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Shadow Rebbe's avatar

How about reading the text aloud in class?

I'd suggest @michael Strong's book on doing socratic seminars on the text- either post-reading or reading together

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Peter Shull's avatar

As a teacher of juniors and seniors, I'm in near-total agreement with all of this--though afraid I probably err on the side of 'hard' assigning too many works and not offering my students their own choices often enough. I tell my students we're working for an 80% understanding of each work we read, and I usually have three or four 'big' goals for each book. I agree that "supplementing the reading with additional worksheets or projects...feels like a mistake, both because it sours the joy of reading, but it also displaces reading from the center of our purposes."

When we finished reading The Great Gatsby recently, my students were mystified when I told them we weren't taking a test on it -or- writing a paper. "What are we going to do?" they asked. "Read another book!" I told them.

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