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Using Emerging Technologies to Promote the Authenticity of Composition. Angela Gunter, NBCT Daviess County High School. Engaged Readers
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Using Emerging Technologies to Promote the Authenticity of Composition Angela Gunter, NBCT Daviess County High School
Engaged Readers wide and frequent readers who often explore new territory through text and who are intrinsically motivated to read for the knowledge and enjoyment it provides (Guthrie & Cox, 2001) Authentic Writers “a sense of audience—the knowledge that someone will read what is written—is crucial to young writers” (Atwell, 1998) The Goals: Engagement and Authenticity
Students are not recognized for bringing valuable, multiple-literacy practices to school, potentially creating students who are resistant to • school-based literacy. (Lenters, 2006) • The proliferation of high-stakes tests can complicate the literacy learning of adolescents, particularly if test preparation takes priority over content-specific literacy instruction across the disciplines. Teachers can devalue, ignore, or censor adolescents’ extracurricular literacies, assuming that these literacies are morally suspect, raise controversial issues, or distract adolescents from more “important” work. This means some adolescents’ literacy abilities remain largely invisible in the classroom.(Kim and Monique, 2004) Obstacles
Adolescents need bridges between everyday literacy practices and classroom communities, including online, non-book-based communities. (Moje,2007) • Effective teachers understand the importance of adolescents finding enjoyable texts and do not always try to shift students to “better” books. Literacy has come to include, but not be restricted to academic learning. (Alvermann, 2001) Research Demonstrates:
To address this issue, instructors should depend less on text-bound modes of teaching that place adolescents in passive roles and more on inquiry-based instruction that allows students to be active learners. (Bean et al. 1999) • Teach for understanding, define learning as an inquiry-based process, and collaborative learning which builds on constructivist principles of learning as a social activity that is embedded in socio-cultural systems. (Wiggins & McTighe, 1998) Research-Based Solutions
“Young learners currently are members of a participatory learning culture who can and should be contributing to the knowledge-building process rather than merely passively consuming prepackaged information.” The World is Open: How Web Technology is Revolutionizing EducationCurtis J. Bonk (2009)
Forums Chats Blogs Attachment of Documents Link to Webpages Post Photos Post Videos Individual/Personal Pages Events Activities Groups Music Birthdays Notes Widgets RSS
American Library Association Young Adult Library Services 2009 Outstanding Books for the College Bound and Lifelong Learners • Advanced Placement Summer Institutes • College Summer Reading Lists • Former Students (in college) The List
Autobiography/Memoir • Biography • Nature/Adventure/Science • Sports • History/Politics/War • True Crime • Travelogue Categories
What types of podcasts have you listened to? Dave Ramsey show, Mugglecast, Behind the Music, Books on Tape, The Onion, Car Talk (NPR), Pardon the Interruption (ESPN), Advanced Spanish, Oprah’s Book Club, Bungie (video games) • What blogs do you read? Iamboycrazy.com, espn.com, himynameismark.com (bass player for Blink182), church youth group blog, My Live is Average, Rick Reilly (ESPN), Perez Hilton Hollywood 411, Katie Davis (young missionary) Authentic Consumers of Information
Angela’s Ashes (1) • Bridge to Terabithia (1) • Catch-22 (1) • Catcher in the Rye (1) • Devil in the White City (1) • Fahrenheit 451 (2) • Flowers for Algernon (1) • In Cold Blood (1) • Lone Survivor (1) • Scar Tissue (1) • Slaughterhouse-five (3) • The Bluest Eye (2) • The Color Purple (1) • The Da Vinci Code (1) • The Handmaid’s Tale (1) • The Last Lecture (1) • The Outsiders (1) • The Poisonwood Bible (2) • The Time Traveler’s Wife (1) • Tuesdays With Morrie (2) Titles on the Podbean
Podcast Stats (Last 30 days) • Episode hits 311 • Subscribers 24 • Site visitors 551 • Comments 146 Latest Activity
I thought your voice pacing was fine. I remember teaching this book in class when I was a student teacher, and the issue of “loss” was pretty dramatic and touching, and emotional for a lot of students. Did you know that Katherine Patterson is the new Ambassador to Children’s Literature? Just a fact. Thanks for your podcast. Mr. Hodgson, Sixth grade teacher Comment by Mr. Hodgson — January 18, 2010 @ 6:05 am
Hi! I was particularly interested in listening to your podcast because I read Angela’s Ashes and loved the book, despite its sadness. Also, I had Frank McCourt as a teacher years ago. Thank you for capturing your thoughts about the book - hearing you speak about the book made me think about the parts I enjoyed most. I think I liked best Frank McCourt’s ability to find humor in what seemed like the bleakest of circumstances. It made him, as a character, seem resilient and not sad. Did you have a favorite moment or moments? Thanks again for your work on this and making it public to the world for all of us to enjoy! Paul Oh, National Writing Project (former teacher) Comment by Paul Oh — January 19, 2010 @ 12:15 pm
Last year, I re-read Catch-22 several times for a class, and realized that the recurring motif of the tail-gunner episode turns the plot-line into something like a spiral, with each successive loop giving more information about the episode. Otherwise, the “novel” seems to be impressionistic, giving a series of character sketches loosely arranged around Yossarian’s military career, as you mentioned. I like your comparison of Catch-22 to The Office–clever! Comment by Larry Barton — January 17, 2010 @ 8:54 pm
Allow more time • Eliminate background noise • More reaction/recommendation than summary • Add a common rating (out of 5 stars) • Speak clearly • Add rich details, adjectives • Add quotes from the novel • Attach them to card catalog in media center • Add a brief music clip or appropriate background music • Interview format Suggestions for Revision