This document provides information about the 2012 Fall Conference of the North Carolina English Teachers Association (NCETA). The conference will be held on September 28-29, 2012 at the UNC Charlotte City Center campus in Charlotte, NC. The conference will focus on the theme of "Co-Sponsoring Literacy Across the Curriculum" and feature keynote speakers Patricia Dunn and Joseph Bathanti discussing topics like multiple literacies and engaging poetry in the classroom. The document provides details on conference sessions, speakers, parking instructions, and NCETA as a professional organization.
This document is a resume for Jacklyn R. Pierce, an Assistant Professor of English at Lake-Sumter State College. It outlines her education, including degrees from Saint Louis University, Clemson University, and Drury University. It also details her extensive teaching experience at various colleges, areas of expertise like online course development and accessibility, and honors/awards received. Pierce has presented at numerous conferences and facilitated leadership seminars for Phi Theta Kappa.
Jackson indian removal_lesson_ccss_2011_finalLauren_Weaver
CCSS Presentation, Saturday March 5, 2011
Investigating the Indian Removal Act through Multiple Sources:
An historical inquiry-based lesson that analyzes art and speeches by President Andrew Jackson & Chief Black Hawk
8th Grade Multi-day Lesson
The document discusses non-traditional types of English lessons used at the final assessment and generalization stages. It describes several types of lessons including quiz games, press conferences, and musical performances that make the lessons more engaging for students. The goal is to creatively assess what students have learned and help them develop their speaking skills in a relaxed environment. Computer technologies are used to supplement but not replace interactive lessons led by teachers.
This document is a resume for Michael Hornback that summarizes his professional and educational experience. It shows that he has over 20 years of experience as a teacher of English, with a Masters in Education and training in creative writing. He currently owns a martial arts school and has experience teaching at the university and high school levels. His resume demonstrates strong skills in teaching, curriculum development, and leadership.
Sarah B. Gray is a Ph.D. candidate in English Literature at Middle Tennessee State University, with expected graduation in May 2016. Her dissertation focuses on Gothic literature in 19th century reform works. She has a M.A. in English Literature from MTSU and a M.B.A. in Human Resources and Management from Baker University. Gray has published and presented her work widely, and teaches literature and composition courses as a graduate teaching assistant and adjunct instructor.
Spring-Ford Area School District School Board Recognition John Eckstine
The Spring-Ford Area School District School Board recognized the Spring-Ford High School Honors Wind Ensemble for being one of few groups invited to perform at the annual Pennsylvania Music Educators Association conference. The superintendent said people were in awe of the students' and director's work. The ensemble then performed for the school board. The board also commended a fifth grade student for being nominated for a national award that recognizes students who overcome learning challenges and help others. She uses art and songs to help herself and others learn. The board approved new textbooks and computer leases for the upcoming school year.
Dawn Mendoza has over 20 years of experience in academia. She received her PhD in English from Tufts University and currently works as the Writing Center Director and Writing Program Administrator at Dean College. In these roles, she oversees tutoring services, faculty training, and writing program development. Previously, she held positions at Simmons College and Bentley College directing writing centers and writing programs and teaching composition courses. She has presented her work at numerous conferences and published on topics related to tutoring, writing centers, and Latino literature.
Nikki Lyn Pugh has extensive experience as a writer, editor, teacher, and coach. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing and has worked as a freelance journalist, magazine editor, and blog/article writer. Pugh has coached numerous clients on book projects, marketing, and life/career transitions. She is fluent in Spanish and has taught English and creative writing to diverse groups of all ages. Pugh's work has been published in literary magazines, newspapers, and online journals.
This document is a resume for Jacklyn R. Pierce, an Assistant Professor of English at Lake-Sumter State College. It outlines her education, including degrees from Saint Louis University, Clemson University, and Drury University. It also details her extensive teaching experience at various colleges, areas of expertise like online course development and accessibility, and honors/awards received. Pierce has presented at numerous conferences and facilitated leadership seminars for Phi Theta Kappa.
Jackson indian removal_lesson_ccss_2011_finalLauren_Weaver
CCSS Presentation, Saturday March 5, 2011
Investigating the Indian Removal Act through Multiple Sources:
An historical inquiry-based lesson that analyzes art and speeches by President Andrew Jackson & Chief Black Hawk
8th Grade Multi-day Lesson
The document discusses non-traditional types of English lessons used at the final assessment and generalization stages. It describes several types of lessons including quiz games, press conferences, and musical performances that make the lessons more engaging for students. The goal is to creatively assess what students have learned and help them develop their speaking skills in a relaxed environment. Computer technologies are used to supplement but not replace interactive lessons led by teachers.
This document is a resume for Michael Hornback that summarizes his professional and educational experience. It shows that he has over 20 years of experience as a teacher of English, with a Masters in Education and training in creative writing. He currently owns a martial arts school and has experience teaching at the university and high school levels. His resume demonstrates strong skills in teaching, curriculum development, and leadership.
Sarah B. Gray is a Ph.D. candidate in English Literature at Middle Tennessee State University, with expected graduation in May 2016. Her dissertation focuses on Gothic literature in 19th century reform works. She has a M.A. in English Literature from MTSU and a M.B.A. in Human Resources and Management from Baker University. Gray has published and presented her work widely, and teaches literature and composition courses as a graduate teaching assistant and adjunct instructor.
Spring-Ford Area School District School Board Recognition John Eckstine
The Spring-Ford Area School District School Board recognized the Spring-Ford High School Honors Wind Ensemble for being one of few groups invited to perform at the annual Pennsylvania Music Educators Association conference. The superintendent said people were in awe of the students' and director's work. The ensemble then performed for the school board. The board also commended a fifth grade student for being nominated for a national award that recognizes students who overcome learning challenges and help others. She uses art and songs to help herself and others learn. The board approved new textbooks and computer leases for the upcoming school year.
Dawn Mendoza has over 20 years of experience in academia. She received her PhD in English from Tufts University and currently works as the Writing Center Director and Writing Program Administrator at Dean College. In these roles, she oversees tutoring services, faculty training, and writing program development. Previously, she held positions at Simmons College and Bentley College directing writing centers and writing programs and teaching composition courses. She has presented her work at numerous conferences and published on topics related to tutoring, writing centers, and Latino literature.
Nikki Lyn Pugh has extensive experience as a writer, editor, teacher, and coach. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing and has worked as a freelance journalist, magazine editor, and blog/article writer. Pugh has coached numerous clients on book projects, marketing, and life/career transitions. She is fluent in Spanish and has taught English and creative writing to diverse groups of all ages. Pugh's work has been published in literary magazines, newspapers, and online journals.
This document is a resume for Kiara Brinkley-Allen. It lists her education credentials including a Bachelor's degree in English Language from Fayetteville State University and an Associate's degree in Fine Arts from Edgecombe Community College. Her relevant coursework focused on business writing, literature, education foundations, and teaching writing. Her work experience includes being a professional tutor at Edgecombe Community College since 2013 and working as an afterschool teacher/tutor for the City of Rocky Mount in 2013. She also held office assistant positions at FSU and Edgecombe Community College. The resume concludes noting honors including several first place wins for performances.
William Heidenfeldt is a PhD candidate in Romance Languages and Literatures at UC Berkeley. His research interests include foreign language teacher education, language and identity, and second language acquisition. He has taught French language courses at UC Berkeley since 2008 and has experience teaching middle school. He is expected to receive his PhD in May 2015 with a dissertation on identity work and pedagogical decisions of secondary school L2 teachers.
Susan Kim Wyle has over 40 years of experience as an educator and writer. She received her BA and MA in English from Stanford University. At Stanford, she taught a variety of writing courses and advised students. She has also written educational materials for publishers. Her publications include a composition textbook and articles about teaching with primary sources.
This article argues that English teachers should shift their classroom focus from teaching specific literary works to developing students' literacy skills. It recommends replacing traditional whole-class novel studies with student-centered approaches like literature circles that give students choice over what they read. Literature circles allow students to read texts that interest them at their level while still developing skills like inferring meaning and analyzing literary devices. This shift empowers students and better prepares them to be informed citizens and successful in college.
Veronica Oliver has extensive experience teaching composition and related courses at the university level. She received her PhD in Rhetoric, Composition, and Linguistics from Arizona State University in 2015. Her dissertation focused on the Puente Movement's opposition to Senate Bill 1070. She has published two peer-reviewed articles and presented her work at several conferences. Oliver has over 10 years of experience teaching various composition and writing courses at the university level. She also has experience working in writing centers as both a tutor and administrator.
This document contains a lesson plan for a class about the Work and Travel program. The 80-minute lesson involves students learning about the program through a video, reading passages that describe it, and answering questions. They discuss popular locations for the program and seasons it is available. The goal is for students to understand the program's requirements and benefits, and identify if they would be interested in participating.
A field based curriculum designed to teach english and culture to musically g...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a field-based curriculum designed to teach English and culture to two gifted Chinese adolescent pianists attending the prestigious Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. The one-year ESL Transition Program aimed to improve the students' English abilities, introduce them to U.S. culture, and prepare them for high school. Students participated in 19 field trips visiting 50 cultural and historic sites around Philadelphia to gain insight into the city and culture. The curriculum was tailored to the students' needs as musicians and focused on developing their language skills while not interfering with their musical studies.
Charlene Oldham is a middle school teacher in Lemay, Missouri with over 15 years of experience in education. She currently teaches 8th grade balanced literacy and advisory at Hancock Place Middle School, where she has worked since 2006. Prior to her current role, she held teaching positions at Vashon High School from 2002-2006 and worked as a staff writer for newspapers in Dallas, Orlando, and Little Rock from 1999-2002. She has a master's degree in teaching from Lindenwood University and a master's in journalism from Columbia University.
This document is Lisa Park's curriculum vitae. It summarizes her educational background, including a Ph.D. in Curriculum & Instruction from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It also lists her research interests, experiences, publications, and presentations. Her research focuses on language and identity, bilingual education, globalization and English learning, and qualitative research methods. She has conducted research on Korean international students in U.S. schools and has published several books on this topic.
The document provides information on new National Writing Project sites in Elk River, Montana and Singapore. It then lists the Board of Directors and notes a new Board Chair. Finally, it discusses the National Student Poets program, showing pictures of past student poets and activities.
This document summarizes a pilot project conducted by Black Hawk College to use American roots music to teach English literacy to immigrant and refugee students. A musician, Ellis Kell, conducted workshops over four sessions with about 70 students. He introduced them to blues music traditions and had them engage with songs. The instructor, Gail Grigg, supported the workshops with English language exercises before, during and after. She had students discuss their migration experiences, which were then incorporated into a student-created blues song. Both students and organizers found the project helped students engage with the local culture and express themselves in English. They hope to expand the project in the future.
This document summarizes an article that discusses using the works of Studs Terkel to teach English language learners authentic American English. The author teaches a course on American culture at a Korean university using Terkel's interviews and writings. Students conduct research on Terkel's background online and listen to and discuss his interviews. They also give short speeches about their own beliefs. Using Terkel's works helps students move beyond simplified English texts to more authentic language use and gain cultural insights from Terkel's diverse interview subjects.
Grade School To Grad School Tesol Barratt Latham LoboLeslie Barratt
This document discusses three student mentoring programs at different education levels: grade school, high school, and graduate school. At the grade school level, mentoring involves lunch meetings and special events to foster social interaction. The high school program involves one-on-one and group mentoring between new and returning students. Mentoring at the graduate level includes pairing current and incoming students, as well as mentoring groups for MA and PhD students. The mentoring programs aim to provide opportunities for authentic communication and social integration to support language development.
The document discusses using music and art in teaching English for academic purposes. It describes incorporating art topics into student presentations and assessments to practice language skills. Students presented on artists and artworks from their own cultures. Music was also used, such as having students rewrite song lyrics in a more academic style. Specific language areas that can be taught using music and art include vocabulary, grammar, writing skills such as reflection, and developing critical thinking. The purpose is to create a more engaging and motivating learning environment through multimodal techniques.
Kaci Vestal has over 10 years of experience in education. She holds an MA and BA in Communication from Angelo State University. Currently, she teaches communication courses at George H. W. Bush New Tech Odessa High School and as an adjunct professor at Odessa College. Previously, she taught English at Plains Independent School District and was a lecturer at Angelo State University. References are available upon request.
The document summarizes Laura Tartak's observations and lessons learned from attending the 2018 TYCA-SE (Two-Year College English Association Southeast) conference in Louisville, KY. Some of the key sessions focused on innovative teaching methods like using science fiction, memes, and Wikipedia in the classroom. The conference provided inspiration for creative assignments and highlighted the importance of creativity, collaboration, and technology in teaching composition. Laura realized the value of attending conferences outside her normal library context to gain new ideas and promote the library to English instructors.
Grade School To Grad School Tesol P Point 2007 Barratt Latham LoboLeslie Barratt
This document describes several student mentoring programs across different educational levels:
1. A grade school mentoring program that pairs older and younger students for lunch meetings and special events to foster social networking and language development.
2. A high school mentoring program that implemented both one-on-one and group mentoring of English language learners to provide support and community.
3. A graduate student mentoring program consisting of pairing incoming with current students, mentoring groups for MA and PhD students, and cross-level mentoring through a student organization.
The mentoring programs aimed to provide opportunities for authentic communication and social integration to benefit language learning for students at various stages of education.
This document describes a process drama teaching case study conducted at an Australian secondary school that used drama techniques to teach Chinese language and culture to non-Chinese background students. The drama project involved students writing and performing a play based on the film Kung Fu Panda in Chinese class over several weeks, with teacher guidance. The case study discusses the implementation of the drama activities and lessons learned regarding effective use of drama approaches in secondary school Chinese language education.
Angela K. Johnson is a Ph.D. candidate studying students' information seeking behaviors and meaning construction using digital resources. She has over 20 years of experience as a middle school media specialist and language arts teacher. Her research focuses on how sociocultural contexts and instructional delivery influence students' academic learning processes online. She holds several teaching certifications and has received grants for technology integration projects at her school.
This document contains a list of 17 PowerPoint presentations about various topics related to Canada, including comparative political systems between Canada and the US, trans-border issues, Canadian studies curriculum, indigenous diplomacy in the Arctic, teaching about trade relationships, Quebec, the Canadian political system, teaching resources, and Canada's Aboriginal peoples.
The document provides information about the 43rd annual NC English Teachers Association fall conference being held October 10-12, 2013 at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. It includes the conference agenda with details of concurrent sessions, keynote speakers, award recipients, and information about membership and getting involved with NCETA.
This document provides an agenda and details for the 45th Annual Fall Conference of the North Carolina English Teachers Association (NCETA) taking place on October 2-3, 2015 at the University of North Carolina Asheville. The agenda outlines the schedule of events including registration, concurrent sessions, a keynote speech, and award ceremonies. It also provides biographies of the keynote speaker and award recipients as well as information on NCETA grants and awards.
This document is a resume for Kiara Brinkley-Allen. It lists her education credentials including a Bachelor's degree in English Language from Fayetteville State University and an Associate's degree in Fine Arts from Edgecombe Community College. Her relevant coursework focused on business writing, literature, education foundations, and teaching writing. Her work experience includes being a professional tutor at Edgecombe Community College since 2013 and working as an afterschool teacher/tutor for the City of Rocky Mount in 2013. She also held office assistant positions at FSU and Edgecombe Community College. The resume concludes noting honors including several first place wins for performances.
William Heidenfeldt is a PhD candidate in Romance Languages and Literatures at UC Berkeley. His research interests include foreign language teacher education, language and identity, and second language acquisition. He has taught French language courses at UC Berkeley since 2008 and has experience teaching middle school. He is expected to receive his PhD in May 2015 with a dissertation on identity work and pedagogical decisions of secondary school L2 teachers.
Susan Kim Wyle has over 40 years of experience as an educator and writer. She received her BA and MA in English from Stanford University. At Stanford, she taught a variety of writing courses and advised students. She has also written educational materials for publishers. Her publications include a composition textbook and articles about teaching with primary sources.
This article argues that English teachers should shift their classroom focus from teaching specific literary works to developing students' literacy skills. It recommends replacing traditional whole-class novel studies with student-centered approaches like literature circles that give students choice over what they read. Literature circles allow students to read texts that interest them at their level while still developing skills like inferring meaning and analyzing literary devices. This shift empowers students and better prepares them to be informed citizens and successful in college.
Veronica Oliver has extensive experience teaching composition and related courses at the university level. She received her PhD in Rhetoric, Composition, and Linguistics from Arizona State University in 2015. Her dissertation focused on the Puente Movement's opposition to Senate Bill 1070. She has published two peer-reviewed articles and presented her work at several conferences. Oliver has over 10 years of experience teaching various composition and writing courses at the university level. She also has experience working in writing centers as both a tutor and administrator.
This document contains a lesson plan for a class about the Work and Travel program. The 80-minute lesson involves students learning about the program through a video, reading passages that describe it, and answering questions. They discuss popular locations for the program and seasons it is available. The goal is for students to understand the program's requirements and benefits, and identify if they would be interested in participating.
A field based curriculum designed to teach english and culture to musically g...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a field-based curriculum designed to teach English and culture to two gifted Chinese adolescent pianists attending the prestigious Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. The one-year ESL Transition Program aimed to improve the students' English abilities, introduce them to U.S. culture, and prepare them for high school. Students participated in 19 field trips visiting 50 cultural and historic sites around Philadelphia to gain insight into the city and culture. The curriculum was tailored to the students' needs as musicians and focused on developing their language skills while not interfering with their musical studies.
Charlene Oldham is a middle school teacher in Lemay, Missouri with over 15 years of experience in education. She currently teaches 8th grade balanced literacy and advisory at Hancock Place Middle School, where she has worked since 2006. Prior to her current role, she held teaching positions at Vashon High School from 2002-2006 and worked as a staff writer for newspapers in Dallas, Orlando, and Little Rock from 1999-2002. She has a master's degree in teaching from Lindenwood University and a master's in journalism from Columbia University.
This document is Lisa Park's curriculum vitae. It summarizes her educational background, including a Ph.D. in Curriculum & Instruction from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It also lists her research interests, experiences, publications, and presentations. Her research focuses on language and identity, bilingual education, globalization and English learning, and qualitative research methods. She has conducted research on Korean international students in U.S. schools and has published several books on this topic.
The document provides information on new National Writing Project sites in Elk River, Montana and Singapore. It then lists the Board of Directors and notes a new Board Chair. Finally, it discusses the National Student Poets program, showing pictures of past student poets and activities.
This document summarizes a pilot project conducted by Black Hawk College to use American roots music to teach English literacy to immigrant and refugee students. A musician, Ellis Kell, conducted workshops over four sessions with about 70 students. He introduced them to blues music traditions and had them engage with songs. The instructor, Gail Grigg, supported the workshops with English language exercises before, during and after. She had students discuss their migration experiences, which were then incorporated into a student-created blues song. Both students and organizers found the project helped students engage with the local culture and express themselves in English. They hope to expand the project in the future.
This document summarizes an article that discusses using the works of Studs Terkel to teach English language learners authentic American English. The author teaches a course on American culture at a Korean university using Terkel's interviews and writings. Students conduct research on Terkel's background online and listen to and discuss his interviews. They also give short speeches about their own beliefs. Using Terkel's works helps students move beyond simplified English texts to more authentic language use and gain cultural insights from Terkel's diverse interview subjects.
Grade School To Grad School Tesol Barratt Latham LoboLeslie Barratt
This document discusses three student mentoring programs at different education levels: grade school, high school, and graduate school. At the grade school level, mentoring involves lunch meetings and special events to foster social interaction. The high school program involves one-on-one and group mentoring between new and returning students. Mentoring at the graduate level includes pairing current and incoming students, as well as mentoring groups for MA and PhD students. The mentoring programs aim to provide opportunities for authentic communication and social integration to support language development.
The document discusses using music and art in teaching English for academic purposes. It describes incorporating art topics into student presentations and assessments to practice language skills. Students presented on artists and artworks from their own cultures. Music was also used, such as having students rewrite song lyrics in a more academic style. Specific language areas that can be taught using music and art include vocabulary, grammar, writing skills such as reflection, and developing critical thinking. The purpose is to create a more engaging and motivating learning environment through multimodal techniques.
Kaci Vestal has over 10 years of experience in education. She holds an MA and BA in Communication from Angelo State University. Currently, she teaches communication courses at George H. W. Bush New Tech Odessa High School and as an adjunct professor at Odessa College. Previously, she taught English at Plains Independent School District and was a lecturer at Angelo State University. References are available upon request.
The document summarizes Laura Tartak's observations and lessons learned from attending the 2018 TYCA-SE (Two-Year College English Association Southeast) conference in Louisville, KY. Some of the key sessions focused on innovative teaching methods like using science fiction, memes, and Wikipedia in the classroom. The conference provided inspiration for creative assignments and highlighted the importance of creativity, collaboration, and technology in teaching composition. Laura realized the value of attending conferences outside her normal library context to gain new ideas and promote the library to English instructors.
Grade School To Grad School Tesol P Point 2007 Barratt Latham LoboLeslie Barratt
This document describes several student mentoring programs across different educational levels:
1. A grade school mentoring program that pairs older and younger students for lunch meetings and special events to foster social networking and language development.
2. A high school mentoring program that implemented both one-on-one and group mentoring of English language learners to provide support and community.
3. A graduate student mentoring program consisting of pairing incoming with current students, mentoring groups for MA and PhD students, and cross-level mentoring through a student organization.
The mentoring programs aimed to provide opportunities for authentic communication and social integration to benefit language learning for students at various stages of education.
This document describes a process drama teaching case study conducted at an Australian secondary school that used drama techniques to teach Chinese language and culture to non-Chinese background students. The drama project involved students writing and performing a play based on the film Kung Fu Panda in Chinese class over several weeks, with teacher guidance. The case study discusses the implementation of the drama activities and lessons learned regarding effective use of drama approaches in secondary school Chinese language education.
Angela K. Johnson is a Ph.D. candidate studying students' information seeking behaviors and meaning construction using digital resources. She has over 20 years of experience as a middle school media specialist and language arts teacher. Her research focuses on how sociocultural contexts and instructional delivery influence students' academic learning processes online. She holds several teaching certifications and has received grants for technology integration projects at her school.
This document contains a list of 17 PowerPoint presentations about various topics related to Canada, including comparative political systems between Canada and the US, trans-border issues, Canadian studies curriculum, indigenous diplomacy in the Arctic, teaching about trade relationships, Quebec, the Canadian political system, teaching resources, and Canada's Aboriginal peoples.
The document provides information about the 43rd annual NC English Teachers Association fall conference being held October 10-12, 2013 at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. It includes the conference agenda with details of concurrent sessions, keynote speakers, award recipients, and information about membership and getting involved with NCETA.
This document provides an agenda and details for the 45th Annual Fall Conference of the North Carolina English Teachers Association (NCETA) taking place on October 2-3, 2015 at the University of North Carolina Asheville. The agenda outlines the schedule of events including registration, concurrent sessions, a keynote speech, and award ceremonies. It also provides biographies of the keynote speaker and award recipients as well as information on NCETA grants and awards.
This article summarizes the Russian language curriculum at Argonne Elementary School in San Francisco. The curriculum integrates culture throughout by using folktales and literature as thematic units. Each unit introduces vocabulary and cultural topics through hands-on activities, stories, games and role-playing. Cultural displays around the school immerse students in the Russian language and culture. In the classroom, students sing, dance and act out animals to learn about their cultural significance in Russia. The goal is for students to acquire language and culture holistically rather than through isolated mini-lessons.
This three sentence summary provides the essential information about the document:
The document is an introduction to the textbook "Beyond Language: Intercultural Communication for English as a Second Language" which aims to introduce cultural components into the ESL classroom through readings, vocabulary exercises, and conversation activities. The textbook covers topics such as verbal and nonverbal communication patterns, personal relationships, family values, educational and work attitudes, time and space, cultural conflict, and cultural adjustment between American culture and other cultures. The textbook is designed to help ESL students avoid culturally-based misunderstandings and improve their intercultural communication skills.
Nancy Borer has over 20 years of experience in education, tutoring, and communications. She holds a Master's degree in Secondary Education and a Bachelor's degree in Communication. Her objective is to apply her education and management experience to achieve daily goals as part of a supportive team. She has specialized training in English grammar, composition, literature and language arts education. Her experience includes tutoring test prep, writing, and ESL students. She has taught college composition and high school English courses. Borer seeks to contribute her skills and experience to support students' academic success.
Emily Alt is a nationally board certified English and history teacher with 12 years of classroom experience. She has served as an English and history teacher, department chair, and grade level leader at several schools. She developed Common Core aligned curriculum and promoted literacy. She has extensive experience developing curriculum and leading departments, as well as collaborating across subjects and supporting all students.
GO BACK TO TEACHING BASIC WRITING SKILLSLexington Herald-L.docxbudbarber38650
GO BACK TO TEACHING BASIC WRITING SKILLS
Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) - Monday, January 23, 2006
Author: Donna Slone
My greatest fear in grades seven through 12 in the 1960s was that my English teacher would make good on her daily threats.
"I'm going to pinch your ears off and pitch you out the window," she shrieked whenever she caught a student daydreaming or unprepared.
Irene Slusher struck fear into the hearts of every student who entered her classroom on the second floor of Jackson City School in Breathitt County.
And we all had to enter.
Mrs. Slusher taught English to everyone at the school. I was one of 18 in the 1968 graduating class.
From her, we learned the parts of speech and the rules of punctuation. We never ended a sentence with a preposition. We learned to diagram sentences, and we
memorized and recited poems. We didn't dare turn in an assignment without first editing it for grammatical errors.
We took Mrs. Slusher seriously.
Now, as a college English instructor, I find myself wanting to pinch off a few ears. It is not that I dislike my students; quite the opposite is true.
The people I want to pitch out the window are the teachers and administrators who allowed these students to slip through high school without basic reading and writing
skills.
About 54 percent of college freshmen require remedial education in English, reading and/or math before they can take college-level courses that count toward graduation.
The problem is not race or economics. I have taught students of many ethnic and economic backgrounds. The problem is not confined to large, inner-city schools. This fall,
a few of my remedial students came from Chicago, Detroit and Miami. Some had graduated from public schools in Louisville. Others came from Franklin, Fayette and other
Central Kentucky counties.
They all lacked basic writing skills. They all told the same story: Their teachers didn't "count off" for errors in grammar and mechanics and didn't teach the parts of speech
in junior and senior high school. While some of the students' remarks might be taken with a grain of salt, their poor skills speak for themselves.
The students' most common errors are sentence fragments and run-on sentences. A student must recognize a subject and a verb before he can tell whether he has a
complete sentence. Too many students cannot, which makes instruction in English classes as understandable as a foreign language.
It is true that some students who need remedial courses slacked off in high school, but some received A's and B's in Advanced Placement English and still do not recognize
the parts of speech. Some, when they receive D's on their first college essays, decide college is too difficult.
College is not for everyone, but at open-admissions schools, we try to give those who want to attend every chance to succeed. As a result, we must first back up and
teach basic skills, before we can teach the advanced skills in rhetoric that students should be learning .
Naomi Tsai is a senior at the University of Pennsylvania studying English with a focus on creative writing. She has worked in a variety of roles including as a writing tutor, teacher, research assistant, and editor. Her resume demonstrates strong academic performance as well as significant community service and work experience in education.
Anne K. Richards has over 20 years of experience in education, including teaching English at multiple schools. She holds a PhD in English from UCLA and seeks a full-time position that combines education with other missions. Her experience includes curriculum development, teaching, advising students, and collaborating with colleagues. She is proficient in educational technologies and supporting students with diverse needs.
This document is Anne Heintzman's curriculum vitae. It summarizes her education, including a Ph.D. in Rhetoric and Composition from the University of Louisville, and lists her areas of research and teaching experience at various universities, including Western Kentucky University, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the University of Louisville. It also provides details of her academic service, professional development activities, and publications.
The document discusses incorporating Chinese guest teachers into elementary school programs to teach Mandarin Chinese. It notes that children are most receptive to learning a new language like Mandarin before age 10. The program would have the guest teachers provide 20-30 minute lessons to K-4 students 5 days a week to help them learn the spoken language and culture through songs, stories and activities. The district aims to expand such opportunities for students to engage with Chinese language and culture.
This newsletter provides information about upcoming presentations and events related to literacy for deaf and hard of hearing students. It summarizes two presentations that will occur at an upcoming convention for the Special Interest Group for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Readers. The first presentation will provide a meta-analysis of research on effective writing instruction practices for deaf students. The second will discuss an intervention to improve reading fluency and comprehension among deaf elementary students. The newsletter also shares information about SIG newsletters online, an online course, and a new book related to deaf literacy.
Kohn 2018_ELF - From research to pedagogy_RELC Conf 12-14 March 2018Kurt Kohn
The evolution of research on English as a lingua franca (ELF) is characterized by three major paradigm shifts from ‘variety’ to ‘communicative use’ to ‘translanguaging practice’. These shifts are accompanied by pedagogical suggestions for ELT, which all have in common that they are generally met with suspicion and resistance from ELT professionals (e.g. “Do you want me to teach incorrect English?”). In my talk I will address this conflict between ELT and ELF with the aim of reconciliation. From the perspective of a social constructivist understanding of language learning and communication, special attention will be given to a reconceptualization of Communicative Language Teaching focusing on three issues: a creatively open pedagogical orientation towards Standard (Native Speaker) English, speaker satisfaction as an endonormative criterion of communicative success, and implementation of English (or any other target language) as a pedagogical lingua franca. Results from pedagogical research projects in the European secondary school context will be used to discuss the pedagogical potential of telecollaboration for involving learners of English in authentic intercultural communication and thereby helping them to develop an emancipated non-native speaker identity and thus to become speakers of English.
This textbook aims to help language learners achieve success by understanding how to develop individual learning plans and strategies. It teaches students about learning styles, cognition, memory and communicative strategies.
The book is divided into three parts covering learning, language and independence. It provides activities for students to practice independently or in groups. The authors are experts in language teaching who base the advice on theories of learning and cognition explained simply. It is suitable both for individual use and as a class text to help all language learners.
Chelsea Stenvig seeks a position with a nonprofit organization. She has a bachelor's degree in secondary education and English from Concordia University Wisconsin and a master's degree in leadership and innovation from Wisconsin Lutheran College. She has several years of experience teaching middle and high school English and serving in administrative roles at charter schools in Milwaukee.
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This document provides a curriculum vitae for Kelli Michelle Bippert, who is a doctoral candidate at the University of Texas at San Antonio studying interdisciplinary learning and teaching with focuses on reading, literacy, and instructional technology. It outlines her education background, research interests, teaching experience at the university level, K-12 teaching experience, publications, presentations, and awards.
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This document outlines the bell schedules and lunch periods for J.H. Rose High School. It provides the start and end times for class blocks as well as the duration and timing of lunch periods under the regular, advisory, and smart lunch bell schedules. Adults are responsible for enforcing school rules around dress code, electronic devices, and students needing passes in the hallways during class time.
The document announces the North Carolina English Teachers Annual Conference to be held on September 28-29, 2012 at the UNC-Charlotte City Center Campus. It provides details on the keynote speakers, Patricia Dunn and Ken Lindblom, and lists other informative and engaging sessions led by the NC Department of Public Instruction, universities, and K-12 faculty from across the state. It also provides information on booking a hotel room at a discounted rate by September 11 and invites teachers to a free appreciation reception on Friday evening at the Levine Museum of the New South.
This article describes the author's experience as a middle school English teacher receiving an award. As a student, the author disliked English class and had negative memories, such as struggling to learn parts of speech and being humiliated singing a grammar song. Although the author initially took the teaching job without passion for English, over 10 years he has found fulfillment in helping students enjoy learning. The award recognizes the author's efforts to make English class a positive experience for all students.
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J.H. Rose High School offers a robust academic program with over 20 academic departments and extracurricular activities including mock trial, science olympiad, and various honor societies. The school also has opportunities for athletic involvement with over 15 sports and a vibrant dance program. Additionally, the school offers options for students to earn college credits while in high school through AP classes, classes at a local community college, and classes at a nearby university. The school also has over 50 clubs across various interests and exceptional children's services to support students of all needs.
The document outlines the program for the J.H. Rose High School Awards Day on May 24, 2013. It lists the senior class officers and 2013 marshals. The program includes performances of the alma mater and national anthem, a motivational speech, presentation of departmental, athletic, scholarship and distinguished awards, and remarks from student government leaders.
The document outlines the program for the J.H. Rose High School Awards Day on May 24, 2013. It lists the senior class officers and 2013 marshals. The program includes performances of the alma mater and national anthem, a motivational speech, presentation of departmental, athletic, scholarship and distinguished awards, and remarks from SGA leadership.
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2012 NCETA
1. NCETA
2012
Fall
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1
ð
ð
North
Carolina
English
Teachers
Association
NC
ENGLISH
TEACHERS
ASSOCIATION
42ND
ANNUAL
FALL
CONFERENCE
UNC-‐C
CITY
CENTER
CAMPUS,
CHARLOTTE,
NC
FRIDAY,
SEPTEMBER
28-‐
SATURDAY,
SEPTEMBER
29
www.ncenglishteachersassociation.org
Co-‐Sponsoring
Literacy
Across
the
Curriculum
2. NCETA
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The notion of literacy sponsorship (Brant, 1998) speaks to the power of individuals
and institutions to support literacy learning. Sponsors take responsibility for ushering
outsiders into their communities and provide them with tools for understanding the
community’s norms, values, and beliefs—the ways of knowing and doing that are
coded in language practice.
For too long, many have mistakenly believed that school-based literacy instruction
was the work of Language Arts and English teachers. While we are powerful
sponsors who help students learn how texts work, we do our students and our
profession justice when we reach out to others down the hall and across disciplinary
boundaries to co-sponsor student literacy in the arts and humanities, in the social
sciences, in the natural sciences and mathematics, and beyond.
At last year's conference, attendees said again and again, “less training, more
inspiration, more conversation, more networking opportunities.” That desire on the
part of NC English teachers matches well with our interest this year in literacy
sponsorship. So in the spirit of inspiration, networking, and collaboration, NCETA is
pleased to host a diversity of teachers at the 2012 Annual Conference, Co-
sponsoring Literacy Across the Curriculum. While we will continue to focus on
the success of students and teachers inside English studies curricula and classrooms,
we recognize the need to grow both vertically and horizontally, across contents areas,
grade levels, and institutions.
As we come together in Charlotte, let’s take advantage of this time together to
showcase, interrogate, and sketch new visions for the multiplicity of ways that we are
sponsoring and can continue to sponsor literacy in our classrooms, our schools, and
beyond. It is a pleasure to be part of such an important moment in our state and our
profession and an honor to serve as NCETA Conference Director.
Welcome from Conference Director, Stephanie West-Puckett
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Patricia A. Dunn is a former high school
teacher and two-year college instructor. Since
receiving her doctorate at The University at
Albany (SUNY), she has taught at Utica
College, in upstate New York, where she also
directed the Writing Center and chaired an
interdisciplinary committee on writing across
the curriculum. At Illinois State University for
six years, she taught courses in composition and
rhetoric. Now at Stony Brook University in
New York, she teaches methods of teaching
English and composition to pre-service high
school and middle school teachers, as well as
courses in young adult literature. She has three
books: Learning Re-Abled: the Learning Disability Controversy and Composition Studies (1995),
which has recently been republished online at the WAC Clearinghouse. Her second
book, Talking, Sketching, Moving: Multiple Literacies in the Teaching of Writing, was
published in 2001. Her third book, published in 2011, was co-authored with Ken
Lindblom: Grammar Rants: How a Backstage Tour of Writing Complaints Can Help Students
Make Informed, Savvy Choices About Their Writing. She has also published a number of
book chapters, as well as articles in English Journal, College Composition and Communication,
Kairos, Rhetoric Review, and JAC: Rhetoric, Writing, Culture, Politics.
Patrica’s keynote address, Multiple Literacies for Writing and Revising Across
the Curriculum, is scheduled on Saturday, 10:45am-12:00pm, 2nd
floor auditorium.
Both Patricia and her collaborator Ken Lindblom will be available immediately after
the keynote to sign copies of their books.
She will also co-present a session titled Grammar Rants on Friday, from 3:30pm-
4:45pm in Room 204.
Conference Keynote Speaker
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Joseph Bathanti is North Carolina's current poet
laureate and is the author of six books of poetry:
Communion Partners, Anson County, The Feast of All Saints,
This Metal (nominated for the National Book Award),
Land of Amnesia, and Restoring Sacred Art (winner of the
2010 Roanoke Chowan Prize). His novel, East Liberty,
won the 2001 Carolina Novel Award. His latest novel,
Coventry, won the 2006 Novello Literary Award. His book
of stories, The High Heart, won the 2006 Spokane Prize.
He is the recipient of Literature Fellowships from the
North Carolina Arts Council in 1994 (poetry) and 2009
(fiction); the Samuel Talmadge Ragan Award, presented
annually for outstanding contributions to the Fine Arts of North Carolina over an
extended period; the Linda Flowers Prize; the Sherwood Anderson Award; the
Barbara Mandigo Kelly Peace Poetry Prize; the 2011 Donald Murray Prize; and
others. Named the Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet for the Western Region for
the North Carolina Poetry Society for 2011-12, Bathanti is Professor of Creative
Writing and Writer-in-Residence of Watauga Global Community at Appalachian State
University.
Joseph and NCETA’s Dr. Sally Griffin will facilitate a Foundations session on Friday
morning at 9:30 titled Bathanti in the ELA Classroom. Don’t miss this opportunity
to talk with Joseph and learn how you and your students can engage poetry and place
through an exploration of Joseph’s work.
In addition, Joseph will accept the Ragan-Rubin award and read from his work on
Friday during the luncheon scheduled from 12:15pm- 1:45pm in the 2nd
floor atrium.
Tickets are required for the luncheon and were available to the first 70 conference
registrants who so requested.
Ragan-Rubin Award Winner
5. NCETA
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Steve Fulton is an eighth-grade
English teacher at Kannapolis Middle
School where he has taught for nine
years. He earned his Bachelor of Science
degree in middle grades education from
Ohio University and his Master of
Education degree from UNC-Charlotte.
He also has earned certification from the
National Board for Professional
Teaching Standards, which is teaching’s
highest credential. He is an active
participant in the UNC-Charlotte Writing
Project where he works with other
teachers to explore digital writing and
teaching practices for middle grades
educators.
Steve will co-present a session titled ‘There's an app for that!': The use of iPad
online applications for the consumption and production of media in today's
middle school English language arts classroom with Dr. Heather Coffey on
Saturday from 3:00pm-4:15pm in the 2nd
Floor Auditorium.
2011-2012 Outstanding English Teacher
6. NCETA
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Ken Lindblom has taught English
from grades 7 through the doctoral level at
several schools for almost 25 years.
Beginning at Columbia High School (in
upstate New York), he moved to college-
level instruction after earning a doctorate in
Composition and Cultural Rhetoric at
Syracuse University. Since then, he has
taught English, writing and methods of
teaching English courses at Illinois State
University and at Stony Brook University,
where he is currently Associate Professor of
English and Director of English Teacher
Education. At the upcoming New York State English Council conference, he will be
honored as a 2012 Educator of Excellence. Ken has published on the history, theory,
and practice of writing instruction, conversation analysis, and the teaching of English
in forums such as Rhetoric Review, College English, Journal of Pragmatics, and English Journal.
In 2011, he co-authored Grammar Rants: How a Backstage Tour of Writing Complaints Can
Help Students Make Informed, Savvy Choices About Their Writing with his frequent
collaborator, Patricia A. Dunn, through Heinemann Boynton/Cook Publishers. He
has been editor of English Journal, the National Council of Teachers of English’s 100-
year-old peer-reviewed journal for secondary and middle school English, since 2008.
Ken will present two sessions, one titled Grammar Rants on Friday, from 3:30pm-
4:45pm in Room 204 with keynote Patricia Dunn and another titled Publishing in
English Journal: A Conversation with the Editor on Saturday from 9:00am-
10:15am, also in Room 204.
Special Guest Speaker
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TEMPORARY PARKING PERMIT
VALID ONLY IN THE SECURE PARKING, INC. 707 N. BREVARD LOT
LOC A T ED A T T HE CORNER OF 11T H
& BRE V ARD
Enter from Brevard at 707 N. Brevard St.
PARKING INSTRUCTIONS AND INFORMATION:
This permit will allow you to park for free on a space available basis as a visitor of the Center City
Click here for directions to the building or visit centercity.uncc.edu.
1. Print this document.
2. Write your license plate number in the highlighted box.
3. Place the permit so that it is clearly visible.
4. The permit is valid only in the Secure Parking, Inc. lot located at 707 N. Brevard Street. This
lot is located at the corner of 11th
Street and North Brevard Street. From Brevard, take the
first right immediately after you
entrance to the lot. If you pass the brick house on the right, you have missed the entrance to
the lot and you will need to circle the block. You cannot enter the designated parking lot
from 9th
Street. You must enter from Brevard, which is a one-way street. Click here for a
map of the parking area.
5. Park only in an UN-Numbered space. Your permit is only valid in un-numbered spaces.
If you park in a numbered
space, you must pay. Numbered spaces are available at a cost of $4 (exact change only)
and utilize an honor box system.
6. You may not park
across from the entrance into the building.
7. Any variation in the directions above will result in a ticket and/or towing by Secure Parking,
Inc. UNC Charlotte cannot resolve parking tickets.
8. UNC Charlotte Faculty and Staff & Students are required to place the Center City parking
at Center City.
9. ADA Parking for those with a placard is available in the lot above or in the lot at 625 North
Brevard Street.
Any Alteration or illegal use of this permit will render it VOID. PERMIT HAS NO MONETARY VALUE.
Name of Visitor:
Date (s): Sept. 28 & 29, 2012
Time: 7:00AM-8:00PM
License Plate:
Purpose: NC English Teachers Conference
Issued By: ARA
VALID ON SPECIFIED DATE/TIME ONLY VA LID IN UN-NUMBERED SPA C ES ONL Y
PERMIT MUST BE CLEARLY VISIBLE AND
DISPLAYED ON THE DRIVER SIDE DASH.
8. NCETA
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About Us
NCETA is the professional organization of North Carolina English Language Arts
educators. Our mission is to promote quality instruction and to empower teachers to
be educational leaders by providing professional development that addresses the
demands of 21st century teaching and learning. NCETA is an affiliate of the National
Council of Teachers of English. NCETA hosts conferences, issues a newsletter,
manages a web site, funds action research through a grant system, and sponsors
awards to recognize excellence in teaching and writing. As an affiliate of the National
Council of Teachers of English (NCTE), NCETA is pleased to offer for exhibit some
resources from the national organization. If you are not a member of NCTE, check
out the organization at www.ncte.org.
Membership
All 2012 Fall Conference registrants receive a complimentary one-year membership to
NCETA, beginning October 2012-October 2013. Visit our Registration Table in the
lobby to learn more about our ongoing initiatives and find out how you can get
involved.
Digital Presence
We are pleased to continue developing our web presence at
www.ncenglishteachersassociation.org and invite you to join us
building a dynamic, interactive space for connecting and sharing
news, ideas, and resources across our state. Learn more about
the site’s features and functionality during the Foundations
session NCETA: An Introduction to Your Professional
Organization in Room 806, Friday from 9:30-10:30am.
Please use your camera at this year’s conference! We’ll have a gallery set up on our
webspace for you to share your photos and tag your colleagues. SmileJ
Twitter Feed
Got a Twitter account? Ready to meet your NCETA Tweeps? Tag your NCETA
Conference-related posts with #NCETA12 to join the electronic conversation.
NCETA 2012 Fall Conference Notes
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Conference Registration Desk
The registration desk is located in the lobby of the UNC-C City Center Building and
will open at 8:00 am on Friday, September 28. If you have any questions, the
Registration Desk Volunteers can help.
Exhibitors and Vendors
Education-related exhibits are located in the lobby. We are pleased to have exhibitors
display their products and services at our conference, and we appreciate their
sponsorship of events and their sharing of professional materials and ideas. However,
such presence or sponsorship does not imply endorsement by NCETA.
This year, we are also pleased to have local vendors with us selling their wares. Please
shop with them on 3rd
floor in Room 303. You might just find the perfect souvenir to
commemorate your time with us in Charlotte.
Exhibitor Visitation Drawing
Visit each exhibitor’s table to receive a signature on your Exhibitor Visitation
Drawing form, located in your conference materials. Completed forms should be
turned in at the registration desk by 4:15pm on Saturday. Participants completing the
form will be entered into a drawing for a variety of items donated by exhibitors and
vendors. You must be present to win or ask a colleague to collect your prize.
Silent Auction Baskets
NCETA Regional Representatives from across the state have pounded the pavement
and begged the generosity of craftspeople, merchants, and businesses statewide to fill
a lovely assortment of Silent Auction baskets. Stop by the Registration Desk to place
your bid before 4:15pm on Saturday. The highest bidders will receive their wins
during our closing session on Saturday at 4:30pm in the 2nd
floor auditorium.
Continuing Education Unit Credits
Conference participants attending ten hours of sessions qualify for one CEU toward
certification renewal. A certificate is included in the back of your program. Please fill
out the number of hours that you attended. Submit this form to your LEA and
follow local procedures for obtaining CEUs. Our luncheon on Friday will count as
two hours. You may count one hour of time spent viewing exhibits toward the
required ten hours.
16. NCETA
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Conference Evaluation Form
This year’s conference evaluation form is digital and will be available on the NCETA
website. Please take a few minutes to complete an evaluation before you leave
campus on Saturday. We appreciate your feedback.
Acknowledgements
• UNC-C College of Education and Department of Continuing Studies for
co-sponsoring our conference at the beautiful City Center campus.
• Exhibitors and Vendors whose support has enabled us to host a Teacher
Appreciation Reception at the Levine Museum of the New South on
Friday evening, 5:30-7:30pm.
• Presenters at this conference deserve our special thanks. They are asked to
register for the conference and are given no compensation for their time or for
the handouts they provide, yet they willingly share their ideas and expertise with
us all. Please take time to thank them for their efforts; they are the heart of our
conference.
• Keynotes speaker Patricia Dunn, Ragan-Rubin Award Winner Joseph
Bathanti, Featured Presenter Ken Lindblom, and Outstanding English
Teacher Steve Fulton are wonderful additions to this year’s conference
program. We are pleased to have them and look forward to their presentations
and time with us.
• Merchants Across the State who have contributed to our Silent Auction
Baskets. Don’t forget to stop by the Registration Desk to place your bid before
noon on Saturday.
• JH Rose High School Printing & Graphics Department for designing,
printing, and mailing our conference materials.
• All Board Members who have dedicated countless hours to the planning and
delivery of a successful conference, especially our Executive Director, Julie
Malcolm.
17. NCETA
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We encourage you to visit our Registration Desk to learn more about these awards
and gather materials that can help you to promote them in your schools and districts.
These awards provide excellent opportunities for young writers, and we enjoy hosting
them and celebrating their work each year at our Fall Conference.
Poet Laureate Award
Kathryn Stripling Byers, North Carolina Poet Laureate, has established a trust in
memory of her father through which NCETA will recognize one outstanding high
school poet and one outstanding middle school poet each year. Students will earn a
cash prize and have their winning poems published on broadsides, courtesy of the NC
Arts Council. Thank you to Mrs. Byers and her family for making this recognition
possible.
Watterson-Timberlake Award
To honor their 60+ combined years of service teaching English and their dozens of
exemplary student writing award submissions, NCETA honors William Watterson of
Watauga High School in Boone and Betty Timberlake (retired) of Enloe High School
in Raleigh through the Watterson-Timberlake non-fiction contest. Thank you to both
of them for their many contributions to the field.
The Wade Edwards Short Fiction Award
The Wade Edwards Foundation awards the annual Wade Edwards Short Fiction
Award to the North Carolina high school junior who submits the year’s most
outstanding original work of short fiction. The award is intended to reward
excellence in creative writing and to encourage contemplation of virtues among high
school students. In their submitted short fiction, students are encouraged to consider
and address one or more of the qualities associated with Wade Edwards – humility,
strength of convictions, loyalty, honor, charity, determination, the value of friendship,
and the obligations of friendship and community.
Amy Charles Award
Amy Charles directed the NCETA writing contests for twenty years, beginning in
1961. “A native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Charles received her BA from
Westminster College (1943) and her MA from the University of Pennsylvania (1944).
After her tenure at Westminster, she completed her PhD at the University of
Pennsylvania (1955). A year later, she moved to the Woman’s College (subsequently
Student Writing Awards
18. NCETA
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18
UNC-Greensboro), where she taught until shortly before her death, March 24, 1985.”
(1993* The North Carolina English Teacher 11*). The contest was named the Amy
Charles Writing Awards in 1985 and merged with the North Carolina Writing Awards
in 1992 at the request of NCDPI, who had previously administered those awards. In
2007, the NCETA Board of Directors added the middle school contest and made the
award exclusively a short fiction contest. The contest is open to all North Carolina
students in grades 6-8 and 9-12. Both the First Place High School and Middle School
Award winners receive $250 and publication on the NCETA web site.
19. NCETA
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Castle Software/Learning Online
Jason Stanton
800.345.7606
jstanton@castlelearning.com
Sadlier
Loren Breland
803.345.3100
loren@hickoryhill.us
Bread Loaf School of English
Deborah Alcorn
802.443.5418
deborah_alcorn@breadnet.middlebury.e
du
Everbind Books
Marc Callahan
800.842.4234
mcallahan@everbind.com
www.everbind.com
Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
Kedrick Lewis
(704) 441-4353
kedrick_lewis@mcgraw-hill.com
www.mheonline.com
Worldstrides International
Becky Lewis
540.885.4564
blewis@casterbridgetours.com
Studium Educational Resources
Kathleen Skotcher
336.993.4370
kskotcher@aol.com
NCShakes
Ivey Harris
Emily Morrison
336.841.2273
ivey.harris@ncshakes.org
King’s College
Jamie Bluto,
703.372.0266
jbluto@kingscollegecharlotte.edu
www.KingsCollegeCharlotte.edu
My Educational Partners
Rick Harlow
919.341.1350
rharlow@myedupartners.com
NCWrite
Trish Martin
(919) 683-2100
tmartin@measinc.com
LEARN NC
UNC School of Education
http://www.learnnc.org/
NC Council on Holocaust
Pamela Pate
www.ncpublicschools.org/
holocaust_council
NC Writing Projects
Tar River Writing Project @ ECU
www.trwp.org
UNC-C Writing Project @ UNC-C
http://wordpress.unccharlottewritingproject.net/
NCETA 2012 Fall Conference Exhibitors
20. NCETA
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Friday Schedule
7:15- 8:30 am Exhibitor Set-Up, Lobby
8:00 am Registration, Lobby and Refreshments, 2nd
Floor, Exhibitor
Networking in Lobby
9:00- 9:20 am Opening Remarks, 2nd
Floor Auditorium
9:30-10:30 am Foundations Sessions
10:45- 12:00 pm Concurrent Sessions A
12:15- 1:45 pm Buffet Lunch and Presentations, 2nd
Floor Atrium
2:00-3:15 pm Concurrent Session B
3:15-3:30 pm Refreshments, 2nd
Floor
3:30 -4:45 pm Concurrent Session C
4:45- 5:15 pm Exhibitor Networking
5:30-7:30 pm Teacher Appreciation Reception, Levine Museum of the New
South, 200 E. Seventh Street, Charlotte, NC 28202
Saturday Schedule
8:00-8:45 am Regional Meetings, Issues Forums
9:00-10:15 am Concurrent Session D
10:15 am Exhibitor Networking, Break
10:45-12:00 pm Keynote Address with Patricia A. Dunn, 2nd
Floor Auditorium
12:15- 1:15 pm Boxed Lunch/Networking, 2nd
Floor Atrium
NCETA 2012 Fall Conference Agenda
22. NCETA
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Conference Strands
Conference Strands
Global and Digital Citizenship (GDC)
Discourse Communities and Funds of Knowledge (DCFK)
Transfer of Learning (TL)
Transliteracies, Multimodalities, and Multimedia (TMM)
Content Area Literacies (CAL)
Common Core Literacy Strands (CCLS)
Reading and Writing in the Quantitative Disciplines (RWQD)
Visual and Performance Literacies (VPL)
Interdisciplinary Literacy Partnerships (ILP)
Community/ Family Literacy Partnerships (CFLP)
K-12 & Higher Education Partnerships (K12HEP)
NC Writing Project (NCWP)
Times Session Titles Comments/Choices
Friday 8:00-9:00 am Register, Visit Exhibitors
Friday 9:00-9:20 am Opening Remarks, 2nd
Floor
Auditorium
Stephanie West-Puckett,
Conference Director
Julie Malcolm, Executive Director
Friday 9:30-10:30 am Foundations Sessions
F1: Grant Writing for Educators,
Michelle Eble, East Carolina
University (K12HEP)
Facilitator: Theresa Redmond
Room 1104
F2: SET: Social Studies, English,
and Technology, Jennifer Ricks,
Department of Public Instruction
(CAL)
Facilitator: Wendy Sharer
Plan Your Conference Experience
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Room 1105
F3: Foundations
Tackling Text Complexity, Anna
Frost, Department of Public
Instruction (CCLS)
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
2nd
Floor Auditorium
F4: Foundations
Bathanti in the ELA Classroom,
Sally Griffin, Forrestview High
School & Joseph Bathanti,
Appalachian State University
(CAL)
Facilitator: Donna Duncan
Room 805
F5: Foundations
NCETA: An Introduction to
Your Professional Organization,
Julie Malcolm, Elaine Cox,
Jennifer Sharpe, and Jonathan
Bartels, NCETA Board of
Directors
(NCETA)
Facilitator: Debra Pagona
Room 806
F6: Foundations
Using the Levine to Foster
Literacy and Historical
Engagement, Levine Museum
(CFLP)
Facilitator: Mitch Cox
Room 204
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Friday 10:45 am-Noon Concurrent Sessions: A
A1: Literacy Leadership Teams:
The Secret to Successful
Secondary Schools, Laura Mayer
and Kenny McKee, Buncombe
County Schools (ILP)
Facilitator: Annie Hovis
Room 1104
A2: Multi-Modal assignments in a
hybrid classroom (Sponsored by
the Triangle Community
Foundation), Ann Barksdale,
Green Hope Elementary School
and Megan Poole, Wake County
Public Schools, NCSU Borchardt
Grant (TMM)
Multimedia, Traditional Texts,
and the New Literacy Landscape
(Sponsored by the Triangle
Community Foundation), Sara
Lee, Hobbton HS and Michael
Cook, Clemson University, NCSU
Borchardt Grant (TMM)
Facilitator: Courtney Clark
Room 1105
A3: Fostering Inclusive Media
Production in a 21st Century
Classroom, Damiana Gibbons,
Appalachian State University &
Mark Maya, Two Rivers
Community School Boone
(TMM)
Facilitator: Elaine Cox
2nd
Floor Auditorium
A4: Breaking Boundaries: Where
English and Science Meet,
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Antoinette Melvin and Chelsea
Coleman, Heide Trask High
School, (ILP)
Weather Literacy in the
Classroom, William Nelson, East
Carolina University (CAL)
Facilitator: Jeff Carpenter
Room 805
A5: Peter Elbow’s "Vernacular
Eloquence" Across the
Curriculum, Gail Russell,
Teachers College, Columbia
University (ILP)
Planting and Cultivating the
Rhetorical Vision in a High
School Culture, Valerie A Person
and Linda Kimble, Currituck
County High School (ILP)
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
Room: 806
A6: Curriculum Mapping and the
Common Core in English
Language Arts: Start at the Very
Beginning, Kelly Roberts,
Meredith College (CCLS)
Facilitator: Lisa Wall
Room: 204
Friday 12:15- 1:45 pm Ticketed Buffet Lunch
2nd
Floor Atrium
Amy Charles Short Prose
Award
Presented by Delores Cupo, Vice
President, NCETA
Recipient: Tanner Sciara,
“Personality of the Night”,
Watauga High School, Teacher
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Mary Kent Whitaker
Wade Edwards Short Fiction
Awards
Introduction by Elaine Cox,
NCETA President
Presented by Betsey McFarland,
Executive Director, Wade
Edwards Foundation
3rd place, Samantha Reid, "The
Pain of the Bullet", Needham
Broughton High School, Teacher
Chelsey Saunders
2nd place, Christopher Killen,
"Snow", South Caldwell High
School, Teacher, Dolores Cupo
1st place, Fiona Dunn, "The Rot
and the Rose", Needham B.
Broughton High School, Teacher,
Christine Molloy
Entries Judged by Marianne
Gingher, Bowman & Gordon
Gray Distinguished Professor,
Dept. of English & Comparative
Literature, The Creative Writing
Program, Co-Director, Thomas
Wolfe Scholarship University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill
NCETA Classroom Grant
Awards
Presented by Julie Malcolm,
NCETA Executive Director
Recipients: Danielle Lewis, Renee
Gliddon, Michelle Sims, Linda
Dextre, Legacy Garden Project
Wendell Middle School
Lisa Burke, Classroom Lending
Library, Wildwood Forest
Elementary School
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Outstanding English Teacher
Address
Introduction, Jennifer Sharpe,
NCETA 2nd
Vice President
Address Steve Fulton, 2011-2012
OET
Ragan-Rubin Award
Presented by Sally Griffin,
NCETA Past-President
Acceptance Address: Joseph
Bathanti, Appalachian State
University, NC Poet Laureate
Friday 2:00-3:15pm Concurrent Sessions: B
B1: CYO - See You Online:
Where Common Core and Web
2.0 Meet, Elizabeth Joyce and
Tonisha Walden, Rockingham
County Schools (CCLS)
Facilitator: Marcia Long
Room 1104
B2: Researching Your Research:
Teaching Students about Source
Credibility in the Age of the
Internet, Mitch Cox, Orange High
School (CCLS)
Cultivating Inquiry-Oriented
Classrooms to Teach the
Common Core, Mary Kendrick,
J.M. Alexander Middle School
(CCLS & NCWP)
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
Room: 1105
B3: Student Writers on the Move:
Connecting Curricula across High
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School and College, Wendy
Sharer, East Carolina University,
Meg Morgan, UNC- Charlotte,
and Tony Adkins, UNC-
Wilmington, and Tracy Morse,
East Carolina University (TL)
Facilitator: Tanya Watson
2nd
Floor Auditorium
B4: The Lightning Thief, Elyse
Durham, Hiawassee Dam Schools
(CAL)
Using MultiMedia to Promote
Reading, Sherrill Jolly, South
Brunswick High School (ILP)
Facilitator: Sarah Cannon
Room 805
B5: Teamwork Makes the Dream
Work: ELA & Social Studies
Integration (Sponsored by the
Triangle Community Foundation),
Leigh Ann Alford, and Anna Gay,
Knightdale HS, NCSU Borchardt
grant (CAL)
Social Injustice Thematic Unit,
Marcia Long, Devona Graham,
and Faydra Womble, SandHoke
Early College (GDC)
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 806
B6: Teaching the Best Young
Adult Fiction of 2011/2012 -
Alan Brown, Joan Mitchell, &
Students, Wake Forest University
(CAL)
Facilitator: Kelly Roberts
Room 204
Friday 3:30- 4:45 pm Concurrent Sessions C:
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C1: Teach the Election with
LEARN NC!
Kimberly Hirsh, LEARN NC
Managing Editor;
Jonathan Bartels, LEARN NC
Research Assistant;
Summer Pennell, LEARN NC
Research Assistant
(K12HEP)
Facilitator: Mary Kendrick
Room 1104
C2: Pearson: The Documentary,
Todd Finley, East Carolina
University and John Suralik, Early
College East (TMM)
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 1105
C3: Social Studies and Literacy:
Recognizing and Interrupting
Single Stories in Our Classrooms
Christina Tschida and Caitlin
Ryan,
East Carolina University (GDC)
Facilitator: Karen Lands
2nd
Floor Auditorium
C4: Putting Together the
Puzzle: Crafting Lessons To
Combine Common Core Strands,
Donna Duncan and Lisa Wall,
Burke County Public Schools
(CCLS)
Corkscrew: Opening the
Common Core and Essential
Standards in a Small School PLC
Structure, Annie Hovis-Williams,
Orange Charter School (CCLS)
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Facilitator: Mark Maya
Room 805
C5: Enhancing Writing
Instruction, Peer Editing &
Assessment with Google Forms,
Jeff Carpenter, Elon University
(GDC)
The Things We Take With
Us: Writing as Praxis in the
Classroom, Kerri Flinchbaugh,
East Carolina University, Patrick
Bahls, UNC-Asheville, and Laura
Bokus Benton, Caldwell
Community College and
Technical Institute (GDC)
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
Room 806
C6: Grammar Rants, Patricia
Dunn and Ken Lindblom, Stony
Brook University (CAL)
Facilitator: Danielle Ange
Room 204
Friday, 5:30-7:30 pm Teacher Appreciation
Reception, Levine Museum of
the New South,
200 E. Seventh Street, Charlotte
Free food, drinks, and admission
to Permanent Exhibit for all
conference registrants!
Saturday, 8:00-8:45am Regional Meetings
Regions 1 & 2
Room 1104
Facilitator: Debra Pagona
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Regions 3 & 4
Room 1105
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
Regions 5 & 6
Room 805
Facilitator: Marcia Long
Regions 7 & 8
Room 806
Facilitator: Keia Pannell
Saturday, 9:00-10:15
am
Concurrent Sessions: D
D1: Lesson Design with the
Common Core State Standards,
Anna Frost, Department of
Public Instruction (CCLS)
Facilitator: Renee Gliddon
Room 1104
D2: Collaborative Media Literacy
Education at the Middle Level,
Theresa Redmond, Appalachian
State University (TMM & NCWP)
Facilitator: Megan Firestone
Room 1105
D3: A New Way to Text:
Choosing Texts for the Common
Core, Christina Adams Purgason
& Karyn Dickerson, Grimsley
High School (CCLS)
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
2nd
Floor Auditorium
D4: Word Painting: How Rebecca
McClanahan's Methods Help
Students and Teachers Become
Better Writers, Rebecca
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McClanahan, writer, John York,
Penn-Griffin School for the Arts
(CAL)
Facilitator: Sarah Cannon
Room 805
D5: Tackling a Common Core
Career Project -- Collaboratively!,
Helena Venakides and Billy
Giblin,
Chapel Hill - Carrboro City
Schools (CCLS)
Digital Video Productions in Core
Subjects (Sponsored by the
Triangle Community Foundation),
Cindy Francis and Susan Szap,
Apex HS, NCSU Borchardt grant
(CAL)
Facilitator: Rob Puckett
Room 806
D6: A Conversation with the
Editor, Ken Lindblom, Stony
Brook University (K12HEP)
Facilitator: Will Banks
Room 204
Saturday, 10:45- Noon Keynote Address
2nd
Floor Auditorium
Introduction, Will Banks,
Keynote Address, Multiple
Literacies for Writing and
Revising Across the Curriculum,
Patricia A. Dunn
Book Signing: Patricia A. Dunn
and Ken Lindblom
Saturday, 1:30-2:45 pm Concurrent Sessions: E
E1: Engaging Writing in the
Quantitative Classroom: Patrick
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Bahls, UNC-Asheville (RWQD)
Facilitator: Kerri Flinchbaugh
Room 1104
E2: Learning the Basics of
Helping Struggling Readers:
Lessons from the Targeted
Reading Intervention, Kathryn
Ohle and Mandy Bean, UNC-Ch
(ILP)
Facilitator: Debra Pagona
Room 1105
E3: Teaching Students with
Learning Disabilities and
Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder in the Content Areas
Kathy Bonyun, Buncombe
County Schools, (DCFK)
Facilitator: Tracy Morse
2nd
Floor Auditorium
E4: Sacred Place, Type Faces:
Writing, Designing, Rethinking
Place with Google Maps, Robert
Puckett, JH Rose High School
(CCLS & NCWP)
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 805
E5: Artist Romare Bearden as
Literacy Sponsor: What the
American Master Artist Can Add
to the NC English Classroom
This Year, Gail Russell,
Smithsonian Institution Traveling
Exhibition Services, Kathleen
Hutton, Reynolda House Museum
of American Art (TMM)
News You Can Use, Courtney
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Clark, The News and Observer
(CAL)
Facilitator: Sally Griffin
Room 806
Saturday, 3:00-4:15 pm Concurrent Sessions: F
F1: Informational texts and NC’s
Digital Heritage with LEARN NC
Kimberly Hirsh, LEARN NC;
Managing Editor
Jonathan Bartels, LEARN NC
Research Assistant;
Laina Stapleton, LEARN NC
Research Assistant (K12HEP)
Facilitator: Christina Tschida
Room 1104
F2: The Demonstration Model:
Turning the Classroom into a
Space of Problem Posing and
Thinking Together, Megan
Firestone, University of North
Carolina at Charlotte (DCFK &
NCWP)
Let the Ideas Flow! Using Idea
Circles to Promote Collaborative
Engagement and Content
Learning, Lois Huffman, NC
State University, (CAL)
Facilitator: Susan Szep
Room 1105
F3: 'There's an app for that!': The
use of iPad online applications for
the consumption and production
of media in today's middle school
English language arts classroom,
Heather Coffey, UNC-Charlotte
& Steve Fulton, Kannapolis
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Middle School (TMM)
Facilitator: Kathy Bonyun
2nd
Floor Auditorium
F4: Read Aloud as Instructional
Tool in Middle and High School
English/Language Arts Teachers
(Sponsored by the Triangle
Community Foundation), Tanya
Watson, NC State University and
Sarah Cannon, Garner Magnet
School, NCSU Borchardt Grant
(CAL)
‘All These Boys Do is Talk
Sports’: Promoting Critical
Literacy through Sports-Related
Content, Alan Brown, Wake
Forest University (CAL)
Facilitator: Elizabeth Joyce
Room 805
F5: Poetry Reading and Open Mic
for Participants, John York, Penn-
Griffin School for the Arts and
Nancy Posey, Caldwell
Community College and
Technical Institute (CAL)
Room 806
F6: Creating a Legacy Garden:
Reading, Writing, Planting,
Reaping, Danielle Lewis, Renee
Gliddon, Michelle Sims, Wendell
Middle School
Facilitator: Caitlin Ryan
Room 204
Saturday 4:30-5:00pm Closing Session
Exhibitor Recognition
Exhibitor Drawings
Silent Auction Awards
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Saturday 5:15- 6:00pm Exhibitor Break-down
Saturday 11:30-12:00 Visit Exhibitors & Make Final
Bids on Silent Auction Baskets
Please show courtesy to our presenters and to other conference attendees. We ask
that conference participants attend sessions in their entirety. Sessions marked with
the symbol “ƒ” have been chosen as Featured Sessions.
As an affiliate of the National Council of Teachers of English, we expect participants
to abide by the ethical policies set by NCTE and NCETA:
• Unauthorized commercial solicitation is prohibited at all conference sessions.
• Speakers and participants are expected to show respect for everyone and to
avoid pejorative and prejudicial remarks.
Room 1104 Foundations 1
Grant Writing for Educators (K12HEP), Michelle Eble, East Carolina University
Need the cash to make your project happen? This session will cover successful
approaches to designing projects and proposals that will captivate the interest of
funding agencies. Participants will learn basic approaches to successful grant writing
in this informative session led by an experienced grant writer and professor of
technical and professional communication.
Facilitator: Theresa Redmond
Room 1105 Foundations 2
Social Studies, English, and Technology: Using Socratic Seminars and Writer’s
Workshops in the English Classroom (CAL), Jennifer Ricks, NC DPI
DPI Instructional Coaches will model interdisciplinary lesson design utilizing Wiggins
& McTighe’s Understanding by Design framework. Participants will work in
collaborative groups to create a lesson that incorporates English Language Arts, Social
Studies and Information and Technology.
Facilitator: Wendy Sharer
2012 Fall Conference Session Detail
Foundations Sessions 9:30- 10:30 am
Friday, September 28, 2012
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2nd
Floor Auditorium Foundations 3
Tackling Text Complexity (CCLS), Anna Frost, NC DPI
The Common Core State Standards state that students must be able to read and
comprehend complex literary and informational texts independently and proficiently.
Text Complexity plays an integral role in choosing texts. This interactive session will
take participants through the process for evaluating the complexity of texts.
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 805 Foundations 4
Bathanti in the ELA Classroom (CAL), Sally Griffin, Forrestview High School &
Joseph Bathanti, Appalachian State University
Don’t miss an exciting opportunity to meet with NC Poet Laureate, Joseph Bathanti,
and learn how you can incorporate his work into your ELA Classroom.
Facilitator: Donna Duncan
Room 806 Foundations 5
NCETA: An Introduction to Your Professional Organization, Julie Malcolm,
Elaine Cox, Jennifer Sharpe, and Jonathan Bartels, NCETA Board of Directors
New to NCETA? Unsure how NCETA can serve you, your students, and your
school? Join us to learn more about our organization and current service
opportunities that can help our organization grow while growing your network and
professional leadership skills.
Facilitator: Debra Pagona
Room 204 Foundations 6
Using the Levine to Foster Literacy and Historical Engagement (CFLP), Levine
Museum of the New South
Learn about the Levine Museum of the New South and how educators far and near
can take advantage of this community resource to build historical engagement and
foster social literacies.
Note: Conference participants can experience the museum’s permanent exhibit first-
hand at the Teacher Appreciation Reception Friday evening, 5:30-7:30pm.
Facilitator: Mitch Cox
1104 A1 ƒ
Literacy Leadership Teams: The Secret to Successful Secondary Schools (ILP),
Laura Mayer and Kenny McKee, Buncombe County Schools
Concurrent Sessions: A 10:45am-Noon
Friday, September 28, 2012
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Literacy Teams are powerful groups of interdisciplinary teachers who positively
influence both school culture and instructional effectiveness. This highly engaging
session, led by two seasoned Literacy Coaches, will enable participants to learn what
literacy teams are, how to develop them, and what they can do to systematically
improve schools.
Facilitator: Annie Hovis
Room 1105 A2
Multi-Modal Assignments in a Hybrid Classroom, Sponsored by the Triangle
Community Foundation (TMM), Ann Barksdale, Green Hope Elementary School and
Megan Poole, Wake County Public Schools, NCSU Borchardt Grant
As we incorporate more and more digital assignments into our classrooms, how do
students share their online work? Teachers in this session will show how students use
a variety of online tools such as Glogster, ToonDoo, Xtranormal, Google maps, and
Timetoast to explain their learning. Collaborative group work and online assignments
are combined in this hybrid classroom. Student work is posted on a Weebly page so
teacher can assess and other students can view to enrich learning.
Multimedia, Traditional Texts, and the New Literacy Landscape, Sponsored by
the Triangle Community Foundation (TMM), Sara Lee, Hobbton High School and
Michael Cook, Clemson University, NCSU Borchardt Grant
This session will present several ideas for multimedia and video projects. With just a
few guidelines and assistance, students can actively participate in the creation of
multimodal projects in their English language arts classes to represent their personal
narratives or to demonstrate their understanding of a class text.
Facilitator: Courtney Clark
2nd
Floor Auditorium A3 ƒ
Fostering Inclusive Media Production in a 21st Century Classroom (TMM),
Damiana Gibbons, Appalachian State University & Mark Maya, Two Rivers
Community School, Boone
In this interactive session, we will showcase how a classroom teacher fostered media
literacy in a classroom with students with severe to moderate disabilities and with
General Education students as he used media production and social media to connect
his students to their school and to the global community.
Facilitator: Elaine Cox
Room 805 A4
Breaking Boundaries: Where English and Science Meet (ILP), Antoinette Melvin
and Chelsea Coleman, Heide Trask High School
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Using literacy in science is easy! All it takes is collaboration, integration, and
motivation. In this session science meets language arts and breaks the boundary
between quantitative and expressive learning. Utilizing 21st century skills, these
teachers incorporate reading and writing to enhance literacy cross-curricularly.
Weather Literacy in the Classroom (CAL), William Nelson, East Carolina
University
We posit the study of weather information freely available on the Internet as a useful
means of bolstering both English and scientific literacy in the primary and secondary
education classroom. Students can thus gain skills that translate to other subjects and
also enhance their weather savvy and personal safety.
Facilitator: Jeff Carpenter
Room 806 A5
Peter Elbow’s "Vernacular Eloquence" Across the Curriculum (ILP), Gail
Russell, Teachers College, Columbia University
Vernacular Eloquence: What Speech Can Bring to Writing (2012) gives theory and
practice that will help participants to co-sponsor literacy across the curriculum. It is a
must read for anyone who wants to support the content area teaching of writing. In
this session, I will give an overview of Professor Elbow’s new book and include
highlights from a speech and writing symposium that he hosted at UMASS-Amherst
this spring.
Planting and Cultivating the Rhetorical Vision in a High School Culture (ILP),
Valerie A Person and Linda Kimble, Currituck County High School
Presenters will share their narrative of what has worked, is working and will work in
establishing a writing culture at their high school. Successes and disappointments will
be included as Kimble and Person share their journey of how to foster a writing
community within their classrooms as well as in their building and community.
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
Room 204 A6 ƒ
Curriculum Mapping and the Common Core in English Language Arts:
Start at the Very Beginning (CCLS), Kelly Roberts, Meredith College
In this interactive workshop, teachers will walk away with a better understanding of
common core 6-12 ELA AND a template for planning units and years. After a
crosswalk through the standards and seven planning tips, teachers will plan a core-
centered unit. Don’t know where to start? We can help!
Facilitator: Lisa Wall
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Room 1104 B1 ƒ
CYO - See You Online: Where Common Core and Web 2.0 Meet (CCLS),
Elizabeth Joyce and Tonisha Walden, Rockingham County Schools
Participants will examine how to integrate Web 2.0 technologies to create authentic
learning experiences in secondary classrooms to meet the English Common Core
Standards. Presenters will discuss strategies for using digital literacies as catalysts for
students’ critical thinking and learning. Students will share their knowledge and
collaborate effectively with a real world audience.
Facilitator: Marcia Long
Room 1105 B2
Researching Your Research: Teaching Students about Source Credibility in the
Age of the Internet (CCLS), Mitch Cox, Orange High School
How often have we read papers including sources that left us asking: What possessed
her to use that? How do teachers move beyond assessing a student’s ability to use
MLA bibliographies and citations to evaluating a student’s own skill to evaluate? This
session offers activities to develop student evaluative skills.
Cultivating Inquiry-Oriented Classrooms to Teach the Common Core
(CCLS/NCWP), Mary Kendrick, J.M. Alexander Middle School
Participants will unpack CCR writing standard seven (W7): “[Students will] conduct
short as well as more sustained research projects based on focused questions,
demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation.” Participants will
then explore how an inquiry-oriented classroom can help students acquire the skills
and understandings required by standard W7.
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
2nd
Floor Auditorium B3 ƒ
Student Writers on the Move: Connecting Curricula across High School and
College (TL), Wendy Sharer, East Carolina University, Meg Morgan, UNC- C, Tony
Adkins, UNC-W, and Tracy Morse, East Carolina University
This session examines the challenges that student writers face as they attempt to
bridge the gap between high school and college and the means by which college and
high school educators might collaborate to facilitate transfer of learning about writing
across that gap.
Facilitator: Tanya Watson
Concurrent Sessions: B 2:00- 3:15 pm
Friday, September 28, 2011
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Room 805 B4
The Lightning Thief (CAL), Elyse Durham, Hiawassee Dam Schools
Do you have students in your classroom who always finish first? Then you need an
enrichment course like The Lightning Thief. Using Moodle technology the class
incorporates a nine week study on Ancient Greek culture to go with the book. It is
appropriate for students in grades 5-8.
Using MultiMedia to Promote Reading (ILP), Sherrill Jolly, South Brunswick High
School
Students in Honors and AP courses at our schools participate in summer reading.
When they return in the fall, they open kiosks and "sell" the book they were required
to read. In addition, they create commercials for their reading, Facebook pages for
characters, and wall art that peaks the interest of students in the hallways. Opening up
student minds to how and why reading can be important has changed my approach to
teaching literature. It has also brought study from history, science, and marketing into
my classroom.
Facilitator: Sarah Cannon
Room 806 B5
Teamwork Makes the Dream Work: ELA & Social Studies Integration (CAL),
Sponsored by the Triangle Community Foundation, Leigh Ann Alford, and Anna
Gay, Knightdale HS, NCSU Borchardt grant
Looking for a way to integrate new Common Core Standards through an
interdisciplinary approach? This “tag-team” between an ELA teacher & Social Studies
teacher will provide practical and strategies for teaching historical non-fiction in the
ELA classroom, as well as ways to collaborate between disciplines. Leave this session
with ready-to-implement lessons for your classroom!
Social Injustice Thematic Unit (GDC), Marcia Long, Devona Graham, and Faydra
Womble, SandHoke Early College
The session will share an awesome unit revolving around the broad concept of social
injustice that integrates reading literature, database research, writing, technology, and
presentation skills with an emphasis on global awareness.
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 204 B6 ƒ
Teaching the Best Young Adult Fiction of 2011/2012 (CAL), Alan Brown, Joan
Mitchell, Beau Burns, Kaylin Bugica, Caroline Fisher, Christina McClain, Michael
Short, Tiffany Newsome, and Sara Schubert, Wake Forest University
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During this session, current and former students of the English Education program at
Wake Forest University will explore some of the best award-winning young adult
fiction from 2011/2012 while suggesting connections to classic texts, works of
nonfiction, and other academic content areas.
Facilitator: Kelly Roberts
Room 1104 C1
Teach the Election with LEARN NC! (K12HEP) Kimberly Hirsh, LEARN NC
Managing Editor; Jonathan Bartels, LEARN NC Research Assistant; Summer Pennell,
LEARN NC Research Assistant
LEARN NC is a digital resource providing lesson plans, professional development,
and innovative web resources to support teachers, build community, and improve K-
12 education in North Carolina. In this session, discover informational texts from
LEARN NC’s election guide and The Mini Page archive for teaching literacy
throughout the 2012 election season.
Facilitator: Mary Kendrick
Room 1105 C2 ƒ
Pearson: The Documentary (TMM),Todd Finley, East Carolina University and John
Suralik, Early College East
Pearson, the world's largest education company, reported $9 billion in revenues from
its K-college curriculum, online courses, test preparation and scoring services. The
company also tests Pearson-trained teachers’ use of Pearson materials and contributes
to a narrowed curriculum that is based on fossilized assumptions about literacy. This
session will premier a student-researched documentary on these issues. View our
short movie and participate in the lively conversation that follows. the world's largest
education company, reported $9 billion in revenues from its K-college curriculum,
online courses, test preparation and scoring services. The company also tests Pearson-
trained teachers’ use of Pearson materials and contributes to a narrowed curriculum
that is based on fossilized assumptions about literacy. This session will premier a
student-researched documentary on these issues. View our short movie and
participate in the lively conversation that follows.
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Concurrent Sessions: C 3:30-4:45pm
Friday, September 28, 2012
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2nd
Floor Auditorium C3 ƒ
Social Studies and Literacy: Recognizing and Interrupting Single Stories in
Our Classrooms (GDC) Christina Tschida and Caitlin Ryan, East Carolina
University
This interactive presentation introduces teachers to the dangers of having “single
stories” about groups of people, historical events, and cultural situations. Using
videos, books, and participants’ own experiences, we explore how teaching with
multicultural children’s literature can expand single stories and instead foster complex
thinking and social justice.
Facilitator: Karen Lands
Room 805 C4
Putting Together the Puzzle: Crafting Lessons To Combine Common Core
Strands (CCLS), Donna Duncan and Lisa Wall, Burke County Public Schools
This session will share activities that integrate cross-curricular informational texts,
nonfiction, the visual arts, and research with traditional literature to focus on multiple
Common Core Standards. The literature component will highlight American and
British selections including various genres. Teachers can utilize activities from this
workshop to make students active learners.
Corkscrew: Opening the Common Core and Essential Standards in a Small
School PLC Structure (CCLS), Annie Hovis-Williams, Orange Charter School
The Corkscrew Meeting is a structure for Professional Learning Communities within
smaller schools. This presentation outlines how to use structures to build democratic
communities of teachers, administration, parents and students in small schools while
maintaining professional development and vertical curriculum alignment to enhance
student learning using the Common Core.
Facilitator: Mark Maya
Room 806 C5
Enhancing Writing Instruction, Peer Editing & Assessment with Google
Forms (GDC), Jeff Carpenter, Elon University
Google forms can be used for the purposes of writing self-assessment, peer editing,
and teacher grading. The data forms gather can be tailored for different assignments,
and be used to enhance writing instruction and expedite assessment methods. Sample
self-assessment, peer editing, and grading forms will be shared with attendees.
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The Things We Take With Us: Writing as Praxis in the Classroom (GDC),
Kerri Flinchbaugh, East Carolina University, Patrick Bahls, UNC-Asheville, and Laura
Bokus Benton, Caldwell Community College and Technical Institute
After a 30-day writing adventure, these instructors recognized its potent educational
potential. This session will explore how this writing exercise encourages writers to
reflect meaningfully as authors of their own work and to integrate themselves into a
community of interacting coauthors. Participants will engage in a sample activity,
reflect together, and discuss adapting for their classrooms.
Facilitator: Jennifer Sharpe
Room 204 C6 ƒ
Grammar Rants, Patricia Dunn and Ken Lindblom, Stony Brook University (CAL)
How can teachers satisfy demands to “teach grammar” and teach writing responsibly-
-as well as inference and critical thinking? By having students read and analyze
grammar rants--published complaints about other people’s language use: letters to
editors, blogs, online comments, syndicated columns, and news features. Join the
authors of the wildly popular new book for an exciting session on how to help
students to “make informed, savvy choices about their writing”. (Adapted from
NCTE 2011 Conference Notes.)
Facilitator: Danielle Ange
Room 1104 D1 ƒ
Lesson Design with the Common Core State Standards (CCLS), Anna Frost, NC
DPI
What do the standards look like in the classroom? This session will provide
participants with key components of a lesson to effectively teach the Common Core
State Standards using a complex text. Participants will have an opportunity to engage
in a lesson and collaboratively discuss its implications on classroom instruction.
Facilitator: Renee Gliddon
Room 1105 D2
Collaborative Media Literacy Education at the Middle Level (TMM), Theresa
Redmond, Appalachian State University
Providing insight into media literacy education as a way to address multiple literacies
Concurrent Session D 9:00-10:15am
Saturday, September 29, 2012
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and multimodal learning in middle school level curricula, the proposed presentation
shares case study research that investigated how teachers implemented media literacy
in an urban, public middle school, including not only what they taught, but also how
they taught it. Descriptive data of three veteran teachers’ collaborative classroom
practice was gathered through extensive field observations, interviews, and document
analysis. The Core Principles of Media Literacy Education in The United States
(CPMLE) is employed as a conceptual framework through which teachers’ media
literacy practice is grounded and investigated. The barriers and constraints to media
literacy education are also explored.
Facilitator: Megan Firestone
2nd
Floor Auditorium D3 ƒ
A New Way to Text: Choosing Texts for the Common Core (CCLS), Christina
Adams Purgason & Karyn Dickerson, Grimsley High School
Learn about text selection in regard to the Common Core Standards, including literary
nonfiction, graphic novels, and non-print media. Skills covered include analysis of
non-print media, including artwork, photographs, and political cartoons; appropriate
implementation of graphic novels; understanding the difference between nonfiction
and literary nonfiction; and locating nonfiction sources on the web. The session will
focus on literacy both in the English classroom and across the curriculum.
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 805 D4Word
Painting: How Rebecca McClanahan's Methods Help Students and Teachers
Become Better Writers (CAL), Rebecca McClanahan, writer and John York, Penn-
Griffin School for the Arts
For over fifteen years, Rebecca McClanahan was Writer-in-Residence in the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system. Since her tenure in Charlotte, she has
published many books of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, as well as an
excellent resource for teachers, Word Painting. Whether we write poetry, fiction, or
nonfiction, we can benefit from increasing our skills in description. Based on Word
Painting: A Guide to Writing More Descriptively, this workshop focuses on using
“word pictures” to shape authentic, effective literary pieces in all forms.
Facilitator: Sarah Cannon
Room 806 D5
Tackling a Common Core Career Project-- Collaboratively! (CCLS), Helena
Venakides and Billy Giblin, Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools
Why should 8th grade students tackle a Career Project? In this session, we will present
a 4-week Common Core Career Project in which students choose, explore, research,
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and present a future career of their choice. In this project, students also explore the
biography of a recognized expert within their chosen career. This project caters to
every section of the Language Arts Common Core Standards and several components
of the NC Essential Standards for Social Studies. Ultimately, students take on the role
of an expert in their chosen field and teach the class about their career for 30 minutes.
Students must provide a warm-up, notes/ lecture/ power-point, an activity and a final
assessment. The "real" teacher acts as a student!
Digital Video Productions in Core Subjects (CAL), Sponsored by the Triangle
Community Foundation, Cindy Francis and Susan Szap, Apex High School, NCSU
Borchardt grant
Learn how to seamlessly integrate themes across the curriculum using core subject
curricula and digital video production. Students choose a theme studied in core
subjects and use it as a springboard to generate a capstone project: a four minute
documentary that expresses how the theme (topic) is relevant today. Hear how the
project’s various elements—initial pitch, interviews, script, storyboard, digital images,
and final cut—come together to generate a core curricula engaging experience.
Facilitator: Rob Puckett
Room 204 D6 ƒ
Publishing in English Journal: A Conversation with the Editor (K12HEP), Ken
Lindblom, Stony Brook University
Join English Journal Editor Ken Lindblom to talk about taking your teaching ideas and
practices from the classroom to the pages of one of the field’s most respected
journals. Don’t miss this opportunity to pitch your ideas and find potential
collaborators interested in publishing the scholarship of teaching and learning.
Facilitator: Will Banks
Room 1104 E1 ƒ
Engaging Writing in the Quantitative Classroom (RWQD) Patrick Bahls, UNC-
Asheville
Join author of the new book Student Writing in the Quantitative Disciplines: A Guide
for College Faculty to talk about why writing is relevant to the STEM disciplines and
how STEM teachers can support better writing in their disciplines. Learn how using a
Writing-to-Learn and Writing-in-the Disciplines approach can benefit students,
making their math-related study more rigorous and relevant at all grade levels.
Facilitator: Kerri Flinchbaugh
Concurrent Session E 1:30-2:45 pm
Saturday, September 29, 2012
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Room 1105 E2
Learning the Basics of Helping Struggling Readers: Lessons from the
Targeted Reading Intervention (ILP), Kathryn Ohle and Mandy Bean, UNC-Ch
The Targeted Reading Intervention is a federally-funded randomized control trial that
delivers one-on-one instruction to struggling readers. This presentation will give an
overview of the key skills struggling students need to become successful readers, a
diagnostic model, and a suggested set of activities to help teach and reinforce these
skills.
Facilitator: Debra Pagona
2nd
Floor Atrium E3 ƒ
Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities and Attention
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in the Content Areas (DCFK), Kathy Bonyun,
Buncombe County Schools
Participants will learn characteristics of students with ADHD and various learning
disabilities. Teachers will participate in simulations that mimic the experiences of
students with disabilities in the classroom environment and will be given strategies
that help all learners meet Common Core Literacy Standards in all content areas.
Facilitator: Tracy Morse
Room 805 E4 ƒ
Sacred Place, Type Faces: Writing, Designing, Rethinking Place with Google
Maps (CCLS/NCWP), Robert Puckett, JH Rose High School
This project encourages students to redefine the notion of place in their own terms
while pushing through the restrictive nature of digital composing sometimes found in
classroom settings. In this session, participants will explore student projects and
create their own collaborative Google Map that brings together digital art and digital
writing. Participants should have a Google Account set-up prior to session.
Facilitator: Bob Alexander
Room 806 E5
Artist Romare Bearden as Literacy Sponsor: What the American Master Artist
Can Add to the NC English Classroom This Year (TMM), Gail Russell,
Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Services, Kathleen Hutton, Reynolda
House Museum of American Art
Native to Charlotte, Romare Bearden has a gallery dedicated to his work at the Mint
Museum, and his work is featured in Charlotte’s main library. In this session,
presenters discuss Bearden’s A Black Odyssey, a traveling collection that will be
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hosted by Reynolda House in Winston-Salem this fall and winter. We position the
collection within Bearden’s oeuvre and show why it is particularly important to North
Carolina English teachers. We will close with a Q&A about the extensive availability
of Bearden’s work in North Carolina and how his work might sponsor a range of
literacies in NC English classes this year. It doesn’t matter if you consider yourself an
“art” person or not. We plan for you to experience Bearden’s art as your students’
might experience it. The session will promote lively experiential discussion around
participants’ responses to this very special collection.
News You Can Use (CAL), Courtney Clark, The News and Observer
In this session you will learn how to access the FREE e-edition of The News &
Observer. You will also gain access to lesson plans and additional resources to
support the use of newspapers to reach your curriculum goals. NIE is an acronym for
Newspapers in Education, a worldwide effort that supports the use of newspapers as
supplementary text in schools. NIE is a non-profit that provides the newspaper, along
with training and support, to schools in North Carolina. We provide all of these
services at no charge to schools. NIE works to encourage young people to become
lifelong readers and learners, capable writers, informed, involved adults, thoughtful
consumers of the news, and creative contributing citizens. Come find out how to
integrate newspapers into your classroom.
Facilitator: Sally Griffin
Room 1104 F1 ƒ
Informational Texts and NC’s Digital Heritage with LEARN NC (K12HEP),
Kimberly Hirsh, LEARN NC Managing Editor; Jonathan Bartels, LEARN NC
Research Assistant; Laina Stapleton, LEARN NC Research Assistant
LEARN NC is a digital resource providing lesson plans, professional development,
and innovative web resources to support teachers, build community, and improve K-
12 education in North Carolina. In this session, explore primary source materials and
related lesson plans from the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center and LEARN
NC.
Facilitator: Christina Tschida
Concurrent Sessions: F 3:00-4:15pm
Saturday, September 29, 2012
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Room 1105 F2
The Demonstration Model: Turning the Classroom into a Space of Problem
Posing and Thinking Together (DCFK/NCWP), Megan Firestone, University of
North Carolina at Charlotte
Learn about a new curriculum for First Year Composition, called the Demonstration
Model, that has students build knowledge together by discussing and reflecting on
their funds of knowledge. This curriculum brings students together as a community of
learners and encourages them to share and develop a willingness to think out loud.
Let the Ideas Flow! Using Idea Circles to Promote Collaborative Engagement
and Content Learning (CAL), Lois Huffman, NC State University
Idea circles are small-group, peer-led discussions fueled by interaction with multiple
print and digital informational materials. Join us as we engage in one of these inquiry-
based discussions and explore how to use Idea Circles to build conceptual
understanding and intrinsic motivations for literacy across the curriculum.
Facilitator: Susan Szep
2nd
Floor Auditorium F3 ƒ
'There's an app for that!': The use of iPad online applications for the
consumption and production of media in today's middle school English
language arts classroom (TMM), Heather Coffey, UNC-Charlotte & Steve Fulton,
Kannapolis Middle School
In this roundtable session, participants will have the opportunity to explore the many
ways in which classroom teachers are already using the iPad™ both as a teaching tool
and as a way to develop skills with 21st Century learners. More specifically, we will
discuss how teachers might integrate the iPad™ into classrooms in order to meet the
English teaching standards as outlined by the NCTE and IRA. Participants will also
be able to experiment with the various iPad™ “Apps”, like the e-readers, dictionaries,
and flash cards and discuss how they might assist in the acquisition of skills required
by the national and local learning standards. We will also share the possible
disadvantages to using this technology as well as invite the suggestions and
experiences of those who are currently using the Ipad™ in their classrooms.
Facilitator: Kathy Bonyun
Room 805 F4
Read Aloud as Instructional Tool in Middle and High School
English/Language Arts Teachers (CAL), Sponsored by the Triangle Community
Foundation, Tanya Watson, NC State University and Sarah Cannon, Garner Magnet
School, NCSU Borchardt Grant
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Elementary teachers commonly use read-aloud and write-aloud to engage and
entertain. This session offers specific read-aloud and write-aloud applications as
instructional tools for middle and high school students to balance efferent strategies
(i.e., reading for facts; writing informational text) and aesthetic strategies (i.e., reading
for enjoyment; writing for personal exploration) with the goal to promote stronger
comprehension.
‘All These Boys Do is Talk Sports’: Promoting Critical Literacy through
Sports-Related Content, Alan Brown, Wake Forest University (CAL)
Whether you love sports or hate them, this is the session for you. This interactive
presentation will examine the position of sports in secondary schools while providing
attendees with ideas and resources for engaging some of your hardest to reach
students—sports-minded adolescent males—in reading, writing, and critical literacy.
Facilitator: Elizabeth Joyce
Room 806 F5
Poetry Reading and Open Mic for Participants (CAL), John York, Penn-Griffin
School for the Arts and Nancy Posey, Caldwell Community College and Technical
Institute
NCETA members Nancy Posey and John York have recently published poetry
collections. They would like to invite members to a reading and ask them to read or
recite favorite poems or their own work, or just listen, if they prefer.
Facilitator: John York
Room 204 F6 ƒ
Creating a Legacy Garden: Reading, Writing, Planting, Reaping (ILP), Danielle
Lewis, Renee Gliddon, and Michelle Sims, Wendell Middle School
Session facilitators will share research, accomplishments, and challenges in creating a
Legacy Garden at Wendell middle school and discuss methods for creating project
based, cross-curricular learning for students.
Facilitator: Caitlin Ryan
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Executive Director
Julie Malcolm
5227 Koster Hill Place
Cary, NC 27518
1.919.896. 6989
Julie.Malcolm@dpi.nc.gov
President
Elaine Cox
7891 Old Hwy 16
Crumpler, NC 28617
1.336.384.3591
Ashe County Middle School
elaine.cox@ashe.k12.nc.us
1st Vice President
Dolores Cupo
7035 Spartan Drive
Hudson, NC 28638
South Caldwell High School
1.828.396.2188
dcupo@caa.k12.nc.us
2nd Vice President
Jennifer Sharpe
5852 Daughtridge Rd.
Rocky Mount, NC 27803
1.252.908.1350
jennifer.lee.sharpe@gmail.com
Conference Director
Stephanie West-Puckett
Department of English
East Carolina University
Greenville, NC 27858
1.252.737.1089
westpucketts@ecu.edu
DPI Representative
Anna Frost
Anna.Frost@dpi.nc.gov
Secretary
Christy Shivar
363 Billy Price Road
Seven Springs, NC 28578
Spring Creek HS
1.919.751.7160
christyshivar@wcps.org
Past President
Dr. Sally Griffin
1125 Edgewood Circle
Gastonia, NC. 28052
1.704.861.2625
1.704.953.7328
sgsallyg@gmail.com
NCTE Director
Dr. Joe Milner
2125 Royal Drive
Winston-Salem, NC 27106
Wake Forest University
1.336.759.5341
milner@wfu.edu
Writing Project Representative
Dr. Will Banks
East Carolina University
2210 Bate Bldg, Mail Stop 555
Greenville, NC 27858
1.252.328.6674
banksw@ecu.edu
NCETA Notes Editor
Melissa Armbrester
Hugh M. Cummings, III HS
2200 N. Mebane St.
Burlington, NC 27217
Melissa_Armbrester@abss.k12.nc
.us
Webmaster
Jonathan Bartels
UNC, Chapel Hill
School of Education
CB 3500 Peabody Hall
Chapel Hill, NC 27599
jtbartels@gmail.com
Colleges/Universities
Director-West
Vacant
Colleges/Universities
Director-East
Dr. Sheryl Long
longs@chowan.edu
Colleges/Universities
Director-Central
Dr. Kelly Roberts
robertsk@meredith.edu
Independent Schools Director
Vacant
NCETA Board of Directors
A list of Regional Directors can be found on our website at www.ncenglishteachersassociation.org.
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N
Make Plans Now to Attend
NCETA’s 43nd
Annual Fall Conference
At UNC-Wilmington
Dates TBA
Check our website for updates.
Make sure to complete the Fall 2012 Electronic Evaluation Form
to tell us about your conference experience. The form is available
at our website, http://www.ncenglishteachersassociation.org/nceta-2012-evaluation/.
We appreciate your feedback and look forward to seeing you again
next year!
NCETA 2013 Fall Conference
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