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ELA Brave and True by Marilyn Yung

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Tag Archives: Thoreau

Connect to Thoreau with Into the Wild

Whether a modest, yet sturdy cabin at Walden Pond or Fairbank City Transit Bus 142 on the Stampede Trail, this is American Transcendentalism at its core.

Posted byMarilyn YungFebruary 21, 2022June 14, 2022Posted inAmerican LitTags:Education, High school, Into the Wild, Jon Krakauer, teaching, Thoreau2 Comments on Connect to Thoreau with Into the Wild

Henry David Thoreau for the High School Mindset

Ever have students tell you that school just doesn’t apply to them? Yeah, me too. Like all the time… maybe even more often than that.

Posted byMarilyn YungFebruary 7, 2022August 30, 2022Posted inAmerican LitTags:Education, High school, Productivity, Reading, Relevance, Thoreau, Walden3 Comments on Henry David Thoreau for the High School Mindset

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Enjoyed making this Jazz Age Journal, a reader’s guide for each chapter of Gatsby. As they sail through each chapter, Ss jot down main events, new vocab, beautiful sentences, TQEs, and important quotes. They also learn new contextual details to add to their Jazz Age knowledge. And of course, reading comprehension questions are there, too. The sheets can be used later as references for your end-of-unit project. If you’re gearing up for Gatsby and need something new to spice things up this year, click on my bio for details. #gatsby #canva #teachersofinstagram #books #reading #education #thegreatgatsby #jazzage
Poetic art! This was a new idea my poetry class recently tried. The task: find a poem you love, choose your favorite line, depict it in a creative way without using pencil or pen on paper. The point is to recreate the line with materials that reflect the meaning. I made this example using Frost’s Mending Wall. Click the link in my bio for more info.
Trying out @taylor_mali’s #metaphordice. Planning to use the dice with my new poetry class this week… will be posting!
Last spring, I experimented with something new using The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane and here it is: I wanted to introduce my students to literary impressionism by noticing Crane's use of color and then creating a collaborative visual representation of the novel. My bio has a link to a post in my blog with tons of pictures, resources, some background, etc. Each student analyzed two consecutive chapters of the book and then created a representative collage. Here are photos of chapters 7-8 and 15-16, respectively, plus the entire book in last shot. Of course, there are improvements to be made, but this was an interesting first attempt.
I tried #firstchapterfriday all year long! (Okay, we missed a few due to random things.) Something else I tried: tying FCF to my weekly vocabulary mini-lessons on Thursdays. I would find a new word in my first chapter selection ahead of time, teach it on Thursday, and then have fun watching heads pop up around the room when students heard the word as I read aloud the next day. I think I’ll do FCF again next year. Several students told me it was something they looked forward to every week.
Let’s hope enough students sign up for Tsunami: A Poetry Experience, my new poetry class next fall! I want to make it a fun and motivational way to end the day... especially when I roll out the coffee cart to get the juices flowing. (My school has a four-day week, so we have a longer than usual school day and that last hour is l-o-n-g.) What better way to end the day than with some poetry?!

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Recent Posts

  • Ekphrastic Poetry: New Website and Podcast March 20, 2023
  • ChatGPT and the Numbing of a Student’s Mind February 27, 2023
  • Checked Out: Student Disengagement in the High School Classroom February 16, 2023
  • The Anthropocene Reviewed Essay for High Schoolers February 6, 2023
  • The Great Gatsby: Chapter 1 Challenges January 30, 2023

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