Radford University Registrar

ENGL 426
Teaching English in the High School

  1. Catalog Entry

 ENGL 426. Teaching English in the High School
Two hours lecture (2).

Prerequisites: Completion of English general education requirements; admission to the Teacher Education Program.
Corequisite: Junior clinical field experience or “blocking.”

This course provides instruction in the methods of teaching English language arts in the secondary school. It is designed to allow students to explore student-centered approaches to teaching literature and language and to practice designing lessons and making long-range plans. Meeting two hours weekly, the course satisfies licensure requirements for English majors intending to teach at the secondary level. It does not satisfy English major requirements but is a requirement in the professional education core.

  1. Detailed Description of Content of Course

Students will enroll in English 426 during the fall prior to student teaching. They take the course concurrently with the “blocking” or junior clinical field experience. The course provides students with approaches to teaching language and literature that are firmly grounded in theories of learning and literacy, giving them the tools for becoming effective secondary English teachers. They will investigate nontraditional materials and methods, develop unit plans and lessons, examine materials available from publishers and school systems, and discuss ways to align classroom objectives with Virginia Standards of Learning.

The course will introduce students to particular pedagogical approaches and give them the opportunity to incorporate these approaches into unit plans and lesson plans. For example, students may be introduced to the reader-response approach to teaching literature, perhaps reading parts of Louise Rosenblatt's Literature as Exploration. They would then develop specific plans for using this approach with literary selections.

The course also introduces students to various curriculum materials available to the teacher of English language arts and provides them with opportunities to analyze and evaluate those materials. Students will examine teaching materials available from publishers and school systems, and explore ways that the world wide web can enhance classroom teaching.

Throughout the course students will explore issues of professionalism, including a commitment to keeping abreast of developments in the field of education. To that end, students will read and react to articles and books dealing with various aspects of the teaching of English language arts. The course provides students with information about appropriate professional organizations and encourages them to become student members of such organizations as the Virginia Association of Teachers of English and the National Council of Teachers of English. Those student memberships allow students to receive the Virginia English Bulletin and the English Journal, two professional publications whose articles may be part of the course's textual materials.

  1. Detailed Description of Conduct of Course

The course may include small group collaboration, demonstration, individual and group presentations, minilesson planning and teaching, and formal and informal writing. The course is designed so that students are actively involved in their learning. They will talk and write often on issues related to teaching the English language arts. Learning opportunities may include, among others, the following:

Unit Plan with five accompanying lesson plans: Students will be asked to prepare a unit plan with five detailed lesson plans focusing on some area of the English language arts.

  1. Goals and Objectives of Course

Upon successful completion of the course, the student will be able to:

  1. Assessment Measures

Assessment measures may include:

  1. Other Course Information

NONE

  1. Review and Approval