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Applying Argumentation in the Middle School and High School ELA ClassroomMoran, Renee Rice 01 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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USING SPORTS TO TEACH LITERACY IN THE MIDDLE SCHOOL ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS CLASSROOMBailey Cosette Ritter (18334821) 10 April 2024 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">Throughout my educational journey, sports have been an integral part of my life, whether playing kickball at recess, going to the river for rowing practice after school, or bonding over Sunday football games with my family while tackling homework. Despite my love for sports, I never had the chance to experience them in the classroom setting. Motivated by this absence, I embarked on writing this thesis to offer educators new ways to integrate sports into the English Language Arts curriculum. My initial exploration led me to Luke Rodesiler’s insightful guide, Integrating Sports into the English Classroom, which served as the starting line for further research. Striving for diversity, I searched for texts that encompassed a variety of sports and cultural perspectives. After selecting my texts, I developed a lesson collection comprised of fourteen individual lessons all aligning with sixth-grade Common Core Standards. Educational technology played a crucial role, as I incorporated digital storytelling platforms, podcasts, multimedia presentations, virtual games, and films into my lesson plans. By integrating these tools, alongside sports-centered novels, educators can effectively incorporate sports into their lessons, thereby creating an enriching learning space for their students.</p>
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TEACHER DISCLOSURE: DEVELOPING PRIVACY RULES, MANAGING BOUNDARIES AND BUILDING RELATIONSHIPSKaufmann, Renee Monique 01 January 2011 (has links)
The roles and responsibilities of middle school teachers are never ending. From instructing students on state-mandated curriculum to the enrichment of character and inquiry, teachers make daily decisions about how and what to disclose to their students. The current study reexamines Hosek and Thompson’s (2009) study on how teachers develop privacy rules and coordinate boundaries using Petronio’s Communication Privacy Management as the theoretical framework. Studying middle school teachers, in lieu of college instructors, allows for a better understanding of how privacy rules and boundaries are constructed and used within the middle school. This provides a better understanding of the important factors that influence teachers’ communicative decision making within the classroom.
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