Get Connected: Working with Your School Librarian

Long-time teacher, new school librarian Jennifer Connolly will take you on a quick journey of her first year in the library and explore ways to build connections between students and books, between teachers and librarians, and between libraries and communities. With tips from how to better your readers’ advisory to ideas and plans on how to build programs that connect classrooms and library spaces, let’s look at ways to get connected that benefit students and teachers alike. How can we use this collaboration to foster reading growth and help students become “real” readers?

Implementing Collaborative Strategic Reading (CSR) in Secondary ELA Classes

This is a hands-on, active workshop! I’ll introduce Collaborative Strategic Reading (CSR), a research-based instructional strategy that uses small-group collaborative learning to enhance student understanding and recall in content-area learning. I’ll explain the reasons to use this technique in secondary ELA classes. We’ll practice the strategy with the cards and logs often used with this teaching method. We’ll follow-up with a discussion of benefits, possible hiccups, and ideas for adaptations. You’ll walk out with everything you need to implement CSR in your classroom. Attend this session if you’re looking for ways to enhance student engagement while strengthening students’ reading comprehension.

Providing Feedback That is Nurturing, Productive, and Sustainable

This session’s presenters—a high school teacher and a teacher educator—will describe their project to refinethe tone and content of their and their students’ writing feedback to support writers’ agency and growth, a process-oriented approach, and relationship-building in the classroom. They will also describe how such work can lead to more sustainable feedback practices.

 

CAFÉ SESSION, Build Your Stack®: Teachers as Readers and Writers

Making novel connections is what NCTE’s Build Your Stack® is all about! Join current and former committee members to explore tips for book selection, themed text sets, and using books to spark student writing. You’ll leave with fresh titles, creative ideas, and new ways to connect reading and writing in your classroom. Proposed Topics (ranked): 1. Thoughtful book selection 2. Using texts as a catalyst for writing 3. Thematic sets of books and classroom.

The Larry Johannessen New Teacher Forum

In this interactive Café Session, four pre-service teacher candidates will each present a challenge they have faced in student teaching or in their clinicals and the instructional strategies they have developed and implemented to address these challenges. Student teachers, teacher candidates, teachers in their first few years of service, and experienced teachers who care about the struggles of novice teachers are encouraged to attend and share their ideas.

Living the Life of a Writer: 6 Practices Student Writers Have, Know, and Do

Everyone is a writer. We write texts and emails. We write for ourselves and for others. We write novels or write about novels. Inviting students into living the life of a writer shifts the focus of our instruction from the writing to the writer. In this session, educator and author Jen Vincent will guide you through the six practices writers have, know, and do while sharing strategies you can try tomorrow with student writers.

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.

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 takes 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.