English/ELA, Free Resources, Media Literacy, Teacher Resources

Let’s have a little Chat

Raise your hand if you’re tired.

Put your hands down.

Raise your hand if you’re a classroom teacher who’s exhausted and can’t wait for Thanksgiving break, not because of the food or even the family and friends, but because, even if you do still have to make a seating chart, you don’t have to write a lesson plan. Probably.

I’m tired too. I was so tired last Friday night Saturday morning at 2:22, when I finally finished writing the lesson plans and updating Curriculum Trak for this week, that I couldn’t even begin to create the teaching resources I needed for said plans.

So I decided to have a late-night teacher chat with Chat—you know what Chat I’m talking about, and it’s not the one the youths refer to when conversing among themselves.

The lesson was on identifying media bias by analyzing rhetorical devices. Goodness, the fact that we have to teach students rhetorical devices to read a NEWS report is ridiculous. Remember when news reports fell into the expository mode of writing? Regardless of the section title under the masthead, we have to bring knowledge of Aristotelian appeals and a bag of rhetorical devices to figure out what’s going on because very little of what we call news is presented without bias. I miss Joe Friday.

But educate the young ones, I must, so I entered the Chat.

The first thing I asked was for Chat to bring me the five rhetorical devices that most frequently appear in online news. One of the devices was pathos, and we cover appeals separately, so I asked Chat to try again. The tweak still landed in the realm of pathos, but at least we were able to keep our terminology separate.

At this point, I usually search for a real news article or write a fictional article for students to practice identifying devices and bias. But, man, I was beyond tired. Instead, I entered this:

Take the list of rhetorical devices and write two fictitious news briefs for an analysis exercise where media literacy students in grades 9-12 annotate the reports, identifying use of these devices. [NOTE: I copied & pasted the list just to be sure Chat and I were on the same page.]

News Brief 1: Make the first a news brief about a city council voting on an annual budget and the tension between two factions. One wants to prioritize building new schools to ease overcrowding and replace aging schools that lack reliable HVAC systems and contain mold. The other wants to prioritize cutting taxes to attract industries that are considering locating factories in the area. Quote a fictitious council member on one side of the issue and a local resident on the other. Make up names for the city, schools, corporation and corporate representatives seeking to build factories, city councilor, and resident. Make the article’s bias favorable toward school improvement. Make up statistics and anecdotes that use the rhetorical devices.

News Brief 2: Write a news brief about a local college football team that paid $100 million per year to a famous professional coach to take the helm of a 7 and 5 team. Set the story halfway through the season with the team having a 1 and 5 record. A group of wealthy alumni fans wants to buy out the contract of the famous coach. A group of students wants to give the coach time to build the team. The opposing sides have clashed outside football games because the students are protesting the wealthy alumni boosters’ plan. Quote sources from each side. Give them fictitious names. Make up stats for the players and numbers for the negative financial impact of the teams losses. Make the stats realistic, but skew them with a bias toward the wealthy fans’ side of the issue. In both articles, make sure each use of a rhetorical device clearly illustrate that device’s definition.

Prompt me with any clarifications you need to create two quality fictitious news briefs.

Chat asked me to clarify a few questions, so I added the following:

  1. Each brief should read like a short online news story (250–350 words).
  2. Make the bias overt and clearly exaggerated.
  3. Include descriptions of imagery. Also include headlines. Do not include story placement.
  4. They will annotate a PDF on Notability and submit to a Schoology assignment.

Were the news briefs perfect? No

Were they sufficient for introducing these concepts to the class? Absolutely.

Did Chat give me an answer key that was super easy to use? Um-hum.

Did it take me two hours to write, revise, proof, and create a worksheet, beginning at 2:22 am on an hours-awake day that started at 5:30 am on the calendar date before? Nope.

It took about a minute for Chat to generate the briefs, five minutes for me to tweak them in a few places, and another 20 minutes for me to pop them into Canva and create a worksheet. So… 30 minutes to create a resource that I would have spent two or three hours creating previously.

Please and thank you. Let’s do that again.

When Chat rolled out, I tried it right away. It wasn’t good. Over the next couple of years, I revisited it periodically, but it never gave me what I was hoping for. Recently, though, I’ve been using it more, and I’ve been teaching others to use it too.

I’m hopeful.

I have a lot of thoughts about AI, its threats and benefits to creators who bear the image of their Creator. That’s another post—sometime, somewhere.

But for now, something has to give in education. We simply cannot keep doing more and more with less and less. So, I’m going to hang with my buddy Chat a little more frequently and aim for a full six hours of sleep a night.

Curious about the worksheet Chat and I collaborated on? It’s a free download below.

This post was 100% human-written.

English/ELA, Faith-Based Resources, Free Resources, Teacher Resources

Frankenstein, Ian Malcolm, & Emerging Technology

Did y’all know that a new Frankenstein movie comes out in November?!

It’s releasing on Netflix and looks like it’ll be pretty intense with Guillermo del Toro at the helm of the adaptation.

Coincidentally, when I stepped back into a British Lit classroom to land the plane for the 2024–2025 school year, the final work the seniors studied was Frankenstein.

I teach in a private Christian school, so there are all kinds of lessons about the dangers of playing God that rise to the surface quickly. This work is too perfect to let it go gently into the good night of high school. So, with the goal of making the 19th-century novel relevant to today’s headline-grabbing technologies, I took a gamble.

Instead of launching Frankenstein with the Emerging Technology project as an introductory activity— or saving it for the final assessment—I paused the reading right after Victor runs screaming into the streets when his creature pops in to say “Hi, Dad!” on Creation Day.

We traced Victor’s journey from curiosity to passion, then obsession to possession, and when the consequences of his pride first peeked into the novel on that dark and stormy night, we hit pause.

At the heart of the project is Ian Malcolm’s legendary quote to Dr. Hammond about the hubris of scientific achievement without ethical consideration. That quote inspired the project’s name. (If you haven’t seen the original Jurassic Park movie in a while, take a minute to watch this clip.)

It was a very quick project, two block-schedule days total. We reviewed the presentation, chose groups, researched topics, and presented findings to the class. And oh my word, did those technologies spark some fabulous debates!

Below are PDFs of the resources we used. Students documented their group discussion and research on the worksheets. I counted the worksheets as classwork and the presentations as major assessments.

Please note: The project’s intent was to examine emerging technologies in light of traditional biblical wisdom—to factor in the should along with the could. If that’s not your worldview, you may or may not find this resource helpful.

But if it is, I can’t wait to hear how it goes!

The post photo above is the first slide of the project’s instructional presentation, which uses a template designed by Hope Studio via Canva.

English/ELA, Faith-Based Resources, Free Resources, Teacher Resources

End-of-Year Reflections & Intentions: A Senior Mini Project

“Are you going to miss us?”

“Probably.”

“Do you miss us yet?”

“You are literally sitting RIGHT THERE. How can I miss you? Your absence from my presence is, by definition, a requirement for me to miss you.”

*eye-roll*

*wink*

OF COURSE I’m going to miss them. And, of course, I already do kind of miss them because I’ve been in this gig long enough to know that one year rolls to the next with breakneck speed.

In these last days of the last year of high school, the seniors are full of questions. They’re at the end of all they’ve known, and they’re looking for something to hang on to as they turn the page. They seem to appreciate opportunities to sit with the magnitude of the transition they’re facing.

So in the waning days of this school year, I asked the seniors what they would like to do for their final assignment. They said they’d like to do another reflection essay. Earlier in the quarter, they wrote a reflection essay on the lessons Victor Frankenstein learned in Chapters 1-13 and developed a personal narrative about a lesson they learned during their four years of high school, sharing how they planned to carry that wisdom with them into college.

I said, “Absolutely not.” Only a deranged English teacher would assign a big honking essay on the last day of class. It’s the end of the year. Who has time and energy to grade that with the care it deserves?!

But I did come up with something that worked to give them an opportunity to reflect on high school and set themselves up for success in college. I call it the Reflections and Intentions Senior Mini Project.

To my surprise, most of the students took the assignment seriously. I was shocked at the detail. (NGL, woulda LOVED that much specific detail on the Frankenstein Unit Test essay, but maybe a Reflections & Projections on Frankenstein worksheet could help prep future British Lit classes… hmmmmm…)

The assignment includes the opportunity to create a mood board, either reflecting on high school or looking forward to whatever their next chapter brings. Like many schools, we’re seeing an unusually high number of students choosing to take a gap year or to enter the workforce next year. While they do eventually plan to go to college, they feel like they need a little extra time to figure out what they want to do in life. Some created elaborate mood boards from their camera rolls. Others drew stick figures. Everyone got credit.

Below are two versions of the worksheet. It took most of the students about 45 minutes to complete it. I let them chat it up while they worked. Honestly, I think the fact that they sat together reminiscing about their four years of high school helped them think deeply and specifically.

The first version is for pretty much any high school senior. The second has a few questions specifically geared toward students who attend Christian faith-based schools.

You are welcome to either or both.

We’re almost there, friend! I can’t even tell you how excited to be on the brink of the bliss-filled season of slow mornings sans the iPhone alarm. I hope you have a magnificent end-of-year season. You’ve got this!

American Lit, English/ELA, Free Resources, Teacher Resources

Teaching English: Embracing the Challenge of Gatsby

A funny thing happened on the way to Q4. Our private school junior English teacher and department chair resigned, effective the end of February.

Burnout + Having a friend who needed help in his business RIGHT NOW = Early Exit.

We miss him. A lot. In many ways, he was the heart of the department. He has a poet’s soul and a young family, and, honestly, education in our current moment isn’t a great profession for poetic souls.

So I’m stepping in to teach a few English classes through the end of the year, added to my part-time journalism and communications job. Everything aligned—open position, hubs getting caught in a corporate RIF, sense that the Lord was leading me back into the classroom—to lead me back to full-time.

For two Q3 weeks + all of Q4, I’m teaching English again, and OF COURSE, I’m teaching content I’ve never taught before: Frankenstein and Gatsby. I really am excited to return to the English classroom for a little while. It’s just that… it’s Gatsby. Ew. Across my whole decades-long teaching career in education, I’ve successfully evaded Gatsby, the most overrated American novel in this history of ever. Hot take, I know. Everyone else LOVES teaching it. But *insert eyeroll* it’s just SO on-the-nose I can’t.

Anyway, for lack of love toward this work, I have to find something to be enthusiastic about, and since it’s laden with stereotypical characters, contrived settings, forced symbolism, and depressing themes, I’m reaching into the depths of my undying love for teaching high school students how to annotate literature. Yay, Mortimer Adler!

As I make content, I’ll share it here, so check back now and then. Or follow. That works too.

This post’s free resources are a slide/guide and a 17 x 11 printable poster of the system we’re using to close-read The Great Gatsby. I promised the kiddos that annotating would pay, so we’re having in-class reading checks with every assignment, and I’m letting them use their annotated books during the timed quizzes.

If you decide to download and use the resource, let me know how it goes. I’ll just be hanging out at the end of my dock, staring at green light across the water, Old Sport.