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Todd Blake Finley, PhD (@finleyt on Twitter) is an Associate Professor of English Education at East Carolina University in C&I. He has taught elementary and 8-12th grade English and co-developed the Tar River Writing Project. Dr. Finley teaches, researches, works with schools and publishes in the field of composition, curriculum, instruction, technology, and collaboration. His home page iswww.EEprof.com.
Did you check out Open Education Week this month? The international event highlighted free lesson plans and materials, searchable by subject, grade and quality. I spent a couple days throwing keywords into OER (open education resources are digital materials freely available through open licenses) search engines to assess the quality of secondary and higher education writing curricula. About 10% of the lessons and/or courses met my criteria, which meant the writing courses and lessons had to:
I rejected lessons that were too complicated, too reductive or too traditional. Curriculum that featured hamburger diagrams was rejected with malice. Some of the lessons on my winner list would not technically be considered OER, but were useful and free. Why quibble?
If you are in search of great writing curricula, start with the links in this paragraph; these resources contain abundant, rigorous and delightful (yes, delightful!) writing lessons that are bookmarked by English teachers in the know: Web English, ReadWriteThink, Steve Peha'sTTMS.org, Traci Gardner's Traci's Lists of Ten, HuffEnglish, WritingFix, Peter Smagorinsky'sVirtual Library and Jim Burke's English Companion.
Below are resources that I never would have found without the OER databases listed at the end of this blog.
As I searched materials, I bumped into two professional development resources that are worth mentioning. P2PU National Writing Project study group, Writing and Inquiry in the Digital Age, allows you to interact with some of the brightest (and friendliest) thinkers on the subject of technology-enhanced composing. Another resource, Linda C. Mitchell's FlexBook, Glyfada Method: A Writing Process, elaborately describes a composing method that helps students begin writing and "determine what to say about the main point."
Educational materials don't have to bore. Six Traits of Writing for Stick People is an amusing video made with Xtranormal Movie Maker. There are two videos on writing a thesis: a) How to Write that A+ Paper by 60SecondRecap (preceded by a short advertisement) features a giddy narrator, and b) Sunyulsterinstructs covers the subject more deeply.
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Mentors.net was founded in 1995 as a professional development resource for school administrators leading new teacher induction programs. It soon evolved into a destination where both new and student teachers could reflect on their teaching experiences. Now, nearly thirty years later, Mentors.net has taken on a new direction—serving as a platform for beginning teachers, preservice educators, and
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