Grading Essays Online vs. Grading on Paper: Pros and Cons

Grading Essays Online vs. Grading on Paper:  Pros and Cons

I find myself dancing between grading essays online (via Google Spreadsheets and Doctopus/ Goobric) and printing out student essays to grade on paper. If you’d like more information on getting started with online grading using Google Spreadsheets, check out my YouTube tutorial for some helpful tips.

PowerPoint Party: A Fun Persuasion Game

PowerPoint Party:  A Fun Persuasion Game

In their pure sense, PowerPoint Parties started becoming popular due to COVID, and friends/ family members would get together (albeit virtually) to present a PowerPoint on a topic of interest. This eventually morphed into a fun game for high school and college-age students (is it ok for me to add “drinking game” in here?). Currently, PowerPoint Parties have become popular on TikTok, which provided the inspiration for this post. Head over to TikTok and search for “PowerPoint Parties” to find ideas… be forewarned that some of these ideas will not be “school appropriate” but still humorous.

“First Week Back” Activities for Secondary ELA

“First Week Back” Activities for Secondary ELA

Starting a new semester— whether at the beginning of the school year or calendar year— is a time of tough transition as we begin to restart our minds and work habits. It’s a difficult transition for both students, teachers, and administrators— but I don’t have to tell you that. You know that feeling of dread at the beginning of a new term, and there’s no way to sugarcoat it.

The "Leads to" Thematic Claim Concept

The "Leads to" Thematic Claim Concept

The thesis statement is undoubtedly the MOST important sentence of the entire essay! It serves as the blueprint, or road map, for the essay, so it is crucial that the thesis statement is clear and logical before beginning the body of the essay. The caveat here, of course, is that a thesis statement can and often does change throughout the writing process, but in general, it is always helpful to begin with a solid argument.

Three Necessary Lessons for the Beginning of the Year in ELA

Three Necessary Lessons for the Beginning of the Year in ELA

The beginning of the school year is a time to reintroduce students to routine, classroom procedures, and the habits of homework and studying…. but I don’t need to tell you that! For us as English teachers, the beginning of the school year means reviewing and reteaching skills that our students will SWEAR they were NOT taught “last year.” We know the joke; we know that isn’t true!

Using an Exit Ticket Journal to Check Understanding

Using an Exit Ticket Journal to Check Understanding

Exit tickets are not a new concept, but making them work for you can be time consuming and feel like a chore. Instead of a helpful tool to wrap up a class, they can be a hindrance of extra grading time. So, how can we make exit tickets work in an effective way that won’t take up more of our time than needed but will also give us valuable feedback to guide instruction?

Texts to Diversify Your Secondary Curriculum

Texts to Diversify Your Secondary Curriculum

Now, more than ever, it is crucial that we as secondary English teachers work consciously to diversify the cannon. “Imagine a world in which all children can see themselves in the pages of a book.” This is the mission of the organization We Need Diverse Books. We Need Diverse Books has been working towards this goal for a long time, and they provide amazing resources to help teachers do just that.

The Junk Journal Novel Project for Secondary ELA

The Junk Journal Novel Project for Secondary ELA

While junk journals can vary from person to person, they generally share one primary characteristic: the journal is made with mostly a mix of found and recycled materials.

5 Ways to Use Jamboard in Secondary ELA

5 Ways to Use Jamboard in Secondary ELA

Jamboard through Google has become a cornerstone tool in my virtual ELA classes because one of my go-to strategies when we had students in class was to use sticky notes on the board. You can read more about the Board but NOT BORING: My Go-to Collaborative Activity for Secondary ELA strategy here.

How to Build a Writer's Toolkit for Students

How to Build a Writer's Toolkit for Students

A writer’s toolkit is a resource for students to use as a reference guide during writing workshop. A writer’s toolkit can take the form of a digital folder or even physical folder. Both options can work for students depending upon the needs of your students— or your individual preference.

Yes, YOU CAN! Use PDF Files for Distance Learning

Yes, YOU CAN! Use PDF Files for Distance Learning

Teaching online certainly comes with its share of obstacles and roadblocks. It also forces us as educators to become more innovative in our practices and approaches; however, there are so many amazing tech tools to help circumvent these issues— even if a file happens to be a PDF.

Six NO PREP Activities for AFTER Break

Six NO PREP Activities for AFTER Break

The night before the end of a break from school can be scary as the reality sets in that you need plans ready to go— TOMORROW! The fear and the panic can start to set in as you try to scramble for an activity that will ease you and your students back into the school routine.

But all that stops right now because Bespoke ELA has you covered!

Here are six NO PREP writing for after break!

3 Thanksgiving Activities to Recognize Native Americans

3 Thanksgiving Activities to Recognize Native Americans

Thanksgiving season provides ELA teachers with the perfect opportunity to engage students in meaningful reading, writing, and speaking activities that can target creative writing, analysis, as well as multiculturalism. It’s an important time of the year not only to give thanks but also to acknowledge both voices in the foundation of the United States: the colonists and the Native Americans.

How to Facilitate Online Discussion Boards

How to Facilitate Online Discussion Boards

Online discussions can be helpful as discussion strategy for virtual learning or in a co-seated classroom environment. But, how can we facilitate these discussions using technology and going online?

3 Sanity Savers for Virtual Teaching

3 Sanity Savers for Virtual Teaching

So here we are. Many of us have found ourselves teaching online or in some type of hybrid setting. We don’t know when it will end— or even if it will end this school year. It’s a stressful time, indeed, and I’ve been brainstorming “sanity saving” tips to help us all get through the these unprecedented times.

Literary Analysis Essay Boot Camp

Literary Analysis Essay Boot Camp

This year, I have decided to start all of my high school ELA classes with a Literary Analysis Essay Boot Camp. I have discovered over the years that all students in grades 9-12 at all levels need repetitive practice of the same essential writing skills, no matter the grade or level.


Starting the School Year with the College Essay

Starting the School Year with the College Essay

If there is one writing assignment that has real life and real world purpose, it’s the college essay. I have never seen my students more motivated to write and more motivated to work on writing than with this particular assignment. And the reason is simple: this writing assignment truly matters to students.

Three Strategies for Implementing SEL in Secondary ELA

Three Strategies for Implementing SEL in Secondary ELA

This new catch-all acronym has caught hold of the new focused trend in education as a means of emphasizing the fact that as teachers, we do NOT just teach content. We do more than just teach Shakespeare and the Pythagorean Theorem. We also hold the responsibility of training our students how to behave socially and also how to express emotions in a healthy way.

AP Lit Exam Grading 2020: My Main Takeaways

AP Lit Exam Grading 2020:  My Main Takeaways

As I graded 500+ essays for the 2020 exam, I created a skills list of roses and thorns (positives and negatives) to help inform our instruction in AP Lit for the upcoming school year using the new rubric. Please note that I am NOT divulging any specific information bout the exam itself in terms of the passages and prompts or any specifics about student essays.

How to Avoid the Summer Slide with Summer Reading Challenges & One-Pager Projects

How to Avoid the Summer Slide with Summer Reading Challenges & One-Pager Projects

Summer has that way of magically erasing knowledge, so one way to prevent some of that summer slide is to engage students in summer reading through a summer reading challenge and also through one-pagers to help students interact, process, and analyze what they’re reading.