NCTE Centennial: A Blast from the Past
Did you know . . .
"the reason many students don't retain grammar information is because they can't?" Ann L. Warner raised this key aspect of direct grammar instruction in a 1986 English Journal article that noted "only about half the adolescent and adult population reach the highest levels of formal operational thinking" needed to manage grammar in isolation.
Did you know . . .
that the controversy over the direct teaching of grammar is not a new one? In the March 1946 English Journal, educator and former NCTE President Lou LaBrant wrote: "We have some hundreds of studies now which demonstrate that there is little correlation . . . between exercises in punctuation and sentence structure and the tendency to use the principles illustrated in independent writing."
Other grammar resources include . . .
"Contextulizing Grammar," Voices from the Middle, March 2001.
Engaging Grammar: Practical Advice for Real Classrooms
Grammar Alive! A Guide for Teachers
Grammar Kit
NCTE Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar
RWT Lesson
Choosing the Best Verb: An Active and Passive Voice Mini-Lesson