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Teach BeTween the Lines

Teach BeTween the Lines

  • Home
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    • Personalized Learning
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    • Rhetorical Analysis
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English Teacher Life-Blog

English Teacher Life - A Blog for Secondary ELA Teachers to connect over our unique content. English teacher inspiration, ideas, lesson ideas, and free ELA resources!

Creative and Engaging Lessons for Teaching Logical Fallacies

February 9, 2020 Elizabeth Taylor
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Anyone who has ever taught high school or middle school students knows that their creativity and excitement can be infectious. When I have a particularly creative group, I like to adjust some of my units to give them more opportunities to play. One way that I enjoy adding some "play" into my units is through acting. My students love creating silly stories and acting out their ideas. They enjoy playing other characters, getting creative with their ideas and scripts, and performing their well-developed ideas for their peers. When I have a group that seems particularly eager to get on their feet and do a little acting, I adapt my activities to give them more opportunities for these types of performances.

Sometimes, as teachers, we shy away from performance-based activities to reduce stress. However, despite the concerns and anxiety that some students have for performing in front of peers, I find that my students are wildly successful with acting presentations, so acting pieces and scripts prove to be excellent forms of assessment (summative or formative). The audience provides accountability that leads to more in-depth discussion and development of the scripts, more focused rehearsal, and I also find that my students are more likely to seek out feedback before presentations (yay!). These are all skills that I value, and I love that these activities inspire so much attention from them. 

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In Argument Writing, Close Reading, Rhetorical Analysis Tags rhetorical analysis, Logical Fallacies, logical fallacies lessons, persuasive appeals
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Avoid These Common Pitfalls with One Pagers

February 4, 2020 Elizabeth Taylor
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Recently, I found a new love… a new teaching strategy that became a game changer for me and my students. The One Pager. Have you heard of these? One pager activities allow students to show what they know about a specific topic all on one singular page. The key element that separates these one pagers from any other assignment, is the combination of their written reflections/understandings and art. Students creatively display their knowledge with text, drawings, color, and any other elements that showcase their knowledge.

I love how these display a combination of their artistic talent, symbols from the texts, and their written interpretations and understandings. They are still completing a rhetorical analysis or a literary analysis, but they also get to showcase their creativity. Engagement soars! My students have not gotten excited for their rhetorical analysis assessments. And… that excites me!

That said, with all this love for one pager activities, I will share the two pitfalls that I, myself, fell into when I started using one pagers.

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In Argument Writing, Close Reading, Literary Analysis, One Pagers, Reading Instruction, Rhetorical Analysis Tags One Pagers, One Pager Activities, Avoid the pitfalls of one pagers, Pitfalls of one pagers
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Rhetorical Analysis - a Fun Acronym and 5 Mini-Lessons to Get You Started!

February 2, 2020 Elizabeth Taylor
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Teachers are professional acronym and mnemonic device creators. Love them or leave them, acronyms and mnemonic devices are important, well-supported learning strategies, and I have found them to be particularly useful when teaching students about arguments and persuasion. 

When I introduce the many pieces of rhetorical analysis to my students, I use the term SMELL to focus their learning. It is not a surprise that teenagers find my SMELL-y mnemonic device entertaining, and several snickers are shared as I introduce it, but it's memorable, and that is what matters. I tell my students we are going to SMELL out an author's argument (complete with a slide with a large nose on it). In my class, we use SMELL to analyze and evaluate an author's argument, the logic of their reasoning, and the relevance of their evidence. In case you were wondering what the letters mean, let me enlighten you.

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In Argument Writing, Literary Analysis, Reading Instruction, Rhetorical Analysis Tags Rhetorical Analysis, Analyzing Rhetoric, Persuasive appeals, Persuasive writing, persuasive strategies, ethos, ethos pathos logos, logical fallacies
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Offering Voice and Choice in Assessments – A Guide for Letting Go

January 9, 2020 Elizabeth Taylor
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A few years ago, I began making a concerted effort to focus on student engagement in my classroom. Offering voice and choice in activities and assessments became an integral part of this process. As I began to offer voice and choice with learning activities, I found that student engagement increased dramatically. I was so inspired that I decided to try and allow for voice and choice in summative assessments as well.

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In Argument Writing, Reading Instruction, Rhetorical Analysis Tags Voice and Choice in Assessments, Choice boards
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No Lonely Quotes! Engaging and Creative Ways to Teach Citing and Embedding Quotations.

November 7, 2019 Elizabeth Taylor
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No Lonely Quotes. This gets my students attention every year! A lonely quote is a quote that has been thrown into the middle of the paragraph without any of the author’s/student’s words. It sits all alone, abandoned right there in the middle of a paragraph. This description, which I play up with as much emotion as any teacher-actor could muster, really helps my students to see that they cannot simply quote a sentence of text without leading into and/or out of that quotation with their own words. Then, as my students write their paragraphs, either literary or informational, I can remind them not to abandon those quotes within their paragraph- cue the waterworks!  

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In Grammar, Rhetorical Analysis, Writing Instruction Tags Citing evidence, citing text evidence, embedding quoations, parenthetical citations, Citing evidence lessons, Citing evidence assessments
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Liz - Teach BeTween the Lines

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