Friday, November 13, 2015

What is the thesis to your article for this course? What support will you cite to help you make your case?

What is the thesis to your article for this course? What support will you cite to help you make your case? 


'Every Day is [Not] Exactly the Same': Using Popular Music in the Classroom to Encourage Resistant Readers

Using music in the high school English classroom seems like it might lead to some disgruntled students, or might cause a serious distraction. As a ninth grade English teacher, I have met quite a few resistant readers. During a unit on the Dystopian novel, The Maze Runner by James Dashner, I used popular music to compare and contrast themes and motifs between songs and the novel. I used Nine Inch Nails' song "Every day is exactly the same," and Imagine Dragons' "Radioactive" to encourage my students to engage with The Maze Runner novel. While all of my students responded quite positively to this assignment, my resistant readers responded more positively and engage more with the reading after doing this analysis than my regular readers.

Using multimodality in the classroom often encourages students to engage more fully with the tasks they are presented. I will explore how the use of popular music encourages resistant readers to engage more fully with a novel. Integrating multimodality mediums in the classroom can and will change how our 21st century students learn. 

Bibliography

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Archer, Arlene. “Multimodal texts in Higher Education and the Implications for Writing Pedagogy.” English in Education 44.3 (2010): 201-213.

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Bourelle, Andrew, Tiffany Bourelle, and Natasha Jones. “Multimodality in the Technical Communications Classroom: Viewing Classical Rhetoric Through a 21st Century Lens.” Technical Communications Quarterly 24.4 (2015): 306-327.

Durant, Cal, Alyson Simpson, and Maureen Walsh. “Moving into a Multimodal Landscape: Examining 21st Century Pedagogy for Multicultural and Multilingual Students.” English in Australia 50.1 (2015): 67-76.

Epelde, Maria, Julia Bernel, Miguel Gallardo-Vigil, and Africa Rodriguez. “Music in the Teaching and Learning of English.” The International Journal of the Humanities 9.11 (2012): 143-152.

Koutsoupidou, Theano. “Improvisations in the English Primary Music Classroom: Teachers’ Perceptions and Practices.” Music Education Research 7.3 (2005): 363-381.

Lems, Kristin. “Music Works: Music for Adult English Language Learners.” New Directions for Adults and Continuing Education 107 (2005): 13-21.

Moore, David Cooper. “Learning Tunes: Pop Music in the Classroom.” Library Media Connection (2011): 13- 14.

Palmeri, Jason. Remixing Composition:  A History of Multi-Modal Writing Pedagogy. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UP, 2012. Print.

Paquette, Kelli, Sue Reig. “Using Music to Support the Literacy Development of Young English Language Learners.” Early Childhood Education Journal 36 (2008): 227-232.

Reid, Alex. “Portable Composition: ITunes University and Networked Pedagogies.” Computers and Composition 25 (2008): 61-78.

Scanlon, Molly. “The Works of Comics Collaborations: Considerations of Multimodal Composition for Writing Scholarship and Pedagogy.” Composition Studies 43.1 (2015): 105-130.

Stein, Pipa. “Rethinking Resources: Multimodal Pedagogies in the ESL Classroom” TESOL Quarterly 34.2 (2000): 333-336.

1 comment:

  1. I'm a fan of using music videos to teach composition. Can you bring in a cultural literacy aspect?

    ReplyDelete