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Monthly Archives: July 2010

Quick Hit

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With record-breaking temperatures in our fair region and no central AC, I’m happy to be taking a little break and heading off to have some summertime adventures with my girls and their grandparents. We’ll be staying cool, going to see a show and spending lots of family time together.

I’m scheduling a pair of posts to be published while I’m gone that are a bit unusual for me, so while I don’t usually do this, I’m going to make a pretty blatant plea for comments on those. Pretty please with a cherry on top? I’ll make sure to get some computer time in so I can engage with the comments too; you’ll see why that might be useful.

In the meantime, why not go enjoy some other pursuits? If you’re in the mid-Atlantic, I suggest staying indoors or as close to a body of water as possible. Perhaps you’d enjoy a fresh new(ish) blog to read? If so, may I direct you to Hyperbole and a Half? This is one of my recent finds, and Allie manages to hit that precise and endearing combination of heartbreaking and hilarious that is the hallmark of all the best personal blogs. Try her posts on never becoming an adult, the awkward situation survival guide and the sneaky hate spiral, for starters, and thank me later.

What to Teach, Why and When

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One of the invisible aspects of teaching, from the student’s perspective, is what we as teachers choose to teach. What books do we choose, why do we choose them, for which grade/level are they best, and when in the year should we teach them: all questions I wrestle with every year, and did every semester even when I was teaching college kids instead of 14 year-old girls.

Do you put the harder text earlier in the year, to establish the tone and rigor of your course, or are you dooming students to failure? Maybe it’s better to place the harder text at the end, but then you often get fatigued students who slog through the text as if dragging their feet through mud. In my class for juniors, I struggled with placing Hamlet and Beloved, faced with these same dilemmas. Which text is going to be a good palate-cleanser, between two longer or denser texts or units? Should you place the most teachable, perennial favorite (like The Great Gatsby, in my experience) in the middle of the year, because it will hold their interest in the festive weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas, or do you save it to ramp their interest back up after the long winter break? If you’re teaching The Bible as Literature in the ninth grade, do you try and place a novel or text near it that is heavy on Biblical allusions, or will they be too Bible-saturated to appreciate it right away? Should the summer reading book be challenging, to establish the tone and rigor of your course, or should it be more accessible, since they are reading it independently? Should you require outside reading, or only class texts? Should we teach books we as teachers love, or keep our eyes only on tried-and-true choices?

I know I’m not the only one; I’ve read Dana Huff on : teaching books we love, and I LOVED her speech to her students before beginning Wuthering Heights and have given a similar version when I’ve taught Walt Whitman, one of my eternal favorites. I’ve watched Epiphany in Baltimore deliberate between Macbeth and Richard III and try to make some really tough decisions for his IB reading list. It’s nice to know I have company in this struggle, and I’ve learned a lot from what I’ve seen and heard in other teachers’ decisions.

Every year, I sweat the ordering of my texts, and every year, I find myself wishing I’d done something differently.

New Gigs

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One of my summer goals was to challenge myself more as a writer, and another goal of mine this year was to renew my commitment to my poetic practice.

Today, I think I’ve made some progress on both those goals by taking on some new regular writing challenges.

Right now, you can read my first review of a book of poetry over at JMWW, a quarterly online journal run by local Baltimore writers and editors (among others). I really enjoyed reading and reviewing Scott Owens’ Paternity, and will be doing another review for them in the fall. Reading new poetry is always exciting, and Owens’ style is especially inspiring to me. Yesterday I spent some time in my poetry notebooks, with one new draft and one old, and it felt so good.

In the near future, you’ll be able to see reviews and features of mine at Instructify, where I am officially a regular contributor! I love their focus on teaching smarter, not harder with concrete strategies for teaching with technology and creativity. I’m working on my first feature right now, and will be posting reviews as well. I haven’t taken on a regular freelancing gig in a few years, back when ePregnancy was alive and kicking and under the editorship of the fabulous Dawn, and I think this will be wonderful for me as both a teacher and writer.

I still have a lot on my summer to-do list (look over there in the sidebar if you want to see it), but I’m feeling pretty good about where I am.

Blogging will resume after the Fourth of July holiday–enjoy your weekend!

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