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Other Work by Joan Cone:
Overview
of Joan Cone's work
Monograph:Co-constructing
Low Achievement (pdf)
"The
Gap is in Our Expectations," Newsday, 5/26/02 (pdf)
Project
Snapshot: Central Context and Concerns
Poster:
Co-constructing Low Achievement (JPG)
Reflective
Video Analysis of Classroom Period
Download
Joan Cone's Materials and Strategies
- SOAPS:
strategies for analyzing text (pdf)
- English
AP Prompt (JPG)
- Students'
Prompts Marked with Text Analysis Notations
- Students'
Essays (will be posted soon)
View
Video:
Entire
class session(streaming)
Reflective
Video Analysis of Classroom Period
Link
to Related Work:
Jeannie
Oakes, "Detracking:
The Social Construction of Ability, Cultural Politics, and Resistance
to Reform"
Timothy
Boerst, "Ownership
of Learning"
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Constructing
Urban High School Students as Achievers
Essential practices for constructing students as achievers in the
high school English class.
We as teachers have a pedagogical and moral obligation to interrupt the
process of co-construction of low achievement. It is my experience as
a detracking advocate that there are three essential practices that contribute
to the construction of students as achievers. 1) we need to create
a classroom environment in which students feel safe to participate
in the academic and social conversations of the class. 2) We need to address
issues of power in the classroom around reading and writing competencies.
And 3), we need to mix and remix students in groups
so that all students will see that they can learn with and from each other.
While these practices inform everything I do in my classroom, they are
not limited to the English classroom. All teachers need to look for ways
to employ these practices and thereby invite their students to construct
themselves as achievers.
(Note: This page will be linked to student work and instructional materials
in early September)
- Create
a safe classroom environment for achievement
In
the first days of my first untracked AP English class (“Untracking
AP English: Creating Opportunity Is Not Enough,” Kappan, May,
1992), I learned the necessity of establishing a classroom environment
in which students feel safe as learners. At the end of the first week
of class, Paula told me she was transferring out of the class: “I
can’t talk like these kids.” New to an honors level English
class and intimidated by the articulateness of her peers and their ease
(sometimes aggressiveness) in participating in discussions, Paula wanted
out. Her words put me on notice: I had to find a way to create a classroom
environment in which she and students like her felt safe asking questions,
trying out interpretations, reading their work, making mistakes, learning
with and from other students. Thus was born my practice of using models.
Now I regularly ask students to write and read personal pieces using
models written by such writers as Toni Morrison and E. B. White. Every
time I listen to what students choose to reveal in these pieces, I am
amazed at the kind of openness the models invite and the personal details
students share with their peers.
On the first day of school I hand out “I am Sarah”—a
model patterned loosely on a piece written by a former student. The
next day, we read our self-introductions from the author’s chair
and then post them on the bulletin board with a recent photograph. Every
several weeks, I hand out another model and ask students to write and
read their work from the author’s chair—as a way to build
cohesion in the class and to establish and reestablish each student’s
place in the class.
- Address
issues of power in the classroom around reading and writing competencies.
In “the
Silenced Dialogue” [1995], Lisa Delpit lists five aspects of power
that play out in classrooms. Delpit’s fourth aspect—“If
you are not already a participant in the culture of power, being told
explicitly the rules of that culture makes acquiring power easier”—challenges
me as a detracking advocate and English teacher. How do I explicitly
teach the “rules” (conventions, strategies, habits) that
will empower low-skilled students to succeed as readers and writers
and at the same time meet the needs of high-skilled students? Rather
than track students within my untracked class, I have devised various
strategies that address diverse skill levels and build reading and writing
competence.
- Writing
Strategies:
- Dictation
and style sheets
To address issues of correctness (grammar, usage,
mechanics), I use dictations and style sheets. Each time I grade
a set of papers, I keep a running list of points I want to address
for a whole-group lesson. I then devise either a dictation or
a style sheet that includes the points I see as most necessary
to address. In writing the dictations and style sheets, I choose
points from papers of skilled as well as unskilled writers so
that my lessons is directed at all levels. The day I return
the set of papers, I give the dictation or hand out the style
sheet and discuss the specific points that came up in the set
of papers. I do not give tests on these points, but I do review
the sheets regularly and ask students to use the sheets when
they proofread their own papers and work in writing response
groups.
- Semi-colons,
colons and dashes
Early in the year, I teach students to use these
three kinds of punctuation. It’s my experience that when
students begin to incorporate these forms into their writing
(especially semi-colons), their writing becomes more sophisticated
and their thinking more complex.
- Reading
strategies:
Four
basic beliefs inform my teaching of reading: 1) reading is a social,
cultural, and linguistic act as well as a cognitive act; 2) reading
is a process of meaning-making; 3) teachers need to present students
with a wide range of texts by writers who reflect the racial and
ethnic backgrounds of their students; 4) all high school students
benefit from discipline-specific reading instruction.
- Reading
nonfiction
I use the SOAPS strategy to teach students to
read non-fiction pieces. To being with, I choose a relatively
easy piece from a local editorial page. My students and I read
the piece together and then I ask students to read it again
silently and figure out the SOAPS. Then, moving through each
letter—S, O, A, P, S—I call on students to read
what they have written. My purpose in asking several students
for each letter is to give students the idea that there is no
one, specific “right” answer. The answers they give
for the A[udience] and P[urpose] provide particularly rich teaching
moments because students quickly learn that writers write for
a variety of audiences and purposes.
Once students learn how to apply SOAPS to newspaper articles
and op ed pieces, I bring in longer pieces: magazine articles,
chapters from books (such as Fast Food Nation and King Leopold’s
Ghost), and documentary films (such as The Thin Blue Line, Four
Little Girls, I Am Not a Freak.) I make it a point to bring
in pieces on science, popular culture, medicine, and national
and global events to expose students to issues they might not
read about on their own.
When students are comfortable using SOAPS to work through non-fiction
pieces, I teach them how to write an argument-in-response-to-an-argument
using a three-part essay model. To assist students with the
first part of the essay, I give them lists of words to use in
summarizing or in making claims about the ideas of the writer.
I attend to the diverse writing skills in the class by encouraging
the more proficient writers to write several paragraphs for
the middle part—including various concession paragraphs
as well as pro paragraphs (see Lucille Payne, 1983).
Once students understand the logic of the three-part argument-on-an-argument,
I give them practice using it on various prompts used in the
AP English Language and Composition exam (see www.apcentral.org)
and in the University of California College Writing Entrance
exam.
- Reading
fiction
I begin the school year with short engaging stories such as
Tallent’s “No One’s a Mystery,” Bambara’s
“The Lesson,” Heckor’s “The Birthday
Party,” and Peck’s “I Go Along.” In
leading discussions on these stories, I make clear that in our
study of literature, I will never ask students to find the “right”
answer in texts; I will ask them to work out their own interpretations
of texts and to participate with their peers in public meaning
making of those texts. I also make clear that I will never call
on them to read unfamiliar texts aloud—if they want to
read, they can volunteer.
In teaching students to read fiction, I use a mix of Louise
Rosenblatt (1938) and Peter Rabinowitz (1987). I emphasize Rosenblatt
in the beginning—especially her theory that reading is
transacting with text and her ideas about reading from aesthetic
and efferent stances. I use Rabinowitz to teach conventions
used by fiction writers.
I spend a good deal of time getting students into texts. Sometimes
I give them an excerpt from the book and have them read that
as a way of getting familiar with important characters or with
a writer’s style. Before beginning Toni Morrison’s
Sula, for example, I hand out the excerpt where Nel and Sula
meet the Irish boys (pages 52-55). We read the pages aloud and
then I ask students to write about and then discuss what they
know about Sula and Nel from the excerpt. That exercise introduces
students to the dynamics of the girls’ relationship and
a major theme in the book. Another example: in beginning Chang-Rae
Lee’s Native Speaker, I ask students to read the first
chapter silently and then make a list of everything they know
about the main character and his wife. After they discuss their
lists, we read the chapter aloud and add to the lists. I collect
the lists and hand them back when we have finished the book—to
demonstrate to students how masterfully good writers construct
the first chapter of books. Asking students to write before
beginning the discussions is important: it encourages them to
develop personal interpretations and it provides shy students
with a “script” for joining the class discussion.
- Close
reading and stylistic analysis
Once students have had practice making meaning of a variety
of texts, I teach them strategies for close reading and stylistic
analysis. I begin with a short but provocative piece such as
Robert Hayden’s poem, “The Whipping.” We read
the piece three times (twice aloud, once silently) and then
I ask students what is happening in the piece. Once we get that
established, I ask students to read the poem again with a focus
on the choices Hayden made in writing the poem. I have them
circle or highlight words they see as particularly effective,
words that Hayden chose specifically to use to make the piece
work. Then I have them underline effective details he used and
think about why he used them. Finally, I have them think about
how Hayden organized the poem and how that organization served
him.
After students have worked through various pieces focusing on
such issues as diction, detail, syntax, organization, tone,
and point of view, I have them work in small groups, using pieces
from books we’ve read as a class, articles from newspapers
and magazines, and prompts from past AP English Language examinations.
In teaching students to do close reading, I play the role of
a guide through the pieces, not an authority on them. I ask
questions, push for deeper interpretations and extended commentaries,
draw attention to various aspects of the text students miss.
When students work in groups, they guide each other.
As students grow in their ability to do close reading, I introduce
various literary terms—common ones for ninth graders (metaphor,
personification, alliteration), sophisticated ones for AP students
(polysyndeton, anaphora, metonymy). But always in teaching these
terms, I am watchful that students not let their search for
literary conventions overwhelm their understanding and appreciation
of a piece.
- Mix
and remix students in writing and reading groups
I use a variety of methods in assigning students to
groups. Sometimes I form groups according to where students sit in the
room—putting students who sit near each other in groups. Other
times I deal out cards—all the aces go in one group, all the twos
in another, etc. Other times I put specific students together—in
an attempt to have all groups have a mix of skilled and unskilled writers,
talkative students with quiet ones. And always, I tell students that
the group they are in is not their only group—they can form other
groups or partnerships outside of class to get additional revision assistance.
- Writing
groups
I
do not give students response/revisions sheets. My experience with
these sheets is that they become an assignment meant for me and
not a guide for revision for a peer. I give students oral directions
about group work: every student needs to read his/her own work,
the leader of the group needs to make sure that all students get
equal time and helpful feedback, students need to be respectful
of each other as writers and assist each other in producing a piece
of writing that says what and how the writer wants.
- Response
group video (Alfonzo) - coming soon
- Rules
assignment - coming soon
- Reading
groups
Having students choose books to read in self-selected groups is
an important part of my curriculum (see “Appearing Acts: Creating
Readers in a High School Class,” Harvard Educational Review,
1994, winter; “Teaching the Autobiography of Malcolm X: The
Urgency of Choice in an Untracked Classroom, Teaching Tolerance,
Fall, 1993). While I often require a specific category of book (e.g.
a work of non-fiction, a previously-read book, a book you think
you need to read before you leave high school), students have absolute
freedom in choosing the book they read—as long as they can
persuade three other students to read and discuss it with them.
Students choose book groups on the basis of the book (the author,
the subject matter, the number of pages, the difficulty of the text)
and/or the students in the group—which almost always makes
for groups that are mixed in gender, race, and achievement level.
An example of the variety and level of works students typically
choose: last year in AP English when asked to choose a work by an
African American writer, students formed groups to read The Bluest
Eye, Invisible Man, Devil in a Blue Dress, Brothers and Keepers,
and The Coldest Winter Ever.
- Video:
Reading Group - coming soon
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