Resource Topics
Teaching Writing - Urban Education
Book Review: Young, Gifted, and Black: Promoting High Achievement Among African-American Students
Teacher Magazine,
July 2008
Mary K. Tedrow
After reading this collection of essays by three leading thinkers in African American education, Mary Tedrow, a teacher-consultant with the Northern Virginia Writing Project, realized that "the ideas and potential solutions embedded in this book have gone on largely unacknowledged."
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Helping African American Males Reach Their Academic Potential
May 2008
Marlene Carter
Marlene Carter, associate director of the UCLA Writing Project, conducted a two-year study of African American males in her AP English class. The study helped her understand that these students underperform for different reasons and allowed her to focus on the real problems affecting their achievement.
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Learning From Laramie: Urban High School Students Read, Research, and Reenact The Laramie Project
May 2008
Marsha Pincus
When Marsha Pincus, a teacher with the Philadelphia Writing Project, had her students read The Laramie Project, and then research circumstances surrounding the play's real life events and perform its scenes, they were engaged—and changed—by its themes of homosexuality, homophobia, and murder.
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Gloria Ladson-Billings Reframes the Racial Achievement Gap
April 2007
Gloria Ladson-Billings
Gloria Ladson-Billings suggests reframing the idea of the racial achievement gap as one of educational debt in this address to the 2007 Urban Sites Network Conference in Washington, DC.
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Gloria Ladson-Billings: Biographical Information and List of References
January 2007
Bob Fecho
In a resource developed for NWP's African American Learners Project, Bob Fecho discusses Ladson-Billings' 2006 American Educational Research Association address as well as her writings and contributions to the field of education.
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Veteran Teacher Takes His Victory Lap
The Voice,
2006
Joe Bellacero
Teacher-consultant Joe Bellacero (now associate director of the New York City Writing Project), retiring as a high school English instructor in the Bronx, reflects on his most wrenching experiences, such as being threatened with a knife; his most inspiring experiences, such as coaching failing students to success; and the love he has given and received over the years.
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Book Review: Politics, Language, and Culture: A Critical Look at School Reform, by J. Check
The Quarterly,
2004
Marcie Wolfe
Wolfe reviews Joseph Check's Politics, Language, and Culture, which critiques the "top-down" process of educational reform and focuses on the struggle for school reform in four complex urban environments.
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It Takes a School
The Voice,
2004
Mary Ann Smith
Smith describes a tour of Meade Elementary School, where a five-year partnership with the Philadelphia Writing Project has built a professional community working toward school reform.
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Reflections on Race in the Urban Classroom
The Quarterly,
2004
Janice Jones
Jones describes her mishandling of her encounter with the only white student in a class of primarily African American and Latino students. Because of the experience, Jones has grown as a teacher and a person.
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Urban Sites Focus on Reform Issues
The Voice,
2004
Art Peterson
The National Writing Project 2004 Urban Sites Conference presented participants with both exhilarating and disheartening snapshots of the condition of urban education approaching the middle of the decade.
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Whose Core Is It?
The Voice,
2004
Christina Puntel
Bilingual elementary school teacher Christina Puntel describes the challenges of adjusting to a city–mandated "core curriculum" that prescribes content structure and student performance standards for the entire year.
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Edelsky Talk Brings Urban Sites Conference Theme Alive
The Voice,
Fall 2003
Art Peterson
Professor Carole Edelsky, of Arizona State University, documents the achievements of two fifth grade students in a dual–language program, showing how a dual–language class can become a community of practice.
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Theory, Politics, Hope, and Action
The Quarterly,
2003
Carole Edelsky
In this article Edelsky employs the arguments of theory and the techniques of case study to make a plea for rationality in the education of English language learners.
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On-Site Consulting: New York City Writing Project
National Writing Project at Work,
November 2002
Nancy Mintz, Alan Stein, Marcie Wolfe
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Sculpture Inspires Chicago-Area Students
The Voice,
January-February 2002
Judith Ruhana
A Chicago-area middle-school teacher used a nearby sculpture park and a grant from the James Moffett Memorial Award to create a multidisciplinary project for student learning and high-level interpretation of art.
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Talking, Oklahoman to Oklahoman
The Voice,
September-October 2002
Barbara Howry
Students from an urban community in Oklahoma, stereotyped by students from Georgia during an online exchange, learn a lesson when they realize they have stereotyped another group of students.
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Experiments in Reading and Writing
The Quarterly,
Winter 2001
Nancy Wilson
Wilson documents a collaboration between the New York City Writing Project and an overcrowded inner city high school. The model makes use of an on–site teacher–consultant.
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Toward an Urban New York Spanish Curriculum
The Quarterly,
Spring 2001
Nathan Dudley
Dudley, a teacher of Spanish–speaking students in his Spanish class, argues for such reforms as the inclusion of Spanglish, relevant texts, and an immersion program that allows real language acquisition to take place.
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Unloading the Excess Baggage
The Quarterly,
Winter 2001
Beth Halbert
Halbert wrestles with questions of how she should react to a student memoir that relies on profanity and includes authentic descriptions of violence.
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Imaginary Gardens and Real Issues: Improving Language Arts in the Urban Elementary School
The Quarterly,
Winter 2000
Joe Check
Using the form of a hypothetical narrative, Check argues that improved literacy instruction is inextricably linked to improved schools, and that the NWP is an ideal vehicle for helping urban schools build needed exemplary contexts.
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Mandated Reform vs. Classroom Reality
The Voice,
September-October 2000
Joe Check
Joe Check takes a look at some of the issues involved in mandated school reform and advocates that teachers should remain at the center of reform.
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Writing Projects and School Reform: A Local Perspective
The Quarterly,
Spring 1998
Marcie Wolfe
Wolfe explains how the New York City Writing Project has increasingly worked toward a vision that allows the site to help change and restructure schools while also helping teachers improve their practice.
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Do Ebonics Critics Miss the Point?
The Voice,
Spring/Summer 1997
Bob Fecho
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Ebonics Ain't the Answer
The Quarterly,
Winter 1997
Patricia Smith
Smith argues for the primacy of Standard English in the schools. "As black kids, we were introduced to a world we had to enter in order to survive, and . . . offered the tools to get there."
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Ebonics and All That Jazz: Cutting Through the Politics of Linguistics, Education, and Race
The Quarterly,
Winter 1997
Michele Foster
Foster reviews the linguistic history of Ebonics, discusses instructional approaches for promoting facility with standard American English while honoring the tradition of Ebonics, and reflects on the politics surrounding the Ebonics issue.
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Ebonics, or Language as a Class and Status Marker
The Quarterly,
Winter 1997
Maurice Englander
Englander dismisses the Ebonics critics by arguing "The only important question about a student's language is this: Can he say what he needs to say and be understood by the person he's speaking with?"
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In the Spotlight: Boston Writing Project's Denise Patmon
The Voice,
Spring/Summer 1997
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What the Children Convey: On Matters of Time, Talk and Ebonics
The Quarterly,
Winter 1997
Anne Haas Dyson
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What's in a Name? That by Which We Call the Linguistic Consequences of the African Slave Trade
The Quarterly,
Winter 1997
John Baugh
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Book Review: Other People's Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom, by Lisa Delpit
The Quarterly,
Spring 1996
Joe Check
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Cityscapes: Eight Views from the Urban Classroom
1996
Cityscapes, written by members of the Urban Sites Network, focuses on specific possibilities for teaching in an urban classroom.
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Creating Work of Their Own: Skills and Voice in an Eighth Grade Research Project
The Quarterly,
Fall 1996
Robert Roth
Roth argues that if students are to execute successful research projects they need to put their own stamp on their work and also need explicit instruction in the skills necessary to carry out this task.
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Book Review: Social Worlds of Children Learning to Write in an Urban Primary School, by Dyson
The Quarterly,
Spring 1995
Rebekah Fassler
Rebekah Fassler reviews Social Worlds of Children Learning to Write in an Urban Primary School, by Anne Haas Dyson, which presents case studies of six African-American children in a San Francisco Bay Area school. Over a two-year period, Dyson and her research assistants observed and audiotaped the African American focal children's interaction with peers and teachers during their daily composing time and during other classroom literacy events. Dyson analyzes the particular social purposes of the children's use of language and gives specific guidelines for teachers of minority children.
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Dialogue Journals: Passing Notes the Academic Way
The Quarterly,
Fall 1995
Christine Cziko
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Romance in the Classroom: Inviting Discourse on Gender and Power
The Quarterly,
Spring 1995
Diane Waff
In a male-dominated special education class of learning-disabled students, high school teacher Diane Waff initiates an effort to give male and female students equal opportunity in voicing their concerns. After writing journals and analyzing gender roles in literature, her students start to build healthy classroom relationships that help students become conscious of fairness and equality both in school and out.
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Stories Inside Stories: Creating Successful Writers in an Urban High School
The Quarterly,
Fall 1990
Judith Baker, Joe Check
Providing a group of urban high school students with the real work of producing a student newspaper allowed them to succeed in new ways as writers.
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Possible Lives: The Promise of Education in America
In this chapter, excerpted from Mike Rose's text Possible Lives: The Promise of Education in America, Rose takes an in depth look at the classroom work of writing project teacher Stephanie Terry as she integrates the study of science and language arts in her first grade Baltimore classroom, all the while advancing the cultural knowledge and understanding of her thirty African American students.
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Find Out About NWP's Urban Sites Network