English Practice, the journal of the BC Teachers of English Language Arts Association, is a peer-reviewed, open access, online publication published twice annually. We are passionate about sharing the powerful practices of BC English Language Arts educators, and creating a vibrant conversation about teaching and learning in the English Language Arts in BC and beyond.


English Practice accepts submissions under the following categories:

Teaching Ideas (classroom lessons and strategies)
Investigating our Practice (teacher inquiry)
Salon (Literary & arts-based pieces)
Check this Out (book reviews)
Please see our Submission Guidelines by following this link, or look below for details about the different categories, criteria and guidelines. We are now accepting submissions for two upcoming issues:


1) Spring 2014. Theme: Starting a Circle: Exploring Aboriginal Education

This issue is devoted to exploring the vital importance as well as challenges of integrating First Nations, Métis and Inuit perspectives, voices, texts, curricula and teaching and learning practices within English Language Arts. We invite educators and scholars from British Columbia and beyond to explore significant issues arising from landmark events and curricular shifts in BC, which reflect larger questions related to the future of Aboriginal Education and English Language Arts.

In October 2013, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission held a national event in British Columbia, and the TRC Education Event drew more than 5000 students from across BC. What does reconciliation mean in our classrooms? How can we support students in finding their role within reconciliation? What legacies of residential schools remain in BC schools and beyond, and how can we as Aboriginal and non- Aboriginal educators address these in our practices?

The inclusion of Aboriginal focused outcomes in every subject and at every level is an important element of change to the BC curriculum. How do we increase our ability to integrate Aboriginal content throughout our educational practice? How do we work proactively as a professional community towards these ends?

In British Colombia and elsewhere, the graduation rate for Aboriginal students continues to lag far behind non-Aboriginal students. Aboriginal students are overrepresented in courses such as BC’s Communications 12 course, which offers a modified pathway towards graduation. What approaches support engagement, inclusion, powerful outcomes and greater success for Aboriginal learners in English Language Arts? What practices support increased Aboriginal graduation outcomes?

BC has one the most innovative Indigenous literature courses in the world – English First Peoples 12 – which utilizes engaging texts, is founded on the First People Principles of Learning, and is supported by a teacher’s resource guide. Yet only a few hundred students take this course each year. How do we meaningfully and ethically integrate First Peoples’ texts and curriculum into our practices? What barriers and tensions exist and how do we address these?

Closing date: February 28th, 2014.
Contact: Robert Genaille rvgenaille@hotmail.com, or Pamela Richardson pamela.richardson@ubc.ca

2) Summer 2014. Theme: Multiple Pathways: Diverse Texts

This issue is devoted to teaching practices that welcome and engage all learners in the English Language Arts classroom with an emphasis on writing instruction, new literacies, early literacy, inquiry, social justice, differentiation, oral language and assessment. We are interested in an exploration of questions such as: How do we welcome and respond to the diversity of students in our classrooms? What practices best support our ability to meet diverse learning needs in the English Language Arts classroom? How does responding to diversity shape and benefit our teaching practices? How do we engage students through multiple forms of assessment and help them find their best pathways into learning? How do we invite students to engage deeply with diverse texts, and what happens when we do? What does an “expanded definition of text” look like in our classrooms, and what is its relationship to engaging diverse learners?

Closing date: March 15th, 2014.
Contact: Pamela Richardson, pamela.richardson@ubc.ca

Criteria for English Practice

English Practice provides you with the opportunity to write and be read. Your viewpoints, lessons, opinions, research (formal or informal) are welcomed in formats ranging from strategies, lesson plans and units, to more formal compositions and narratives exploring big ideas in teaching and learning, to creative writing.

English Practice publishes contributions on all facets of language arts learning, teaching and research, focusing on the intermediate, middle and secondary grades. The journal offers teachers of a practical, user-friendly guide to research-based practices.

We have four sections with the following guidelines to assist you in preparing and submitting your writing:


Teaching Ideas (teaching strategies, lesson plans, unit plans)
Articles should
:

  • have a clear purpose (i.e. articulate specific learning goals for students)
  • acknowledge your perspective/background/role (i.e. grade 6 teacher; have used reading workshops for 10 years; trying to embed more targeted strategy instruction in my teaching)
  • provide a description of instruction that outlines how modeling or scaffolding is used
  • offer specific classroom practices that are grounded in research (backed up with current thinking, research reference(s))
  • be well organized and clear
  • ensure that any student samples, graphic organizers, and/or handouts are readable and reproducible
  • ensure that formative and summative assessment are aligned with instruction
  • include information on any student and/or professional resources that may be useful for readers
  • include a summary and/or reflection

  Investigating Our Practice (action research, reflection on practice over time, narrative)

Articles should:

  • introduce and outline the purpose and process of inquiry
  • explore a big idea in teaching and learning over time
  • acknowledge your perspective/background/role in relation to issues, big ideas, and/or inquiry question(s) (i.e. “I believe in democratic schooling, but I hadn’t recently looked at how what I do was or was not working”; “I have been teaching for 18 years and oral language has always been important to me. However, I want to know how I can help my students actually improve their speaking and listening abilities.”)
  • include reflections made before and after the teaching practice
  • typically be narrative in style
  • relate your own thinking and practice to current thinking and research
  • be well organized and clear
  • include synthesis and/or next steps
  • include a list of references in APA format


Salon (literary and arts-based explorations, or opinion pieces)
Pieces should
:

  • be related to teaching and learning, curriculum theory and philosophy, language and literacy, or English language arts
  • use form effectively
  • be engagingly written (first person, present tense, ideas are effectively linked and language choice heightens meaning)
  • acknowledge your perspective/background/role, especially in opinion pieces


Check This Out (includes reviews, announcements of contests and conferences)
Articles should

  • acknowledge your perspective/background/role (i.e. teach grades 9-12 English; looking for novels related to the theme of…; “I am always looking for new ideas related to diversity in the classroom”)
  • have clearly explained and supported ideas and/or opinions
  • Book, website, or other resource reviews should include a target audience and some ideas for application in the classroom.
  • Authors must not have a personal or a financial stake in what is being announced or reviewed.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.