tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4709924828396809379.post8425825318567094388..comments2023-11-02T07:29:59.957-06:00Comments on NCTE Conference on English Education: Wondering About the Unit PlanNCTEhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12254024796847309329noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4709924828396809379.post-13397463014241102782010-02-27T13:48:54.110-06:002010-02-27T13:48:54.110-06:00keep quoting these dead white guys for a reason. W...keep quoting these dead white guys for a reason. We seem to be repeating some particularly nasty history, right now.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4709924828396809379.post-77856097389846721572010-02-07T03:32:24.971-06:002010-02-07T03:32:24.971-06:00[url=http://sopriventontes.net/][img]http://sopriv...[url=http://sopriventontes.net/][img]http://sopriventontes.net/img-add/euro2.jpg[/img][/url]<br />[b]rules of order software, [url=http://sopriventontes.net/]free online shop software[/url]<br />[url=http://sopriventontes.net/]Software PC[/url] free antivirus software for windows xp make to order software<br />line software store [url=http://tonoviergates.net/]purchase a software[/url] 4.0 software price<br />[url=http://tonoviergates.net/]uic software store[/url] nero 9 software<br />[url=http://sopriventontes.net/]mobile software price[/url] adobe macromedia software<br />free adobe software for students [url=http://sopriventontes.net/]adobe photoshop cs3 extended instructions[/url][/b]Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4709924828396809379.post-7132032412408223262007-09-11T21:32:00.000-06:002007-09-11T21:32:00.000-06:00I do require unit plans in both my Teaching of Wri...I do require unit plans in both my Teaching of Writing and Teaching of English (methods) classes at Northern Michigan University. Unit plans allow students to synthesize lesson planning, attention to state standards, and assessment all in one assignment. Another reason to incorporate unit plans in Michigan is the new Michigan Merit Curriculum's emphasis on unit plans for teaching English at the high school level. See http://www.mich.gov/mde/0,1607,7-140-38924_41644_42674---,00.html for more information. <BR/><BR/>I also invite my former English Ed students, who are now English teachers across the United States, to let me know if my students can help them by creating lesson or unit plans for specific units of study in their schools. This has brought about many successful academic service learning projects which help novice teachers and allow my students to get "real world" feedback on their lesson plans. Students in my methods classes during the past few years have planned a unit on YA lit novel Stargirl for an American Literature class in lower Michigan; created unit resources for a Wisconsin high school English class who were studying Fahrenheit 451; and designed a assignments for a unit on Native American identity and personal narrative for a class in New Mexico.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4709924828396809379.post-36578316757660492742007-08-22T10:17:00.000-06:002007-08-22T10:17:00.000-06:00Hmm... good topic! The unit plan does seem to be a...Hmm... good topic! The unit plan does seem to be a method course rite of passage. I think it is a necessary one. Not only can it help students get ready for presenting their lessons in ways that administrators might want to see them, but it can give them early experience juggling different state and national standards. It also can give them the opportunity to see how they best organize their plans. I offer my students different models for planning and use the ReadWriteThink template as a basic one (I like it because it is so narrative in structure, and I just feel that many English Ed students think in more narrative terms than charts or columns might support). Other members in the department offer other templates. <BR/><BR/>I think it can also give students that extra boost of confidence when they go into the field: "OK, I'm not completely without ideas. I've put together this whole unit!"<BR/><BR/>On the other hand, there is no promise that a student will ever use his or her unit. I know many find the labor tedious, and I am sure some never touch the unit again once it is completed. <BR/><BR/>That all being said, I'm generally in favor of a unit plan as part of a methods class. I think the experience students gain in organizing and essentially being curriculum writers is worth it. I would hope there would be some variety and differentiation mixed in, with students considering different standard sets or formats and certainly trying to contextualize everything. <BR/><BR/>Also, creating and sharing a store of ever-growing mini-lessons might be a good supplement to the unit plan for students.<BR/><BR/>I do hope others post on this topic soon!<BR/><BR/>P.S. I strongly recommend S. Long's new book <I>Tensions and Triumphs </I> as a class text for those teaching students in methods classes. It is a real-life, candid look at beginning teaching that I feel every aspiring teacher should read.Bucky C.https://www.blogger.com/profile/06076289438556471019noreply@blogger.com