Showing posts with label discussion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label discussion. Show all posts

November 17, 2017

Successfully Structuring Socratic Seminars

This #2ndaryELA Twitter chat was all about Socratic seminars. Middle school and high school English Language Arts teachers discussed the most effective seating arrangements. Teachers also shared helpful rules and procedures for discussion.

Read through the chat below to find out how to prepare the questions for discussion, often student created and teacher selected.  You'll get ideas about how to encourage and track participation.  You'll also find ways to assess students without penalizing quieter voices.

Hope you'll join us next week for another chat. We'd also love for you to join our 2ndaryELA Facebook group (even if you aren't on Twitter). 2ndaryELA is a group of middle and high school English Language Arts teachers looking to share ideas and best practices. This group is an extension of our Twitter chat and a place for collaboration, questions, and encouragement. Feel free to post teaching ideas, success stories, links, photos, etc. that will enhance our instruction.

November 12, 2017

#2ndaryELA Twitter Chat Topic: Socratic Seminars

Join secondary English Language Arts teachers Tuesday evenings at 8 pm EST on Twitter. This week's chat will be about socratic seminars.
Brynn Allison, The Literary Maven & Kristy, 2 Peas and a Dog host #2ndaryELA on Twitter every Tuesday evening from 8 - 8:30 PM EST. #2ndaryELA is a weekly chat for secondary English Language Arts teachers focused on a topic. Every Sunday, we post the topic and questions on our blogs to allow you to prepare for the upcoming Tuesday evening's chat. Thank you to everyone who joined us last week and we hope that you will join us again.




Looking for the recap? Click on the image below.


We'd also love for you to join our 2ndaryELA Facebook group, even if you aren't on Twitter. 2ndaryELA is a group of middle and high school English Language Arts teachers looking to share ideas and best practices. This group is an extension of our Twitter chat and a place for collaboration, questions, and encouragement. Feel free to post teaching ideas, success stories, resource links, photos, etc. that will enhance our instruction.

On Tuesday, November 14, our #2ndaryELA chat will be about using Socratic Seminars in the English Language Arts classroom.

The Format:
8:00 – What and where do you teach? Include a link to your blog if you have one. #2ndaryELA
8:05 Q1: What seating arrangement(s) do you use for your seminars? #2ndaryELA
8:10 Q2: What rules/procedures do you have in place to ensure successful seminars with your students? #2ndaryELA
8:15 Q3: How are seminar questions prepared, by teacher or students? #2ndaryELA
8:20 Q4: In what ways do you encourage/track seminar participation? #2ndaryELA
8:25 Q5: How do you assess student seminar performance? #2ndaryELA

The Directions:
1. Log into Twitter on Tuesday from 8-8:30 PM EST.
2. Search for tweets with the hashtag #2ndaryELA in the search bar. Make sure to click “Latest.”
3. Introductions are for the first 5 minutes.
4. Starting at 8:05 (@literarymaven or @2peasandadog) will post questions every 5 minutes using the format Q1, Q2, Q3, etc. and the hashtag #2ndaryELA.
5. Respond to questions using the format A1, A2, A3, etc. with #2ndaryELA.
6. Follow any teachers responding and who are also using #2ndaryELA.
7. Like and respond to other teachers' tweets.

You can schedule your responses to the questions ahead of time using a scheduler like TweetDeck or HootSuite (but don't forget to use A1, A2, etc. and #2ndaryELA). Links are encouraged, so be sure to use a link shortener like tinyurlbitlygoo.gl or ow.ly Just visit one of those links and paste your long link to shorten it for Twitter. Using images is also encouraged when relevant.

New to chats? Here are the rules:
1. Stay on topic & stay positive!
2. Please do not post or promote paid products unless specifically asked.
3. If you arrive late, try to look through other posts before beginning.
4. Feel free to just read, like, and/or retweet.
5. Always use our hashtag #2ndaryELA, including in your replies to others.
6. Make sure your twitter feed is set to public. (Also keep in mind that Twitter is completely public – that means students, parents, and administrators can and will read what you tweet.)

You can also check out a quick video tutorial in this blog post.

Be sure to spread the word to any teacher friends who might be interested in joining us as well. We look forward to chatting with you Tuesday evening and in our 2ndaryELA Facebook group!

Get caught up on past chats here:

April 9, 2017

#2ndaryELA Twitter Chat Topic: Speaking & Listening Skills

Join secondary English Language Arts teachers Tuesday evenings at 8 pm EST on Twitter. This week's chat will be about developing students' speaking and listening skills.
Brynn Allison, The Literary Maven & Kristy, 2 Peas and a Dog host #2ndaryELA on Twitter every Tuesday evening from 8 - 8:30 PM EST. #2ndaryELA is a weekly chat for secondary English Language Arts teachers focused on a topic. Every Sunday, we post the topic and questions on our blogs to allow you to prepare for the upcoming Tuesday evening's chat. Thank you to everyone who joined us last week and we hope that you will join us again.




Looking for the recap? Click on the image below.


We'd also love for you to join our 2ndaryELA Facebook group, even if you aren't on Twitter. 2ndaryELA is a group of middle and high school English Language Arts teachers looking to share ideas and best practices. This group is an extension of our Twitter chat and a place for collaboration, questions, and encouragement. Feel free to post teaching ideas, success stories, resource links, photos, etc. that will enhance our instruction.

On Tuesday, April 11, our #2ndaryELA chat will be about developing students' speaking and listening skills.

The Format:
8:00 Intros: What and where do you teach? Include a link to your blog if you have one. #2ndaryELA
8:05 Q1: In what ways do students practice their oral communication skills in your classroom? #2ndaryELA
8:10 Q2: How do you assess students during speaking activities? (Share rubrics, checklists, etc.) #2ndaryELA
8:15 Q3: How do you encourage reluctant speakers? #2ndaryELA
8:20 Q4: What are your favorite speaking and listening assignments? #2ndaryELA
8:25 Q5: Share a resource for teaching oral communication skills (book, article, blog post, etc.) #2ndaryELA

The Directions:
1. Log into Twitter on Tuesday from 8-8:30 PM EST.
2. Search for tweets with the hashtag #2ndaryELA in the search bar. Make sure to click “All tweets.”
3. Introductions are for the first 5 minutes.
4. Starting at 8:05 (@literarymaven or @2peasandadog) will post questions every 5 minutes using the format Q1, Q2, Q3, etc. and the hashtag #2ndaryELA.
5. Respond to questions using the format A1, A2, A3, etc. with #2ndaryELA.
6. Follow any teachers responding and who are also using #2ndaryELA.
7. Like and respond to other teachers' tweets.

You can schedule your responses to the questions ahead of time using a scheduler like TweetDeck or HootSuite (but don't forget to use A1, A2, etc. and #2ndaryELA). Links are encouraged, so be sure to use a link shortener like tinyurlbitlygoo.gl or ow.ly Just visit one of those links and paste your long link to shorten it for Twitter. Using images is also encouraged when relevant.

New to chats? Here are the rules:
1. Stay on topic & stay positive!
2. Please do not post or promote paid products unless specifically asked.
3. If you arrive late, try to look through other posts before beginning.
4. Feel free to just read, like, and/or retweet.
5. Always use our hashtag #2ndaryELA, including in your replies to others.
6. Make sure your twitter feed is set to public. (Also keep in mind that Twitter is completely public – that means students, parents, and administrators can and will read what you tweet.)

Be sure to spread the word to any teacher friends who might be interested in joining us as well. We look forward to chatting with you Tuesday evening and in our 2ndaryELA Facebook group!

Get caught up on past chats here:

April 7, 2017

Out Of The Box Teaching Ideas: Bring Creativity Back Into Your ELA Classroom

Have your lessons have lost their spark? Are you searching for some creative inspiration? This #2ndaryELA Twitter chat was all about out of the box teaching ideas in the ELA classroom. Middle school and high school English Language Arts teachers discussed interesting fiction and nonfiction pairings.  Teachers also shared creative activity and projects that are both fun and rigorous. Read through the chat for ideas to implement in your own classroom.
This #2ndaryELA Twitter chat was all about out of the box teaching ideas in the ELA classroom. Middle school and high school English Language Arts teachers discussed interesting fiction and nonfiction pairings.  Teachers also shared creative activity and projects that are both fun and rigorous.

Read through the chat below to see how other teachers are getting creative in their classrooms. You'll get text recommendations that you've likely never heard of. You'll also find unusual ways to get students out of their seats.

Hope you'll join us on Tuesday April 11th to discuss speaking and listening skills in the ELA classroom. We'd also love for you to join our 2ndaryELA Facebook group (even if you aren't on Twitter). 2ndaryELA is a group of middle and high school English Language Arts teachers looking to share ideas and best practices. This group is an extension of our Twitter chat and a place for collaboration, questions, and encouragement. Feel free to post teaching ideas, success stories, resource links, photos, etc. that will enhance our instruction.

October 31, 2016

On My Bookshelf: Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli

In Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli, Simon is your typical teenager, trying to figure out where he fits in and decide who he is; he just also happens to be not so openly gay and being blackmailed by a classmate for it. The themes of friendship, relationship, betrayal, and trust will draw in teen readers. Read on for more of my review and ideas for classroom use.
The basic plot from Amazon: Sixteen-year-old and not-so-openly gay Simon Spier prefers to save his drama for the school musical. But when an email falls into the wrong hands, his secret is at risk of being thrust into the spotlight. Now change-averse Simon has to find a way to step out of his comfort zone before he's pushed out—without alienating his friends, compromising himself, or fumbling a shot at happiness with the most confusing, adorable guy he's never met.

Incredibly funny and poignant, this twenty-first-century coming-of-age, coming out story—wrapped in a geek romance—is a knockout of a debut novel by Becky Albertalli.

In Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli, Simon is your typical teenager, trying to figure out where he fits in and decide who he is; he just also happens to be not so openly gay and being blackmailed by a classmate for it. The themes of friendship, relationship, betrayal, and trust will draw in teen readers. Read on for more of my review and ideas for classroom use.Why I liked it: In Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda, Simon is your typical teenager, trying to figure out where he fits in and decide who he is; he just also happens to be not so openly gay and being blackmailed by a classmate for it.

Friendship and relationships are universal themes in the novel. Nick, Leah, and Simon have always been a close trio of friends, but now Simon is also growing close with Abby and Abby and Nick may be developing a not so platonic relationship, which leaves Leah feeling left out. Family relationships are also changing for Simon as his older sister Alice is in her first year of college and his younger sister Nora is developing new interests.

Classroom application: The issues surrounding gossip and the use of social media to harass and bully are ones to which all teens can relate. 13 Reasons Why would be a great novel to pair with this one, especially to compare the effects that these issues can have on teenage girls versus teenage boys. It's also an issue that is constantly popping up in current events unfortunately with far too many young people taking their own lives over online harassment and bullying.

The LGBT themes and characters (the main character and others) will help to diversify your classroom library. Because of the sexual content (some dick jokes, fantasizing, and kissing/petting), though it is mild, I would hesitate to include it in a middle school classroom library.

In a mature classroom, you could discuss the range of attitudes that people have toward gays, from accepting to tolerant to slightly homophobic to completely anti-gay. Another rich topic of discussion could be the difficulties of coming out to family and friends, and examining the reactions of Simon and Bram's parents and friends. Do they react appropriately? Are their reactions understandable? Does this make them good or bad parents or friends? A final interesting discussion topic could be the role of parents in general. Simon's parents are frequently featured in the novel. Do students agree with their rules and expectations of their children? Are they similar to the rules and expectations of students' parents?

If you are interested in purchasing a copy of Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda for yourself, you can find it on Amazon here.

Note: The Literary Maven is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

September 30, 2016

National Bullying Prevention Awareness Month: 7 Activities for Secondary Students

Bullying is a hot topic in schools, especially with the increasing amount of cyber bullying occurring. It is important that educators are informed about bullying, but also that we openly discuss the issue with our students. Find a discussion guide plus six other activities for high school and middle school students.
Bullying is a hot topic in schools, especially with the increasing amount of cyber bullying occurring. As educators, it is important that we are informed about bullying, but also that we openly discuss the issue with our students.

As October is National Bullying Prevention Month, I like to hold at least a one day discussion with my students about the myths and misconceptions surrounding bullying. Students individually indicate whether they agree, disagree, or are unsure about a series of statements. Then students have time to discuss the statements in small groups before sharing highlights of their discussion with the whole class. At the end of the discussion, students indicate if their opinions have changed and reflect on the activity as a whole. I try to stay out of the conversations as much as possible, only stepping in to correct major inaccuracies.

Depending on time and students' interest, I may follow up the discussion with additional activities. These activities are separated into high school and middle school, but use your judgement of what is most appropriate for the maturity level of your students.

For High School Students

Two years ago, I didn't have time to jump into another novel at the end of the year and wanted to work on students' media literacy skills, so I designed a week's worth of activities around the topic of bullying. As tenth graders, this wasn't a new topic to them and I knew that many had an apathetic attitude about it after too many lessons they perceived as "preachy" in health class.

The first activity we did was watch a video titled "To This Day," which is a spoken word poem about the long lasting effects of bullying. Immediately after viewing, I wanted students to have space to process their thoughts about the video so we first took about ten minutes just to free write and think. I then opened up the class to discussion. Students could read what they had written or share their thoughts. Depending on the class period and the length of our discussion, I asked students to write their own poem in response. Their writing didn't have to be focused on bullying, as not all students have had experience with it (or at least claimed that they haven't). Instead the poem prompt asked them to imagine themselves as adults looking back on their childhood or high school experience and detail the memories that they thought would stand out to them
Bullying is a hot topic in schools, especially with the increasing amount of cyber bullying occurring. It is important that educators are informed about bullying, but also that we openly discuss the issue with our students. Find a discussion guide plus six other activities for high school and middle school students.

The second activity we did was to examine the two main characters in the novel Cracked by K. M. Walton. We only read the first two chapters of the book (up to page 11). If you don't have a copy of the book, those first two chapters can be viewed using Amazon's "Look Inside" feature or here on Google Play. Give students a copy of these two chapters or read them aloud. After reading the first chapter, we created character silhouettes for Victor and Bull. After reading the second chapter, we discussed how students' view of Bull changed. Students were able to see that we cannot so easily apply the labels of "bully" and "victim." Students then extended the narrative by choosing one of the character's perspectives from which to continue writing.

Our third and final activity was to evaluate the audience, purpose, and effectiveness of a series of public service announcements about bullying. You can find the five videos I used here or choose several of your own. Most of the videos are about 30 seconds to a minute long. The final video is longer, closer to five minutes, but doesn't have to be shown in its entirety. The videos cover a variety of audiences and purposes. Be sure to push students to be as specific as possible when identifying audience and purpose. Just saying "for kids" or "to stop bullying" are too vague of answers. You can probe by asking questions like "what age range of kids?" or "what actions do they want the viewer to take to stop bullying?"

For Middle School Students

I am currently reading The Misfits by James Howe (author of the beloved Bunnicula series) with my seventh grade students. Another possible activity, based on a scene from the novel, would be to have students write down all of the names they've ever been called and the labels they've ever been given. Have students rip up that paper and explain that those things don't define then.

You can then allow students to write about the things that do define them or try out the Compliments Project, where students share positives about each other. The student being complimented sits with his/her back to the board, which allows classmates to write about that student on the board. Not seeing who is writing what makes students feel more comfortable.

You could also do the toothpaste activity, where students squeeze out a tube of toothpaste and then try to put it back in the tube using toothpicks, representative of our inability to take back hurtful words.

You can find the discussion guide, writing prompts for "To This Day," and evaluating public service announcements handout here.

September 12, 2016

On My Bookshelf: Code of Honor by Alan Gratz

In Code of Honor by Alan Gratz, Kamran Smith used to have it all: a starring role on the football team, a beautiful girlfriend, the title of Homecoming King, a loyal best friend, and a spot at West Point in the fall. But after his brother is named as a suspected terrorist, Kamran and his parents are detained by Homeland Security and Kamran must fight to prove to everyone, even himself, that his brother is innocent. Read on for more of my review and ideas for classroom application.
The basic plot from Amazon: Kamran Smith has it all. He's the star of the football team, dates the most popular girl in school, and can't wait to enlist in the Army like his big brother, Darius. Although Kamran's family hails from Iran, Kamran has always felt 100% American. Accepted.
And then everything implodes.

Darius is accused of being a terrorist. Kamran refuses to believe it, but the evidence is there -- Darius has been filmed making threats against his country, hinting at an upcoming deadly attack. Kamran's friends turn on him -- suddenly, in their eyes, he's a terrorist, too.

Kamran knows it's up to him to clear his brother's name. In a race against time, Kamran must piece together a series of clues and codes that will lead him to Darius -- and the truth.

But is it a truth Kamran is ready to face? And is he putting his own life at risk?

Why I liked it: At the start of Code of Honor, Kamran is your typical all-American boy hero. He's the star of the football team and Homecoming King, he has a beautiful girlfriend, tickets to the upcoming Super Bowl game with his best friend, and he is headed to West Point in the fall. All of that changes when Kamran's brother Darius, a West Point graduate and Army Ranger stationed in Afghanistan, is seen on video taking responsibility for a terrorist attack on the United States embassy in Turkey.

In Code of Honor by Alan Gratz, Kamran Smith used to have it all: a starring role on the football team, a beautiful girlfriend, the title of Homecoming King, a loyal best friend, and a spot at West Point in the fall. But after his brother is named as a suspected terrorist, Kamran and his parents are detained by Homeland Security and Kamran must fight to prove to everyone, even himself, that his brother is innocent. Read on for more of my review and ideas for classroom application.While at first Kamran is in shock and cannot believe this about his brother, there are times when his belief (as well as the reader's) wavers as the government presents Kamran and his parents with suspicious details about Darius's activities leading up to the attack. The fact that Darius continues to appear in terrorist videos
doesn't help his case either.

Besides questioning if Darius is a willing terrorist or a captive forced into action against his will, the team sent  to help Kamran find his brother is also full of questionable characters. JImmy is an ex-hacker now employed by the government, Dane was discharged from the Army for admitting drug use, Aaliyah has ties to royalty in Jordan and suffer from post-9/11 discrimination, and even Mickey, a CIA agent, could have ties to Irish rebels. A series of near-death misses make it clear that at least one of them can't fully be trusted.

The novel is full of action, from Kamran's escape from the detention center in DC to finding Darius and the terrorists in the caves of Arizona's mountains to foiling the bombing at the Super Bowl.

Classroom application: A great research or debate topic would be the Guantanamo Bay Detention Center and the rights of the suspected terrorists kept there. While Kamran and his parents are not taken to Guantanamo Bay, they are taken from their homes in the dead of night by Homeland Security without being told where they are going. They are held in a detention facility in Washington DC where they are not allowed to see each other and their requests for a lawyer are denied because they haven't been charged with anything.

Another real world connection would be to examine the treatment of Muslims after September 11th, the stereotypes, and the misunderstandings about their religion. Finally, students could explore the issues surrounding PSTD for soldiers, how many of them self-medicate for their mental health issues and then are discharged. Like Dane, they receive a dishonorable or other than honorable discharge, which affects their access to benefits and only perpetuates their mental health issues.

If you are interested in purchasing a copy of Code of Honor for yourself, you can find it on Amazon here.

Note: The Literary Maven is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

March 11, 2016

Successful Socratic Seminars: Help Students Prepare, Participate & Reflect on Classroom Discussions

Are you thinking about holding a socratic seminar in your classroom? Or maybe your last whole class discussion didn't work out so well? Read on for why fishbowl discussions are the way to go and how to help students prepare for, participate in, and reflect on class discussions.
For years I shied away from holding whole class discussions. Looking back, I'm not really sure why. Was I worried about releasing control of the classroom? Did I think my students wouldn't be able to sustain the dialogue? Whatever the reason, it just wasn't something I did in my classroom. Sure we discussed texts, but I posed all of the questions and called on students to respond.

When I started a long term substitute position last year, my co-teacher shared with me that students had particularly enjoyed a socratic seminar held earlier in the year and were hoping to have another. We planned to hold one at the end of our unit on Of Mice and Men.

As our unit drew to a close, we began to prepare for our classroom discussion. We wanted the discussion to be student led so we knew having students prepare meaningful questions ahead of time would be key to having a successful discussion. I created a simple graphic organizer to help students generate questions focusing on characters and literary elements from the novel. We gave students time in class the day before the discussion to begin working on their questions and allowed them to finish them for homework.

Are you thinking about holding a socratic seminar in your classroom? Or maybe your last whole class discussion didn't work out so well? Read on for why fishbowl discussions are the way to go and how to help students prepare for, participate in, and reflect on class discussions.We decided to use a "fishbowl" format with an inside and outside circle to allow more participation
and prevent one or two students dominating the whole discussion time. This format also makes it easier to track the conversation because there are less students involved at one time. You can also include an empty "hot seat" that someone from the outside circle can jump into if he/she really wants to join the conversation. Make sure seats are arranged in a circle so that all students can see and hear each other equally. I made the mistake of leaving my desks in a rectangular shape and students at the ends couldn't hear each other.

Before the discussion began I discussed with students what they could do if someone asked "their" question. I also projected prompting questions on the board during the discussion to help keep the conversation going. You may want to review student names before beginning discussion, especially if its the beginning of the year. This will help with making sure students direct questions and responses toward each other and allow them to encourage silent students to participate.

Are you thinking about holding a socratic seminar in your classroom? Or maybe your last whole class discussion didn't work out so well? Read on for why fishbowl discussions are the way to go and how to help students prepare for, participate in, and reflect on class discussions.
I also set an expectation of students asking at least one of the two questions they prepared and making at least three comments in response to other students' questions. This expectation was to strongly encourage my quieter students to participate. My class sizes ranged from 20-30 students with 10-15 in the inner circle at a time, and each circle had 15 minutes of talk time. Depending on your class size and length, you may want to set different expectations. However, I find that it is definitely more helpful to set a specific expectation rather than just generally telling students they must participate. 

To get the conversation going, I asked for a volunteer to ask the opening question. For students who are nervous about participation, this is also a great chance to get "their" question asked and out of the way. Then I set the timer and sat back and listened. It is definitely tempting to jump in when conversation lags, but I managed to keep quiet until the two minutes warning, which is a final chance for any students who haven't participated yet to do so.

Are you thinking about holding a socratic seminar in your classroom? Or maybe your last whole class discussion didn't work out so well? Read on for why fishbowl discussions are the way to go and how to help students prepare for, participate in, and reflect on class discussions.While the inside circle was holding their discussion, the students in the outside were responsible for tracking the discussion. This ensured that students were quiet, engaged, and actively listening to their peers. Before the discussion began, I gave examples of the types of comments students should be tracking; saying "I agree" without any explanation doesn't cut it. Having students track their peers helps me as the teacher. Even though using a fishbowl format cuts the number of students participating at one time in half, having extra ears means I don't have to worry about catching every single thing said.

After each round of discussion ended, the students in the inner circle reflected on their performance as a participant, a reflection that included both questions and a checklist of speaking and listening skills. If you do several discussions over the year, have students compare their participation and confidence in speaking. The students in the outer circle reflected on the conversation as a whole, which was another way to ensure active listening. They commented on points they agreed and disagreed with and noted students they felt gave a star performance.

Are you thinking about holding a socratic seminar in your classroom? Or maybe your last whole class discussion didn't work out so well? Read on for why fishbowl discussions are the way to go and how to help students prepare for, participate in, and reflect on class discussions.
If students struggle during your first classroom discussion, don't give up. More frequent practice will help build their confidence. Starting with online discussions using a tool like TodaysMeet can also make students more comfortable and incorporate the silent voices. If you want to further extend your class discussion, you could choose the best questions as future writing prompts or as short essay questions on an exam for the novel or unit.

You can find the resources I used to help students prepare, track, and reflect on our class discussion here.

Leave your tips and tricks for running a successful socratic seminar or other type of classroom discussion in the comments below.




For more speaking and listening resources:

September 24, 2015

Speaking & Listening Skills: Get Students To Talk & Hear What Their Peers Have To Say

Do just a few students dominate all of your classroom discussions or do you struggle to get anyone to participate? In this #2ndaryELA Twitter chat, middle and high school English Language Arts discussed ways to incorporate speaking & listening skills, effective discussion strategies, popular date topics, assessing speaking, and encouraging reluctant speakers. Read through the chat for ideas to implement in your own classroom.
This week's #2ndaryELA Twitter chat was all about speaking and listening skills in the ELA classroom. Middle and High School English Language Arts discussed ways to incorporate speaking & listening skills, effective discussion strategies, popular date topics, assessing speaking, and encouraging reluctant speakers. The highlights are below.

Ideas for Incorporating Speaking & Listening Skills:
*Book talks
*Argument speeches
*Book clubs
*TED talks
*Debates
*Drama
*Public Services Announcements (PSAs)
*Fish bowl
*Research clubs
*Socratic Seminars
*Podcast
* 4 Corners
* Think-pair-share
* Students sharing writing and getting feedback from peers
* News reporter - one student is in charge of sharing a hot news story of the week
* Do presentations regularly about topics that interest students
* Pop-up debate/discussion: every student speaks 1-2 times, the first person to stand up and speak has the floor.
* Book trailers - students try to sell their book and get others to read it, similar to movie trailers but students do narration
* In literature circle discussions, students take notes (active listening) & must advance the discussion with comments that extend the conversation
* Speed Dating style writing conferences - Set a timer. At 1-1 desks, students rotate around the room meeting each other to confer on writing

Do just a few students dominate all of your classroom discussions or do you struggle to get anyone to participate? In this #2ndaryELA Twitter chat, middle and high school English Language Arts discussed ways to incorporate speaking & listening skills, effective discussion strategies, popular date topics, assessing speaking, and encouraging reluctant speakers. Read through the chat for ideas to implement in your own classroom.
Effective Discussion Strategies:
* Use sentence starters and discussion prompts
* Give students a background reading before a discussion
* Model what a good discussion looks/sounds like
* Have students prepare questions, responses, & follow up questions keep conversation flowing
* Prepare students with strategies they can use to keep a conversation moving if it starts to flounder
* Teach a mini-lesson on speaking, organization, or delivery before each discussion.
* Use "First Turn Last Turn" ("Save the Last Word for Me") discussions – one students speaks to topic; rest of group comments on or questions the first student’s statement, who has the final say as to how his/her thinking changed. This process is repeated for all students get a turn being the “first student.”
* Use a speaking stick/object to help students learn to speak one at a time and need to see how important listening is.
* In a book club discussion, allow the group to pick the focus for the discussion.  Choose their own discussion goals helps students come prepared with ideas they are confident speaking about.

Debate Topics:
* The class reads Inherit the Wind and then does their own debate based on the topic.
* Hot topics like gun laws, punishment for juveniles, money & ethics, sexting & ethics
* Let students choose
* Governmental control - Which is more important safety or freedom? (tie in to The Giver)
* Current events
* Do virtual debates with other local schools or other classes via Google Hangout
* Use topic from the local newspaper to get students to form their own opinions not just take mom's or dad's
* Encourage students to watch the presidential debates. Who won the debate? Who would they choose to get the nomination?

Assessing Students:
* In small group discussions, use group writing and personal reflection for assessment and accountability.
*  Use a discussion survey to see what students’ initial comfort levels are. 
* Rubrics made with Rubistar
* Assessment for clearly taught skills, one at a time. Three grades: Nailed it, tried it, didn't try it.
* In Socratic Seminar, set minimum participation requirement.
* When using a fishbowl set up, have students in the outer circle, help track the inner circle’s conversation
* Use the Confer app to transcribe discussion to listen to later
* Give students a choice on which speaking/listening standard they want to concentrate on mastering. This allows for student buy in & focused feedback.
* A fun idea for assessing listening is BINGO during presentations. Ask students to listen for specific qualities.

Encouraging Reluctant Speakers:
* Preparing for discussion gives them something to say.
* Minimum participation requirement encourages them as well as classmates asking them direct questions.
* Start small. Let them film their speech instead of doing it live first.
* Give reluctant speakers a heads-up: "You're going to give your opinion in 3 minutes."
* Start in small groups
* Let reluctant speakers pick ahead when they would like to join in
* In book clubs, remind students that they have something to share and that it is valued. Get other students to urge them.
* Lots of Think-Pair-Share during initial weeks of class.
* Random/cold calling teaches all kids that they don't die when they talk.
* Begin with simple scaffolding: "Can you paraphrase what _____just said?"
* Give choices: "do you think_____or ______"
* Use Today's Meet (online tool) to allow students to share ideas in written format
* Giving students a chance to interact in written word first often times empowers students’ spoken voice later


Hope you'll join us next Tuesday September 29th at 8pm EST to discuss standards and curriculum in the ELA classroom. The questions for next week's chat will be posted here on Sunday. If you missed Tuesday night's chat, scroll down and read the whole thing below.

September 13, 2015

#2ndaryELA Twitter Chat Topic: Speaking & Listening Skills

Brynn Allison, The Literary Maven & Kristy, 2 Peas and a Dog are hosting #2ndaryELA on Twitter every Tuesday evening from 8 - 9 PM EST. #2ndaryELA is a weekly chat for secondary English Language Arts teachers focused on a topic. Every Sunday, we will post the topic and questions on our blogs to allow you to prepare for the upcoming Tuesday evening's chat. Thank you to everyone who joined us last week and we hope that you will join us again.





Looking for the recap? Click on the image below.


On Tuesday, September 15, our #2ndaryELA chat will focus on speaking & listening skills in the ELA classroom. Our guest moderator will be Dave Stuart.

The Format:
8:00 Intros: What and where do you teach? Include a link to your blog if you have one. #2ndaryELA
8:05 Q1: How do you incorporate speaking and listening skills in your classroom? #2ndaryELA
8:15 Q2: What discussion strategies have proven most effective in your classroom? #2ndaryELA
8:25 Q3: Do you hold debates in your classes? What topics resonated most with students? #2ndaryELA
8:35 Q4: How do you assess students during speaking activities? (Share rubrics, checklists, etc) #2ndaryELA
8:45 Q5: How do you encourage reluctant speakers? #2ndaryELA

The Directions:

1. Log into Twitter on Tuesday from 8-9 PM EST.
2. Search for tweets with the hashtag #2ndaryELA in the search bar. Make sure to click “All tweets.”
3. Introductions are for the first 5 minutes.
4. Starting at 8:05 (@literarymaven or @2peasandadog) will post questions every 10 minutes using the format Q1, Q2, Q3, etc. and the hashtag #2ndaryELA.
5. Respond to questions using the format A1, A2, A3, etc. with #2ndaryELA.
6. Follow any teachers responding and who are also using #2ndaryELA.
7. Like and respond to other teachers' tweets.

You can schedule your responses to the questions ahead of time using a scheduler like TweetDeck or HootSuite (but don't forget to use A1, A2, etc. and #2ndaryELA). Links are encouraged, so be sure to use a link shortener like tinyurl, bitly, goo.gl or ow.ly Just visit one of those links and paste your long link to shorten it for Twitter. Using images is also encouraged when relevant.

New to chats? Here are the rules:
1. Stay on topic & stay positive!
2. Please do not post or promote paid products unless specifically asked.
3. If you arrive late, try to look through other posts before beginning.
4. Feel free to just read, like, and/or retweet.
5. Always use our hashtag #2ndaryELA, including in your replies to others.
6. Make sure your twitter feed is set to public. (Also keep in mind that Twitter is completely public – that means students, parents, and administrators can and will read what you tweet.)

Be sure to spread the word to any teacher friends who might be interested in joining us as well. We look forward to chatting with you Tuesday evening!
Get caught up on past chats here: