GGCA English
  • Home
    • Reading Program >
      • Mrs. Vanderwarker's Reading Blog
      • Mrs. Evans' Picks
      • Summer Reading 2012
      • Summer Reading 2013
      • Summer Reading 2014
    • MLA Formatting
    • Grammar & Punctuation
    • S.A.T. Prep >
      • Greek & Latin Roots
      • S.A.T Writing Section
  • British Literature
    • Senior Blog
    • Unit 1: The Anglo-Saxons >
      • Beowulf
    • Unit 2: The Medeival Period >
      • Folk Ballads
      • The Canterbury Tales >
        • The Pardoner
        • The Wife of Bath
      • King Arthur
    • Unit 3: The Renaissance >
      • Sonnets & Essays
      • Macbeth >
        • Act I
      • Metaphysical Poetry
      • John Milton
    • Unit 4: The Age of Reason >
      • Jonathan Swift
      • Joseph Addison & Daniel Defoe
      • Alexander Pope
      • Samuel Johnson
    • Unit 5: Romanticism >
      • William Blake
      • Robert Burns
      • William Wordsworth
      • Samuel Taylor Coleridge
      • Second Generation of Poets
      • Frankenstein
  • American Literature
    • Junior Blog
    • Unit 1: The New Land >
      • Indians & Explorers
      • American Colonies
      • Revolutionary Writers
    • The Crucible
    • Unit 2: Literary Nationalism >
      • American Romanticism
      • Washington Irving
      • James Fennimore Cooper
      • William Cullen Bryant
      • The Fireside Poets
      • Edgar Allan Poe
    • Unit 3: The American Classic >
      • Ralph Waldo Emerson
      • Henry David Thoreau
      • Nathaniel Hawthorne
      • Herman Melville
      • Rights of Americans
      • Frederick Douglass
    • Unit 4: Variations and Departures >
      • Walt Whitman
      • Emily Dickinson
      • Mark Twain
    • Unit 5: The Modern Temper >
      • Willa Cather
      • Sherwood Anderson
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald >
        • The Great Gatsby
      • Ernest Hemingway
  • English 10
    • Summer Reading 2012
    • Sophmore Blog
    • Unit 1: Traditions in the Short Story
    • Detective Fiction
    • Unit 2: Modern Drama >
      • 12 Angry Men
      • Our Town
      • A Raisin in the Sun
    • Unit 3: Poetry
    • Unit 4: Legends of Arthur
    • Unit 5: Short Fiction
    • Unit 6: Julius Caesar
  • English 9
    • Summer Reading 2012
    • Freshman Blog
    • Unit 1: Short Stories >
      • Short Story Writing Workshop
    • To Kill a Mockingbird
    • Unit 2: The Miracle Worker
    • Unit 3: Poetry >
      • Tone
      • Imagery
      • Figurative Language
      • Sound Devices
      • Narrative Poetry
    • Romeo & Juliet
    • Night
  • Sound Speech
    • Speech Blog
    • Given Speeches
    • Unit 1: The Process of Communication >
      • Chapter 2: But I'm Afraid!
      • Chapter 3: What is Communication?
      • Chapter 4: Listen to Me!
    • Unit 2: Communication Fundamentals >
      • Chapter 5: The Type of Audience
    • Persuasive Speaking
    • Communication in the Work Place
    • Speaking in Special Situations
  • Composition
    • Composition Blog
    • Writer's Notebook
    • Writing Dialogue

My Reading Blog

8/30/2012

1 Comment

 
Picture
Hello.  I love books, and I love reading.  Now as an English teacher I do tons of reading, but not always books.  But this year I am going to commit to reading 20 books this school year.  If I require my students to do it, so should I.  No excuses. 

As I read I am going to be writing reading journal entries, just like my students.  Mine are going to be right here. 

I know how busy high school gets, so I am going to lead by example.  I am a firm believer that reading enriches our lives and challenges our concepts. So for those reasons, we want our students to be life-long readers.  Life doesn't slow down after high school, so it's important for reading to become a part of our culture while we still have teachers to encourage us (P.S. you're also being graded).  So, keep me accountable.

This blog should give you an example for your reading journal entries.  It can also give you an idea for books to choose.  I will only be picking books from our library, so every book you see here will be available to you.

Feel free to comment on any of the posts

1 Comment

    Author: Mrs. Vanderwarker

    I'm an English teacher. I make my students read 20 books a year, so I should too.  Right?

    Archives

    September 2012
    August 2012

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.