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What do I Believe as a Teacher?

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     Earlier this semester I was asked to reflect on the experiences throughout my life that brought me to studying English Teaching at BYU, as well as some of my beliefs about being a teacher. I talked about the amazing teachers I had throughout middle and high school that taught me and loved me as an individual. They taught me English for sure, but they were models for the kind of teacher I wanted to be, long before I realized how much I truly love English. For me, even from elementary school, I wanted to be a teacher and I wanted to help students, way before I figured out I wanted to teach English. I wanted to "teach students, not English" as Professor Brown has drilled into me throughout my time in the major.      Even though a love of teaching–and a love of  teachers –came before the love of English, studying in this program has nurtured that passion as well. English is a subject that is naturally more student focused than other subjects. We are a...

Songs I've Listened to on Repeat Because the Struggle is Real

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  1.     Oh Ms. Believer , Twenty One Pilots      This song has been one of my favorites since I was 16. It’s very mellow, starting with a solo a cappella voice and a light tambourine before electronic strings come in with the underlying chords. Finally, the rhythm joins with piano and light snare drum. There are two rounds of verses and chorus, with long instrumental sections in between. The melody is in a major key, but there’s something reserved about it. It’s not quite happy, not quite sad, but there is a melancholy tone. The lyrics talk about walking alongside someone you care about on a cold wintery day as you both reflect upon your struggles.      For me, this song brings me back to my junior year of high school, when my brother had just barely left for his year as an exchange student in Germany. Twenty One Pilots was his favorite band and had been for a few years but I had never cared for the music I heard—much too electronic and hard...

Writers' Workshops: It Takes Time and Energy to Turn Students into Writers

       My 10 th grade students have just started a unit on personal narratives and this being the first major writing assignment of the school year, I know it’s important to plan for a solid writing workshop. I can already tell that many of my students are hesitant writers–meaning they hesitate to call themselves writers. I’ve been reading the writings of Robert J. Graham and Dorfman & Shubitz recently, so I’ve been grappling with figuring how to help them build their identities as writers and part of our writing community. The writing workshop is specialized time that invites them to focus on their writing in ways they haven’t previously.      WW’s are helpful for students to be able to visualize the writing process as all stages can be represented in a well-crafted WW. At the beginning of a unit, different stations can model various brainstorming and prewriting strategies. Inviting your students to rotate and try a strategy that’s different th...

A Study in Procrastination

  Hello world! It has been many years since I last graced the internet with a life blog. When I was 11 and we still were unaware of phenomenons such as Gangnam Style and the extensive Marvel Universe, and we were still able to order DVDs from Netflix's mail order service, I was a baby nerd, an English major in the making though I didn't know it yet. I had a blog, titled All Sadie All the Time, which I must have used to share updates about my life and friends. It's been deleted so we'll never know exactly what information about me was floating around the internet but a quick google image search of my name used to result in pages and pages of fandom pictures, courtesy of my Pinterest.  So why, after all this time would I choose to start another blog. For one, I'm curious if I never advertise it to my friends and family if anyone will ever stumble across it (highly doubt it). Two, I'm and English teaching major now, am I really even an English major if I don't ...