Essay Writing into the Digital World | NWP Digital Is - 0 views

  •  
    The question of how to use technology in the classroom can often divide a school. Some teachers will embrace what's available to them, designing innovative multimedia projects which use all the gadgets at hand. Others, perhaps as a reaction to the first group, will resolve to do things the way they've always done, at best sending students to the computer lab to type up a final paper. Technology is present, but it's tokenized. The digital divide continues to thrive, not just across geographic and socio-economic boundaries, but from one classroom to the next.
Keri-Lee Beasley

+SFETT+ - 0 views

  •  
    The Power of 1 he video presentation Marco Torres did years back where he shows the student's "Power of One" video and discusses the merits of the video versus the students being required to do a 15 page essay
Katie Day

More Ways to Skin the Information Writing Cat | To Make a Prairie - 1 views

  •  
    a blog post that contains some interesting book-related writing prompts - I particularly like the idea of having students read some forewords to books and think how they would introduce a text that they love. Relevant to both primary and middle/high school teachers.
Katie Day

Rebecca Blood :: Weblogs: A History And Perspective - 0 views

  •  
    "We are being pummeled by a deluge of data and unless we create time and spaces in which to reflect, we will be left with only our reactions. I strongly believe in the power of weblogs to transform both writers and readers from "audience" to "public" and from "consumer" to "creator." Weblogs are no panacea for the crippling effects of a media-saturated culture, but I believe they are one antidote."
Wendy Liao

Compare and Contrast Map - 0 views

  •  
    Read Writing Think You can use this tool to map out your compare and contrast essay.
Katie Day

Tablets - essay by Paul Graham - 0 views

  •  
    "I was thinking recently how inconvenient it was not to have a general term for iPhones, iPads, and the corresponding things running Android. The closest to a general term seems to be "mobile devices," but that (a) applies to any mobile phone, and (b) doesn't really capture what's distinctive about the iPad. After a few seconds it struck me that what we'll end up calling these things is tablets. The only reason we even consider calling them "mobile devices" is that the iPhone preceded the iPad. If the iPad had come first, we wouldn't think of the iPhone as a phone; we'd think of it as a tablet small enough to hold up to your ear."
Katie Day

10 Personal Writing Ideas - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "Stuck for an idea? Use the suggestions below to spark personal writing with help from New York Times features."
1 - 17 of 17
Showing 20 items per page