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ACADEMIC EXCHANGE EXTRA'S
"Grist for the Mill"
Thoughts and Questions for You, Our
Readers
On this page, we hope to stir your thinking about issues and ideas as
they intersect with the theoretical and the tangible: in short, to make
education more practical and relevant for everyone. We invite responses
to these topics (and many others) in the form of papers, essays, well-grounded
opinion pieces, fiction, and poetry. All college and university students
and instructors, K-12 teachers, and education administrators are encouraged
to reply. (Please see our CFP at: http://asstudents.unco.edu/students/AE-Extra/Call.htm before submitting.)
Send submissions as Word attachments to the e-mail address below. Please
include a 3-4 sentence summary of your submission as well as a current
short bio that identifies your contact information (e-mail and telephone),
school/departmental affiliation(s), and position(s) (e.g., student level,
instructor, professor and/or administrator), and areas of academic interest.
For bio examples, please refer to this issues contributor's
page.
FEATURE QUESTIONS
MEDIA IN THE COMPOSITION CLASSROOM:
- What are some of your experiences regarding using media as a resource
in helping students develop critical thinking skills?
BULLYING:
- How does your school address the issue of bullying? Describe its
success, or lack thereof.
TECHNIQUE:
- What are some of your unique teaching techniques? Why do you find
them effective, and what initiated them?
COLLABORATION:
- How does collaboration work in your classroom?
- Are their beneficial alternatives to collaboration?
- Do you prefer group conferencing to individual conferencing? Why
or why not? What has been your experience?
GRAMMAR:
- Should grammar play a larger role in the curriculum than it currently
does? Why or why not?
- What is the focus on grammar in your classroom?
- What are your memories of grammar instruction? Was it helpful, and
if so, should those methods be implemented now, or might they be too
outdated?
COMPOSITION/PEDAGOGY:
- What are your thoughts on the role and theories of composition in
the broader theoretical framework of English studies?
- Is using readers in the composition classroom focusing too much on
the new critical approach to literary analysis?
LITERATURE:
- What works/authors would you find the most beneficial for instructional
use in the composition classroom? Why? In the introduction to literature
classroom? Why?
- What is the level of importance of literature in the composition
classroom, given the theories of critical reading and its direct implication
on effective writing?
- What are your thoughts on the qualifications of a "classic"?
- What qualifies a literary work into the Canon?
- Which books should be added/dismissed at your own institution's list,
and why?
- If you could make your own 25-book Canon, what would it look like?
Provide a short justification for each work.
E-mail responses to
Elizabeth Haller, Editor-in-Chief, at: editoraee@hotmail.com
Please be sure the words AEE
SUBMISSION appear somewhere in the subject line.
Academic Exchange Extra invites reader response to any
writings in this issue--especially articles advancing the scholarly debate
of issues raised.
Copyright © Academic Exchange -
EXTRA
- Web Editor
------------------------------ Page
Citation Reference:
AE-Extra.
(2005).
AE-Extra. May.
Available Online.
[URL: <
>.
Created: 27 April
2005.
Updated: --.
Accessed:
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