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The Teachers & Writers Guide to Frederick Douglass (Paperback)
Loot Price: R420
Discovery Miles 4 200
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The Teachers & Writers Guide to Frederick Douglass (Paperback)
Series: Teachers & Writers Guides
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Loot Price R420
Discovery Miles 4 200
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Some essays are personal accounts of teaching experiences and
reflect on the meaning of Douglass to students being educated in
America. Others offer lesson plans for teaching Douglass with
samples of student poems and narratives inspired by the readings.
Contributors include Lorenzo Thomas, Margot Fortunato Galt, Ron
Padgett, and Marvin Hoffman. [Christina Davis, Chris Edgar and Ron
Padgett collaborate on a comprehensive outline for teaching writing
through Douglass' Narrative, entitled Thirty-Two Writing Ideas
Using Douglass' Narrative. The exercises are appropriate for all
levels of education, and there are between one and nine ideas for
each chapter, with the emphasis being on chapters two, seven, and
ten. [There are many detailed lesson plans and astute observations
that make Opal Palmer Adisa's essay a lovely read. Her work with
upper elementary - high school students focuses on using the
narrative to incite students to write about their own lives, but
the emphasis for Adisa is not only on Douglass. She weaves in texts
from the Harlem Renaissance and Sojourner Truth to cultivate a more
complete sense of the Black struggle to which Douglass speaks.
[Margot Fortunate Galt designs her essay for upper elementary
through high school students learning the ballad. From the
beginning of her essay, Galt concisely establishes time frames for
her lessons, with steps, goals and ideas for incorporating music
and performance. The attention she pays to meter, rhyme, and syntax
shows in the care her students put into their own poems. [Lorenzo
Thomas' account of his students' touching reception of Douglass is
a joyful reminder of why we teach and value the written word. While
there are no "lessonplans" in this entry, Thomas is sure to inspire
many teachers with his reflections and analysis of Douglass' work.
[Charles Kuner approaches teaching to write historical letters and
map stories in the bilingual classroom with thoughtfulness and
respect for his students. His own stories about how meaningful
Douglass' words and experiences were to them are enforced by
samples of their writing. This essay is about his high school
students, but it could be interpreted for any level. [A delightful
account of teaching Douglass to a group of inner city eleventh
graders, Marvin Hoffman shares how he gathers the efforts of his
students to savor the text through reading aloud and composing a
letter to Douglass' mother. Student samples included.
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