The Dollar Store Made Me Do It

Plastic Easter eggs, toy microphones, half-stacks of Jenga blocks, and dice are just a few of the unconventional tools favored by your favorite type-B teacher. Join Carrie for a virtual stroll through the aisles of the dollar store and fill your cart with low-cost, high-impact literacy activities. These strategies are grounded in standards, adaptable across grade levels and content areas, and designed to boost engagement and student choice. Come ready to think outside the box and discover meaningful learning opportunities in unexpected places.

 

Enduring Monuments: Using Kindred to Bridge the Gaps

High school teachers that work with students who lack the skills and confidence to be college ready know how difficult it is to capture their attention in the last quarter of the senior year. In this breakout session, I will walk you through a unit designed to engage students in a real-world debate by centering the discussion on controversial monuments in a way that not only captures their interest and reinforces their researching skills, but also offers shared historical context to one of America’s most troubling political choices without alienating students from any particular partisan stance. This session requires participants to bring a device to the session.

Poetry and Song

Meter, rhyme, imagery, sensual language, and ideas are basic to both poetry and lyrics. This session will explore parallels in the English folk tradition exemplified by the centuries’-old “Scarborough Fair” and Bob Dylan’s modern rendition “The Girl from the North Country”; delve into the art song with original settings of the iconic poems “The Lake Isle of Innisfree,” by Yeats, Dickinson’s “Wild Nights!” and Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”; and discuss and demonstrate the lyrical and musical process of writing original songs. The presenter is a veteran English teacher and a singer-songwriter who performs professionally in Central Illinois.

ESCAPE THE BOOK!: Escape Rooms and Other Alternative Assessments

This presentation highlights engaging methods such as educational escape rooms and creative response projects in lieu of traditional assessment methods. Escape rooms transform assessment into an immersive experience, where students apply course concepts to solve puzzles, decode clues, and work as a team. These activities reinforce content knowledge while improving collaboration and engagement. Similarly, creative responses—such as digital storytelling, podcasts, visual art, and role-playing—encourage students to connect with material in meaningful and personal ways. Throughout the presentation, examples of these strategies in action will be shared, showcasing how they align with learning objectives and standards. Additional Alternative Assessment ideas will be shared in addition to the Escape Room format.

 

SOLUTION ROOM, Building Bridges: Tier 1 and Tier 2 Literacy Approaches for Engaging Reluctant and Diverse Learners

This Solution Room session aims to offer a space for teachers to seek and share advice on the challenges we face in teaching literacy to diverse and at-risk students. With years of experience as a high school English teacher in a Title 1 environment, PBIS Teacher Specialist, and T3 Interventionalist, the facilitator will lead us in collaborative problem-solving focused on effective Multi-Tiered System of Support (MTSS) practices. We will address challenges such as implementing Tier 1 and Tier 2 literacy supports for novel study in diverse classrooms, developing strategies for amplifying all voices in the English curriculum, supporting struggling readers, and building collaborative networks within departments to strengthen literacy instruction for at-risk students. Everyone will have the opportunity to participate in structured peer consultations, where we can brainstorm and develop practical strategies that not only engage our learners but also provide the necessary support for our struggling readers and writers.

Reclaiming Novel Study with Blended Learning

While NCTE makes a compelling case for “de-centering novel studies,” it is worth wondering what we might lose if we lose novel study all together. Blended learning is an educational approach that leverages technology, scheduling, and physical spaces to optimize engagement, learning, and human development in students. Mike and Amy are high school teachers who have leveraged blended learning to optimize student engagement in traditional novel study using the Harkness method of discussion founded at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. This session will introduce you to the concept of blended learning and help you advocate for its adoption in your school or classroom. We will explain the rationale and method of Harkness style discussion and its application to novel study, and attendees will participate in a simulated “flex day” discussion that incorporates blended learning and the Harkness method of discussion.