The process:
Some of the topics students have
featured in past clubs:
Language and Writing, Education, The
Internet and Social Relations, Crime, Mental Illness, Disasters, Political
Philosophy, Psychology, Communication, Ethics, Science, Technology, etc.
In addition, pull non-fiction books
from the shelves of your library and have students speed date the books in order
to find a topic of interest for the the project.
3) Read the book in three-four weeks.
4) Collect significant quotes for
argument essay evidence on Scholar Cards[1]
5) Meet weekly in book clubs. Students
share quotes, issues, or ideas from reading.
6) Prepare a seminar on the topic after the books
are read.
Student seminar preparation includes:
Student seminar preparation includes:
a. Finding an article, Ted Talk, or excerpt(s) from
books to assign to the class.
b. Writing brief summaries of the arguments and
ideas for the books read.
c. Constructing thoughtful seminar questions that
address key ideas and arguments.
d. Assigning roles to group members: seminar leader, question leaders,
& scribe.
The scribe summarizes the ideas from the discussion on a shared google doc.
The scribe summarizes the ideas from the discussion on a shared google doc.
7) Conduct the class seminar on the topic and
upload the summary to the shared google doc.
Students have paired Ghettoside with In Cold Blood, focused on introverts in a Quiet group, and considered various education issues in The Overachievers, I am Malala, and Waiting for Superman. Students use the
ideas as evidence in their argument essays and it increases their
bank of information for the exam. Many students
come back from the exam stating that their book club discussion made good evidence
to support their arguments. With time
running close to the exam, this can be modified to a Non-fiction Article/Ted
Talk Club. I am curious to know what
book or article pairings you have used in your classroom. Please add your pairings or a non-fiction selfie to the comments below.
[1] Scholar Pack strategy attributed to Dan Sharkovitz at Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School. Student sample cached at www.mvrhs.org/englishdept/shark/Powerpoints/Phoebe%20scholar%20pack%20.ppt