The Freedom Writers Diary Teacher's Guide (Electronic book text)

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INTRODUCTION
"The Freedom Writers Diary Teacher's Guide" takes students through a three-stage process that will maximize their understanding of "The Freedom Writers Diary" while supporting the central message of tolerance. For best results, I suggest that you begin teaching the Engage Your Students activities first, following the order presented-which mirrors the timeline in "The Freedom Writers Diary." The activities in Enlighten Your Students and Empower Your Students can then be taught according to what best suits your individual curricular needs and weekly schedules. There are no specific time allotments designated for the activities presented in this "Teacher's Guide." Teachers can implement activities in one class period or over multiple days.
The Engage, Enlighten, and Empower Model
Engage Your Students: This section includes lesson plans and activities for you to share with your students before they begin reading "The Freedom Writers Diary." The goal is to establish a collaborative and supportive academic environment that will draw your students into the learning process, help them make connections between who they are as individuals and who they are as students, and encourage them to discover commonalities with their classmates.
Enlighten Your Students: This section offers lesson plans and activities that help students delve into literary themes, topics, and concepts while reading "The Freedom Writers Diary," and concludes with a unit on the film, "Freedom Writers" (2007). Due to its range of contents, Enlighten Your Students covers various categories for ease of use: writing, vocabulary, grammar, oral communication, culminating activities, and "Freedom Writers" film activities. Students will practice different kinds of writing and public speaking, and become critical thinkers as they explore their own opinions, reasoning, and reactions within a "real world" context.
Empower Your Students: This section encourages students to achieve positive changes in themselves and in their communities by bringing the outside world into the classroom, and taking their classroom into the world. Nontraditional activities, such as inviting a guest speaker into class or taking a field trip, can expose students to new social and academic perspectives.
"The Teachers Guide" promotes a holistic approach to language arts: We integrate reading, writing, vocabulary, and grammar with a variety of learning modalities, all focused on a common theme. Each lesson plan for the Engage, Enlighten, and Empower sections of the book contains five important educational elements: implementing different learning modalities, the use of visual graphics, journal writing, adherence to academic standards, and authentic assessment. What follows are brief introductions to each of these elements.

Learning Modalities
Many of the Freedom Writers struggled with learning disabilities (dyslexia) or behavioral challenges (Attention Deficit Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder). In addition, some were English Language Learners. As a new teacher, I desperately tried a variety of ways to engage my students and bring my activities to life.
Little did I know that my wacky idea of bringing in two sandwiches and some clumsy drawings of sandwich i


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Product Description

INTRODUCTION
"The Freedom Writers Diary Teacher's Guide" takes students through a three-stage process that will maximize their understanding of "The Freedom Writers Diary" while supporting the central message of tolerance. For best results, I suggest that you begin teaching the Engage Your Students activities first, following the order presented-which mirrors the timeline in "The Freedom Writers Diary." The activities in Enlighten Your Students and Empower Your Students can then be taught according to what best suits your individual curricular needs and weekly schedules. There are no specific time allotments designated for the activities presented in this "Teacher's Guide." Teachers can implement activities in one class period or over multiple days.
The Engage, Enlighten, and Empower Model
Engage Your Students: This section includes lesson plans and activities for you to share with your students before they begin reading "The Freedom Writers Diary." The goal is to establish a collaborative and supportive academic environment that will draw your students into the learning process, help them make connections between who they are as individuals and who they are as students, and encourage them to discover commonalities with their classmates.
Enlighten Your Students: This section offers lesson plans and activities that help students delve into literary themes, topics, and concepts while reading "The Freedom Writers Diary," and concludes with a unit on the film, "Freedom Writers" (2007). Due to its range of contents, Enlighten Your Students covers various categories for ease of use: writing, vocabulary, grammar, oral communication, culminating activities, and "Freedom Writers" film activities. Students will practice different kinds of writing and public speaking, and become critical thinkers as they explore their own opinions, reasoning, and reactions within a "real world" context.
Empower Your Students: This section encourages students to achieve positive changes in themselves and in their communities by bringing the outside world into the classroom, and taking their classroom into the world. Nontraditional activities, such as inviting a guest speaker into class or taking a field trip, can expose students to new social and academic perspectives.
"The Teachers Guide" promotes a holistic approach to language arts: We integrate reading, writing, vocabulary, and grammar with a variety of learning modalities, all focused on a common theme. Each lesson plan for the Engage, Enlighten, and Empower sections of the book contains five important educational elements: implementing different learning modalities, the use of visual graphics, journal writing, adherence to academic standards, and authentic assessment. What follows are brief introductions to each of these elements.

Learning Modalities
Many of the Freedom Writers struggled with learning disabilities (dyslexia) or behavioral challenges (Attention Deficit Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder). In addition, some were English Language Learners. As a new teacher, I desperately tried a variety of ways to engage my students and bring my activities to life.
Little did I know that my wacky idea of bringing in two sandwiches and some clumsy drawings of sandwich i

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Broadway Books

Country of origin

United States

Release date

September 2008

Availability

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Authors

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Format

Electronic book text - Windows

Pages

208

ISBN-13

978-0-7679-3219-6

Barcode

9780767932196

Categories

LSN

0-7679-3219-6



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