Saturday, October 27, 2012

Conversations on Teaching Grammar

In this post, I connect thoughts of English Education scholars with personal reflections in order to demonstrate my ideas about teaching grammar.

We have taken what is potentially the most personal, energizing, and richly meaningful subject in the whole curriculum and sucked the meaning out of it.  [Steven Zemelman and Harvey Daniels, "The English Teacher's Red Pen"]
 
Zemelman and Daniels are, of course, talking about writing.  Specifically, they are criticizing the English teacher status quo of correcting every minuscule error in student writing.  We've discussed this a lot in class: What do we value in student writing?  If my answer is content and student voice, how can I justify a grading scale rooted in mechanics?
 
In writing, on the other hand, we think that every word that every kid ever writes must pass beneath a teacher’s red pen. And kids who risk writing anything imperfect, exploratory, playful, or over their heads are told, in effect, “This is terrible. You flunk. Don’t try this again until you can do it perfectly. " [Steven Zemelman and Harvey Daniels, "The English Teacher's Red Pen"]
 
This passage recalls Gallagher's question: Does every piece of writing in the classroom need to be graded?  What if students are allowed to write without the apprehension of the red pen? The English classroom should be a space in which students can explore, question, experiment, and challenge.  When teachers highlight every error in student writing, the opportunity for inquiry is lost.  It reinforces the idea that the teacher is a reservoir of correct answers.  This does not foster creative, critical, and confident writers.  In fact, the scholars that we have encountered all suggest the opposite.
 
I said it better than I can say it...  This is a selection from my History and Structure blog from last semester: "Language is power: How something is said is just as important - if not more important - than what is said. We gravitate to errors; they glare at us, obscuring whatever meaning is within them. But when we bleed corrections over a student's page, the student is cut too. If you are always told that you are doing wrong, you begin to feel wrong."

Teachers need to begin by showing students that they have a voice, and then teach them how to hone that voice to effectively communicate their thoughts.
 
[M]any primary teachers will tell you that the surface of a kid’s piece of writing should be inviolate, that it’s an expression of a self, a work of art or artifact that should never be defaced by anyone else’s markings or revisions . . . We assume, of course, that our students have developed to the stage where they can “take it” when their paper comes back to them all marked up. But can they?  [Steven Zemelman and Harvey Daniels, "The English Teacher's Red Pen"]
 
When I reflect on my elementary writing experiences, this statement rings true.  In my previous post, I shared a selection from my volumes of journals.  It's not one of my best pieces of writing.  There are spelling issues, punctuation issues, and logic issues.  When this first entry is compared to entries written at the end of the school year, my writing is exponentially improved.  Yet there is not a single red corrective mark on any page in that journal.  I suppose I will be forever in graditude to Mrs. Tully for giving me such a positive first writing experience.
 
How do we extend this kind of safe writing environment into the secondary classroom?  I think that we have to restore the authority of student voice and encourage risks. We have to develop the patience to understand, like Mrs. Tully with my journal, that the grammar will improve while we focus on teaching the power of the written word.  We have to loosen our grip on the red pen and allow freedom in student writing.
 
The writer is an artist, painting images of life with specific and identifiable brush strokes, images as realistic as Wyeth and as abstract as Picasso.  In the act of creation, the writer, like the artist, relies on fundamental elements.  [Harry R. Noden, Image Grammar]
 
Constance Weaver challenges the traditional understanding of grammar as a "list of rules" by redefining it as a "box of tools."  Noden's passage adds to this discussion by suggesting that grammar exists to bring writing to life.  Grammar needs to be taught through this lens!  If grammar is taught as a tool through which to better stucture, enrich, and express their thoughts, it becomes more accessible to students.  I wrote this in my History and Structure blog last semester: "As students untangle the rules of grammar, they assume control over grammar and, thus, their writing. This is not to say that students are able to use certain standards of grammar and discard others but that students are empowered to use grammar to enhance their writing instead of having adding grammar that limits their writing."
 
Noden's lesson models further illustrate this idea. Students are taught what a participle is, for example, not so they can know what it is but so they can use it. 
Grammar, like all areas of instruction, needs to be student-centered.
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The ultimate thread that I identify through all of the scholars' writings is that teachers should use grammar to develop the student writer as opposed to using grammar to fix student writing.  Teaching is, after all, ultimately about the students.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Writing

"On vacsonon 1999 we went to New Jersy. We visted our grandma and grandpa and coinsen. It was fun. Vacsonon is better than school, but I think school is better."
That is my very first journal entry, written in 3rd grade on August 17, 1999.
Since then, writing has been my window of expression.  Writing provokes learning.  Writing engages new thoughts and ideas.  Writing inspires the imagination.  Writing is freedom.  My writing is my voice.
This is what I want for my students.  Even if they do not journal for the rest of their lives, I want them to take ownership of their writing.
Gallagher and Smagorinsky both suggest AWESOME ways to make this happen.
They both underscore the importance of helping students identify the purpose of writing.  This goes hand-in-hand with the idea that classroom writing must connect to real-world writing.  Early in the year, I would love to have a conversation with my students about why writing is important.  It would be more meaningful to construct this knowledge together.  Writing thus becomes accessible and student-controlled.
Students need to have choice in their writing.  This is important because writing then becomes relevant and interesting.  It further helps to develop their voices.  When students write about topics that they care about, they take writing seriously because it becomes an extension of them.  It is their passion in ink on paper for the world to read.
Daily journal (or blog) writing is one of my preferred strategies for writing development.
Dialogue journals are also great because they demonstrate how writing fosters conversation and sparks new questions.  This does not need to be in the form of a notebook either; students can write together in blogs or other online resources (Tumblr, class Facebook pages, etc.).
Dialogue journals (and online resources) allow students to write for each other (and the world).  Gallagher introduces a discussion on audience, suggesting that if students are going to take their writing seriously, the teacher cannot be the only reader of their writing.  I am particularly excited about hosting open mic opportunities (especially in the community) and having student work available to check out in the school library (and possibly even in the local public library).  On this thread, I plan on having anthologies in my classroom as well, in which students can choose their best or favorite piece of writing from the year to be immortalized in the class library.
Today, in the 12th grade classes that I am observing, the students wrote dialect dialogues to explore the use of dialect in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God.  After they wrote their pieces, Mrs. Duong invited the students to perform their pieces in front of the classroom.  It was so cool to see how excited the students were while writing their dialogues.  Mrs. Duong allowed a lot of choice: The students chose the characters, dialect, and situation for their writing.  They also worked hard because they had the opportunity to share their work with their peers.  In the end, it was so much fun to watch the students share their work.  They demonstrated incredible creativity and humor.
When students choose, they are passionate about their work.  It becomes their own, and anything that belongs to us is sacred – especially our voices.  Students need to be taught that their voices are sacred.  Then, they need time and opportunity to develop and share those voices.
I would further love to invite writers of various mediums (prose, poetry, blogs, newspapers, etc.) into my classroom to share and inspire writing.  It could be valuable for students to enter into conversations about writing with professional writers, especially if students are able to share their writing with them and receive feedback.  Gallagher discusses removing the “Grecian Urn” from the classroom by showing the teacher’s initial sloppy writing.  Imagine the potential for breaking down this “Grecian Urn” when a professional writer shares his sloppy drafts.  This becomes a great way to demonstrate the accessibility of writing – as long as I find supportive and encouraging writers!

Writing also is a way to teach students to ask questions.  This past weekend, I attended a conference.  In one of the sessions, a professor was talking about student research and writing.  She noted: “Students look for answers and once they find them, the research and inquiry stops.”
Asking questions does not only expand and deepen writing, but also critical thinking.  Writing is, thus, also a means to develop students’ critical thinking skills.  Gallagher notes that “students (and adults) who cannot identify an author’s purpose will go through life susceptible” (127).  This is an imperative skill to have in today’s world, especially with an Internet culture in which anyone can say anything.
Gallagher’s ultimate goal for writing in his classroom is: “Everyone improves” (142).  I love this because it takes away the stress of enforcing a standard of writing by promoting the growth of each individual writer instead.
I love all of Gallagher’s and Smagorinky’s ideas, and would love to implement a lot of them.  However, after observing all of the craziness in my first placement, I have to admit to some doubt about making my real classroom coincide with the ideal classroom that I imagine.  Gallagher suggests putting the standards on hold in order to develop strong – and necessary – writing and thinking skills.  I absolutely agree with him – 100%.  But in the classrooms that I have observed, there is so little time and so much to do.  Between daily assignments required and reviewed by the administration and too much material to cover, there was hardly any time for the students to write.
The last thing I want is to be a teacher who pays lip-service to the importance of writing while implementing writing-done-wrong in my classroom.  I love authentic writing, and I want to fight for it in my classroom.  However, I am trying to be a little more realistic about all of this and, in the process, am struggling to  understand how this methodology will be possible.

 

 

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Ahoy! Prezi ahead!


***For best results, play the following while exploring Prezi: Exciting Pirate Music!

Treasure Island: Pirates!

I am very excited about my text satellite!
 
Treasure Island, by Robert Louis Stevenson, is one of my favorite novels.
 
That is not the only reason that I selected it, though!  It is a story of adventure, growing up, and - best of all - pirates!  I believe that it has the potential to be a very engaging novel in the classroom, particularly for male students.
 
I decided to focus my text satellite on an interdisciplinary study of piracy.  In addition to Treasure Island, I chose the broadway script of "Peter Pan and Wendy" as further reading material.  Student understanding of the Hollywood pirate will be challenged through a critical article ("Romantic Hero or Bloodthirsty Robber"), current movie and theatre video clips and exerpts from Exquemelin's 18th-century pirate tales.
 
Students will expand their knowledge of pirate history with historical information from the Elizabethan Era site, historical documents, and documentaries.  Students will use this knowlege to compare and contrast images of pirates from throughout the past few centuries and analyze poetry.
 
Finally, they will explore modern day piracy with excerpts from Terror on the Seas, current event articles, and current documents.
 
A soundtrack will be utilizied to engage student interest but also to deepen their study of piracy through an analysis of the music and its lyrics.
 
Note: The attached link to my text satellite does not allow for the following videos to play:

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Assessments

Creating a rubric for the short story alternative assessment was by far one of the most enlightening experiences in my teaching journey.  The assessment that I created, inspired by Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery, required students to either defend or critique a tradition in today's society.  I made a variety of project mediums available to my students, ranging from paintings and comics to persuasive essays and poetry.

I've created assessment templates like this before for other education courses, but I was never responsible for demonstrating how I was going to actually assess student work.  So, when I sat down to create the rubric for "The Lottery" assessment, I was faced with more questions than I expected.

To be fair to myself, I have heard all of these things before.  Yet, actually creating the rubric for an assessment made me consider these things:

  •  Assessments must reflect learning objectives.  What do I want my students to learn?  This is what I need to assess.  Thus, assessments become a measure of not only student learning but also teacher effectiveness.  If I am successful in teaching, then my students' work will reflect that.
  • Students need structure.  I cannot expect students to simply complete what I have in mind.  They need specific direction.  For example, in order to get the maximum amount of points for their tradition statements, the rubric details that the students must turn in a statement with all three of the required componenets on time.
  • Assessments must be measurable.  Assessments that are measurable clearly demonstrate student understanding of a topic in an organized manner.  Assessments can then be used to maintain teacher accountability as well as to chart student progress, which is helpful to students, parents, and administration. 

In Science Methods, we discussed making sure that assessments allow for further student growth and learning.  Therefore, assessments cannot just require students to repeat what they have learned in the lesson but should encourage them to make new connections and observations.  This maximizes learning time in the classroom and ensures that students really understand the lesson.

Another idea that I love from Science Methods is giving students a quiz immediately after engaging in the lesson.  Dr. Shane modeled this by having us rotate around three stations with an outline of what we need to know for the quiz.  He emphasized that his intention was not to trick us but to ensure that we have learned the details that he wanted us to pick up on.  There was less emphasis on memorizing the material.  Instead, I focused on making sure that I understood the material that he highlighted for us.

Students do not often fully understand why they are being assessed.  They understand that in order to earn an "A" or to move on to the next grade, they must do well on assessments.  Traditionally, "doing well" requires hours of re-reading and memorization.  If this is all that students do, then they are not really learning anything.  I think student understanding of assessments need to change.  Instead of measuring how much information they can cram into their heads, students should understand that assessments exist so that they can demonstrate what they can do with what they have been learning.

And if assessments are not measuring what students can do, then they need to change so that they do.

This brings up the disparity between objective and authentic assessments.  While there is room for both in the English classroom, I prefer authentic assessments.

Authentic assessments provide further opportunity for students to explore the higher levels of Bloom's Taxonomy: applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating.  Thus, authentic assessments allow students to take ownership of their education.  Students are able to directly and tangibly interact with the class's materials, which  leads to a deeper learning experience.

Objective assesments are also helpful in the classroom.  Sometimes it is necessary to make sure that students understand basic concepts that are best measured through objective assessments.  Just because they do not engage the top tiers of Bloom's Taxonomy does not mean that they are not valuable.  However, an English classroom - which is supposed to engage students in critical thought - cannot be reduced to multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank.  That is an insult to student intelligence and creativity.

Final Example: My 10th grade English teacher, who is my absolute favorite teacher, displayed a great blend of objective and authentic assessments while teaching To Kill A Mockingbird.  After certain readings, he would give quizzes that ensured that we completed the readings while directing and measuring our comprehension of important details within the text.  He supplemented these objective quizzes with a variety of authentic writing pieces, including character studies and narratives.









Friday, September 14, 2012

Fighting Readicide


A brief, musical assessment of reading in today’s schools: http://soundcloud.com/barrylane55/01-wasting-away-in-basal

Kelly Gallagher’s driving argument: Reading in school is killing students’ love for reading.

 In my Science Methods course, we read John Dewey’s speech “Science as Subject-Matter and as Method.”  In this speech, Dewey actually contrasts the English classroom and science classroom: “All this change [in science content] is to some extent a symptom of healthy activity, change being especially needed in any group of studies so new that they have to blaze their own trail, since they have no body of traditions upon which to fall back as is the case with study of language and literature.”  I would argue that the study of language and literature is no longer as static as Dewey perceives it in his speech.

 My favorite thread of Gallagher’s text is the idea of developing “expert citizens.”  English classrooms are unique because they have the potential to be such free and interdisciplinary spaces.  Literary texts are written in response to the world around them.  Therefore, a study of literature must engage the outside world.  Gallagher refers to this kind of expansive, interdisciplinary exploration as a “wealth of knowledge” (38).  English classrooms can no longer rely on literary “‘memory gems’” (Dewey’s term for the literary classics).  English is as alive a discipline as science – constantly changing and growing with the world around it.  We are responsible for preparing our students for the demands of a world that is much more complex and connected than ever before.

 I love the idea of combining traditional texts with modern texts: novels, short stories, poetry, graphic novels, magazines, music, newspapers, websites, and video games.  I will never tire of sharing my Graphics and Gaming class experience from last semester.  I am usually barraged with a series of questions (and then an exclamation): “That was a required class?”  “So, you just sat around and played video games all day?”  “What can you learn from video games?”   And, inevitably: “I want to take that class!”  These questions and Dewey’s article demonstrate a stigma regarding the English classroom that we need to dispel.

 When most people think of an English classroom, they immediately associate reading and writing.  Yet thinking is also a key component.  To reiterate, English classrooms can no longer focus on introducing students to great writers.  Instead, students need to engage in critical thinking to prepare for life beyond school.  Critical thinking through reading can be enriched by including a rich variety of authentic texts.  I particularly liked Gallagher’s Article of the Week (AoW) activity: Students were expected to read and respond to a current event article every week.

 Why is this important?  “What the reader brings to the page is often more important than the ability to read the words on the page . . . a wide knowledge base . . . is foundational if [students] are to develop into critical readers of the world” (33, 35).  Literacy is not just reading words off of a page; the words need to have meaning.  If students cannot apply meaning to what they read, then how can they demonstrate independent thought?

 The most recent experience that I can remember having with Silent Sustained Reading (SSR) was the Drop Everything And Read (DEAR) time during elementary school.  As an avid reader, I relished those moments.  I read every opportunity that I could.  I remember a moment during a unit in fourth grade on the Oregon Trail in which my teacher asked us to use our imaginations to go back in time and share what three items we would take with us in our wagon on the journey west.  I answered: “A gun (because everyone else was saying that), chocolate, and books.”  I definitely believe that moments for free reading played a huge role in my love for reading.  Why do these experiences have to stop after elementary school?  I definitely want to have independent reading every week in my future classroom.

 It is imperative to give students free choice in those moments.  Gallagher often suggests that many students will only ever read within the classroom.  Therefore, we must make those moments as meaningful as possible in order to encourage the development of critical, lifelong readers.  This can be accomplished by allowing students to explore their interests through their own book choices.  I love Gallagher’s concept of a “book flood” (32).  I have recently begun to build my classroom library.  It’s interesting that it is so challenging to find books that will appeal to male students.  However, I am really trying to find a wide variety to stock my shelves.  It is also important for students to be able to share what they are reading.  I would love to have a class reading blog or verbal book reports.  These activities would not only involve students in a culture of reading but would further encourage them to take ownership of their own reading.

 A final thought on the chart that Gallagher presents contrasting “Beating the Odds” schools with “Typical” schools (26).  As I scanned the chart, I was reminded of our textbook analysis activity.  The chart and the activity boil down to the same question: How much are we willing to invest in our kids?