Breakout Session D
					
					
						Friday, 2:00 p.m. – 2:50 p.m
| Session D1 Rebecca Holdsworth, rholdsworth@unit6.orgFieldcrest High School
 Room: Fell A
 Audience: High School
 Mentored by the Greats: Using Novels to Raise the Next Generation of WritersWhat if we read novels to enhance our own? Often, after dissecting the pieces (literary analysis), we stop discussing the texts. This doesn’t have to be the end. This presentation conveys how to apply the genre studies approach to the class novel in order for students to write their own narratives and memoirs.
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| Session D2 April Davenport, albehre3@ilstu.eduAndy Goveia
 Thomas Metcalf  Laboratory School
 Room: Fell B
 Audience: Middle/High School
 Using Podcasts to Conduct Social AnalysisTeens love to debate and argue issues they care about. Come hear how our English Language Arts and Social Studies interdisciplinary unit allows students to challenge themselves and others by utilizing the “Serial” podcast to develop social analysis, research, and critical reading and thinking skills.
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| Session D3 Melissa Cunningham, mcunningham@district146.orgCentral Middle School
 Room: Fell C
 Audience: Middle School
 Grammar Reasons:  5 Ways to Make Grammar MeaningfulLearn 5 ways to motivate students to form grammar habits that they will take with them the rest of their lives!  1. Show Me the Right Way!  Using Mentor Texts 2.  Why Do I Need to Know This?  Real-Life Writing 3.  I Already Know This!  Differentiating Grammar Lessons 4.  What’s the Point of This?  Targets and Goals 5.  This is Boring!  Grammar Tech
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| Session D4 Roni FacenProviso Evening School
 Norman Boyer, boyer@sxu.edu
 Angelo Bonadonna, bonadonna@sxu.edu
 Saint Xavier University
 Room: Redbird E
 Audience: High School
 The Real Problem with “At Risk” StudentsWhat defines youth as “at risk”? Who are they? What are their struggles? What are they “at risk” of doing? Or not doing? Roni will work to define that term and will offer some candid insight into the world of alternative education, followed by conversation with former Saint Xavier University professors Angelo and Norm, and with the audience.
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| Session D5 Laura Brown, lbrown@d125.orgCarly Lacombe, clacombe@d125.org
 Adlai E. Stevenson High School
 Room: Redbird F
 Audience: High School
 Writing for CollegeWe collaborate to provide high-school seniors with experiences that will prepare them for the cross-curricular writing challenges of college. We will share learning targets, units of study, and assessments that allow for enough student choice to be relevant while still maintaining clear objectives that meet the rigorous standards of CCSS.
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| Session D6 Kristen Strom, kstrom@ilstu.eduIllinois State University
 Room:  Beaufort
 Audience: Middle/High School
 Redefining Borders in the English Language Arts Classroom Through the Use of Text SetsUsing texts that “talk” to each other, teachers can establish “third spaces” that allow students to explore the borders of history, identity, and power. This presentation will introduce “third space” to help teachers and students challenge borders by using various text sets in conjunction with main texts typically studied.
 
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| Session D7 Jeannette Gagliardi, jegagliardi@leyden212.orgEast Leyden High School
 Room: Redbird C
 Audience: Middle/High School
 Empowering Writers with Strategies to Increase ElaborationInexperienced authors struggle to incorporate background knowledge and content knowledge into their creative, analytic and argumentative writing.  This presentation will detail teaching strategies such as analyzing mentor texts, teacher modeling, discussing revisions in partners, evaluating student work, conferencing and direct instruction that have been successful in my classroom.  This presentation will also describe reflection activities students completed to help them think about which teaching strategies most effectively improved their elaboration.
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