fbpx
Home Blog Page 307

Listen: The Good News About a Bad G.P.A.

0
Listen: The Good News About a Bad G.P.A.

2. After watching, think about these questions:

  • What questions do you still have?

  • What connections can you make between this podcast and your own life or experience? Why? Does this podcast remind you of anything else you’ve read or seen? If so, how and why?

3. An additional challenge | Respond to the essential question at the top of this post: How important are your high school grades for your future?

4. Next, join the conversation by clicking on the comment button and posting in the box that opens on the right. (Students 13 and older are invited to comment, although teachers of younger students are welcome to post what their students have to say.)

5. After you have posted, try reading back to see what others have said, then respond to someone else by posting another comment. Use the “Reply” button or the @ symbol to address that student directly.

6. To learn more, read the Opinion essay “A Promise to Grads With ‘No Promise’.” Ms. Stack writes:

It’s high school graduation season. Time to cheer the teenage achievers (especially the overachievers) and send them off to campus adventures and incipient adulthood. This year, though, I want to talk about the other graduates. The ones without honor society stoles or academic medals or college plans. The ones who still don’t know what they could or should do, who taste a tinny dread when the band strikes up “Pomp and Circumstance.”

I’m talking about students who flailed academically, never discovered any particular talent, drifted unnoticed in the halls. The kids who got into trouble and now think of trouble as their natural habitat. The poor kids, the dwellers in volatile homes, the abusers of substances. The college rejects and even the high school dropouts.

If I could give all those kids a graduation gift, it would be this plain but important truth: Everything can still be fine. Not easy, necessarily, but fine. This is almost certainly true, no matter what seemingly hopeless mess they have made of their affairs or bleak vision they’ve developed of their abilities and future. Virtually all American 18-year-olds have more options and more time than they’ve been led to believe. Teenagers’ biographies (whether promising or ominous) should not be interpreted as dispositive proof of years to come.

This is clear to me now, having lived long enough to watch old friends rebound from seemingly ruined lives to happy, stable and prosperous adulthoods, and on the other end, noticing that some of my most promising classmates fizzled out on contact with the world beyond our little town. There are plenty of kids, of course, who turn out more or less the way you’d expect. But the whole process strikes me as infinitely less predictable than suggested by the mechanical churn and sort of the K-12 assembly line.

7. Join us again on Feb. 6 when we will feature the Opinion video “It Turns Out the ‘Deep State’ Is Actually Kind of Awesome.”


Want more student-friendly videos and podcasts? Visit our Film and Podcast Club column.

Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public.

Should ‘Sports’ Be a College Major?

0
Should ‘Sports’ Be a College Major?

Have you ever thought about what you might study in college? Engineering? Business? Communications? Political science?

How about sports?

In “What’s Your Major? Some Say ‘Sports’ Should Be an Acceptable Answer,” Tania Ganguli writes that the idea of offering a degree in sports is gaining momentum — with even Nike, the sports apparel giant, joining some academics in pushing for it to become a reality:

For decades, a small but passionate group of academics has offered a potential balm for the fraught relationship between athletics and education at major universities: Allow students to major in sports.

One such educator is David Hollander, a clinical professor at New York University’s School of Professional Studies. He has spent years espousing the intellectual value of basketball — positionless play, he says, can teach entrepreneurial thinking, and fast breaks can teach interpersonal communication. Mr. Hollander lobbied for the Catholic Church to name a patron saint of basketball (it did) and helped convince the United Nations to declare Dec. 21 World Basketball Day.

Within the next year, in what he sees as a small step in the road toward athletics being taken seriously in the academy, Mr. Hollander is planning to teach a course for varsity, Olympic and professional athletes in which their experiences playing and practicing their sport will be part of the curriculum.

“You can get a degree right now in higher education, in dance and art and music, drama,” Mr. Hollander said. “And I think those are totally valid degrees. They’re portals into the human condition.”

He added: “I don’t see how athletics is any different. How that ancient cultural form, like those ancient cultural forms that I’ve mentioned, are not intrinsically academically meritorious.”

The article continues:

Recently, the ideas of educators like Mr. Hollander found a notably influential audience: the sports apparel company Nike, which pumps hundreds of millions of dollars into college sports through its numerous sponsorship agreements.

Nike wants to lobby universities to offer minors or majors in athletics. Students would earn credits for time spent working on their sport (in other words, practicing and playing it) and also for taking classes in a more theoretical curriculum that helps them understand the social, cultural, anthropological and physiological elements of athletics.

Some models suggest the major could include sport-specific strategy courses, along with courses in nutrition, performance psychology and physiology. It is an idea that has gained momentum in an era when athletes are now able to be compensated for their name, image and likeness, or N.I.L., which allows some of the most popular student athletes to be paid as much or more than some professionals.

“We think that there’s enough interest from the colleges that Nike works with to be able to make this happen,” said John Jowers, vice president of communications at Nike.

However, the idea of a sports major is not without its critics:

Mr. Tublitz, the emeritus biology professor at Oregon, who was the president of the university senate, said that most of the athletes who took his courses were excellent students, but he did not think sports satisfied universities’ goals of “critical thinking skills and improving oral and written expression.”

He added: “One argument for this type of major is that sports, and the competitive sports specifically, contribute to the formation of a holistic integrated person. Makes persons more mature. And that’s true. But so does traveling. So does reading. So does gardening, cooking.”

Mr. Tublitz thinks the amount of money involved in college sports makes it difficult to compare to subjects like dance or theater. If a dancer misses a performance because they become ineligible because of poor grades, that doesn’t affect a university’s bottom line in the way it could if a star football player misses games.

John Davidson, a professor of Germanic language and film studies at The Ohio State University and the school’s faculty athletics representative, said he worried about conflicts of interest if coaches were allowed to weigh in on their players’ grades. Those coaches would have an incentive to have the athletes pass courses so that they maintained eligibility, whether their work deserved it or not.

Students, read the entire article and then tell us:

  • Should colleges and universities allow students to major in sports? Why or why not?

  • What major do you think you might want to pursue in college? Would you be interested in a degree in sports if it were offered?

  • What’s your reaction to the push for a sports major now that student athletes can be compensated for their name, image and likeness? What do you think of Nike’s role in the efforts? How would a sports degree positively or negatively affect schools and student athletes?

  • David Hollander, a clinical professor at New York University’s School of Professional Studies, points out that students can get college degrees in dance, art, music and drama and argues that we should see athletics in the same ways, as “portals into the human condition.” Do you agree? Should higher education take the study of sports more seriously? What do you think is the academic and intellectual value of studying sports in college?

  • Skeptics like Nathan Tublitz, an emeritus professor of biology at the University of Oregon, believe that a sports major is being proposed “to rationalize and justify the time on the field” and that it “wouldn’t be as intellectually rigorous as any other academic subject.” What do you see as the downsides of a possible sports major?

  • What do you think will be the outcome of these debates? Will sports become a college major in the near future?


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Student Opinion questions here. Teachers, check out this guide to learn how you can incorporate these prompts into your classroom.

Torn Constitution

0
Torn Constitution

What do you think this illustration is communicating? How does it relate to or comment on society or current events? Can you relate to it personally? What is your opinion of its message?

Tell us in the comments, then read the Opinion essay to learn more.


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Picture Prompts here.

Word of the Day: limbic

0
Word of the Day: limbic

The word limbic has appeared in six articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Nov. 2 in “Exhale Through the Gift Shop” by Becky Ferreira, which quotes Roberto Trotta, a theoretical physicist whose experimentation with smell includes organizing a multisensory “journey” at a museum:

“Given its relationship with the more primordial part of the brain, smell could then be used to elicit a more emotional (rather than purely intellectual) response to the topic being addressed,” Dr. Trotta said in an email.

The impacts of smell stem in part from the neural pathways odors activate in our brains. While other senses get routed to the cortex from the thalamus, smell is received directly by the limbic system, which stores memories and regulates emotions. This beeline through the brain might explain why a certain smell can transport you to a distant memory or inspire a strong emotional response.

Can you correctly use the word limbic in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how limbic can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.

If you enjoy this daily challenge, try our vocabulary quizzes.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.

How Worried Should We Be About a Resurgence of Once-Common Childhood Diseases?

0
How Worried Should We Be About a Resurgence of Once-Common Childhood Diseases?

After years of holding steady, American vaccination rates against once-common childhood diseases have been dropping.

Take a look at the graph above showing the share of United States kindergartners vaccinated against measles, polio and whooping cough since 2011-12.

What do you notice? What do you wonder?

What’s your reaction to the graph? How concerned are you about the declining rates of vaccination for kindergartners in the U.S.?

In “Childhood Vaccination Rates Were Falling Even Before the Rise of R.F.K. Jr.,” Francesca Paris writes:

Nationwide, the rate of kindergartners with complete records for the measles vaccine declined from around 95 percent before the pandemic to under 93 percent last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Immunization rates against polio, whooping cough and chickenpox fell similarly.

Average rates remain high, but those national figures mask far more precipitous drops in some states, counties and school districts.

In those areas, falling vaccination rates are creating new pockets of students no longer protected by herd immunity, the range considered high enough to stop an outbreak. For a community, an outbreak can be extremely disruptive. For children, measles and other once-common childhood diseases can lead to hospitalization and life-threatening complications.

Immunization rates fell in most states early in the pandemic, and continued to fall in the years that followed.

States, not the federal government, create and enforce their own vaccine mandates, but the incoming Trump administration could encourage anti-vaccine sentiment and undermine state programs. The president-elect’s nominee for health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has spread the false theory that vaccines cause autism, among other misinformation.

The article, published earlier this month, explores why vaccine rates have been falling:

As the pandemic strained trust in the country’s public health system, more families of kindergartners formally opted out of routine vaccines, citing medical, philosophical or religious reasons. Others simply didn’t submit proof of a complete vaccination series, for any number of reasons, falling into noncompliance.

The shifts in exemptions mostly fall along political lines. In states that supported Mr. Trump for president in November, the number of students with official exemptions have increased on average (rising everywhere but West Virginia). Exemption rates rose in a few states that supported Vice President Kamala Harris — including Oregon, New Jersey and Minnesota — but stayed relatively flat or fell in most.

It continues:

Surveys reveal a new and deep partisan division on this issue. In 2019, 67 percent of Democrats and Democratic leaners told Gallup that childhood immunizations were “extremely important,” compared with 52 percent of their Republican counterparts. Five years later, the enthusiasm among the Democratic grouping had fallen slightly to 63 percent. For Republicans and G.O.P. leaners it had plunged to 26 percent.

Today, 31 percent of Republicans say “vaccines are more dangerous than the diseases they were designed to protect.” Just 5 percent of Democrats say the same.

“There seems to be a divide in terms of people’s feelings about science and skepticism towards the government,” said Dr. Natasha Bagdasarian, chief medical executive for Michigan. “I think some of those divisions are becoming apparent in vaccination rates.”

Students, read the entire article and then tell us:

  • What’s your reaction to the declining rates of vaccination for kindergartners in the U.S.? How worried should we be about a resurgence of once-common childhood diseases?

  • Look at the various graphs in the article showing changes in vaccination rates by state. What did you notice about the rates where you live? Were you surprised by the findings? What might the health effects be for you and your peers?

  • While most states have laws requiring students to be vaccinated, more families of kindergartners are formally opting out of routine vaccines, citing medical, philosophical or religious reasons. Should states allow parents to choose if their children are vaccinated, or should all exemptions be eliminated? How do you think schools should handle children who are unvaccinated?

  • The article notes that the vaccination declines began with the Covid-19 pandemic, which helped to erode the American public’s trust in public health experts. How did the pandemic affect your awareness and perception of vaccines and their role and impact on society? Why do you think vaccinations have become such a politicized issue today?

  • President Trump’s nominee for health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has spread the false theory that vaccines cause autism, among other misinformation. States, not the federal government, create and enforce their own vaccine mandates, but how do you think the Trump administration might affect the growing anti-vaccine sentiment in the country?

  • Have you ever seen anti-vaccine propaganda and vaccine misinformation online? What should be done to address vaccine and health misinformation and falsehoods?

  • The Times has written extensively on vaccines and the dangerous implications of growing vaccine skepticism, such as “Six Childhood Scourges We’ve Forgotten About, Thanks to Vaccines,” “Are Childhood Vaccines ‘Overloading’ the Immune System? No.” and “Even Adults May Soon Be Vulnerable to ‘Childhood’ Diseases.” Read one or more of these related articles, and then tell us what new information or perspectives you gained, and what questions you still have about vaccines and childhood diseases.


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Student Opinion questions here. Teachers, check out this guide to learn how you can incorporate these prompts into your classroom.

Food-Shaped Furniture

0
Food-Shaped Furniture

Furniture resembling food — fruit, sandwiches and more — has gone viral on social media and led to a shopping frenzy.

Take a look at the photos in a recent Times article on the whimsical, brightly-colored trend.

Then, tell us in the comments: What is your reaction to the food-as-furniture fad?

What would be your dream food-shaped furnishing? Where would you put it? What quality would you hope it would add to your décor?


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Picture Prompts here.

Word of the Day: adulation

0
Word of the Day: adulation

The word adulation has appeared in 104 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Aug. 2 in “Kids at the Olympics: ‘It’s Honestly Kind of Insane.’” by Dodai Stewart:

When the 16-year-old Rayssa Leal of Brazil skated, Brazilians in the stands went absolutely delirious. They screamed, they shouted, they jumped up and down, they waved flags. Some were wearing T-shirts emblazoned with her face. They chanted: RAYSSA! RAYSSA! RAYSSA! She stood on her board with her eyes closed and her arms spread wide, basking in adulation.

The girls flashed wide grins after they nailed big tricks. Australia’s Chloe Covell, 14, gestured to the audience to get louder before she skated. Fans in the stands obliged, stamping their feet, creating an undulating sound like thunder.

Can you correctly use the word adulation in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how adulation can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.

If you enjoy this daily challenge, try our vocabulary quizzes.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.

11 Teacher-Approved Strategies to Engage Students With The New York Times

0
11 Teacher-Approved Strategies to Engage Students With The New York Times

This idea was submitted by Peggy Dimock, who teaches English at St. Peter High School in St. Peter, Minn. The three speaking activities were written by Aaron Dimock, Ms. Dimock’s brother-in-law, who teaches speech at the same school.

Do you teach with The Times? Tell us about it here or browse our full collection of reader ideas.


Reading and responding to The Learning Network is a regular part of the routines in our English and speech classes. But when we want to change it up, we use these 11 tried-and-true strategies to engage students in a fun, but still academically rigorous, way.

In my English classroom, I, Peggy, turn to The Learning Network’s daily writing prompts because they pose thought-provoking questions and surface student-friendly articles from across The New York Times. I value the range of topics (school life, politics, fun) they address. And I know whatever I find in The Times will be well written, thoroughly researched and balanced. For the writing exercises below, that means students will have models of excellent writing to follow. And for the discussion exercises, it means that, even in today’s polarized world, students can have evidence-based conversations that are timely and relevant without being contentious.

In his speech classes, Aaron uses the always engaging images and graphs from The Learning Network’s What’s Going On in This Picture? and What’s Going On in This Graph? series to help students practice verbal communication skills in a low-stakes way.

Below, we share how we employ these strategies in our own classrooms. We’ve included links to Times articles and provided teaching materials — including work sheets and student writing samples — when available.

Discussion Strategy

This activity, also known as Big Paper, involves students having a “silent conversation” about a text by writing out their responses to the article and one another. The purpose is to engage 100 percent of the students in the article discussion and allow for the quieter students to participate fully.

  • Choose an article. A longer piece that can be divided into topics, as opposed to being read chronologically, works best. My class has used this article about a video-gaming school from the Learning Network writing prompt How Can Schools Engage Students Who Are at Risk of Dropping Out?

  • Physically cut out sections of the article by topic or argument.

  • Tape the paragraphs on larger pieces of paper or a poster board (make sure there’s a lot of open space to write around the text) and set them up throughout the room, creating stations.

Step 1: Students split up, going to different stations. Everyone should have something to write with. While at their station, students should:

  • Silently read the material and write their responses in the open space, initialing their responses.

  • Read and respond to peers’ comments (again, adding their initials).

  • After seven to 10 minutes, rotate to the next station.

Step 2: Continue until all students have gone to each station.

Step 3: Students can do a gallery walk and read responses to their writings, giving themselves time to process the information and their understanding of the conversation.

A Socratic seminar is a structured, student-led classroom activity to discuss, not debate, the issues, the values and the ideas in an article. Students should be articulating their own points of view and be encouraged to explain how they understand and are affected by the issue. It shouldn’t be about who is right and wrong, but rather about articulating and expressing what they think and why.

Socratic seminars can take a couple of different forms:

  • A large circle of chairs wherein every student is involved in the discussion.

  • A “fishbowl” wherein a smaller circle of students discusses while a larger circle of students observes the process and takes notes. Then, they switch roles.

  • Select a prompt and a text for students to discuss. Look for an article or a question that is thought-provoking and has the potential for multiple interpretations or ideas (articles that have plans of action work well). For example, I have used the prompt Should Teachers Provide Trigger Warnings for ‘Traumatic Content’? about university administrators who rejected a student proposal requiring instructors to provide warnings for upsetting materials. You can find more argumentative prompts here.

  • Give students time to read and annotate the article, making notes, underlining and so on.

  • Give them this preparation sheet and have them fill out the left-hand column.

  • Set up the classroom in a circle (or two concentric circles for a fishbowl).

Step 1: Establish ground rules for respectful and productive discussion. Consider rules like “three before me” (three people speak before you can speak again) and “step forward/step back” (where students encourage one another to make space and engage) and practices such as using “I language” instead of “you language,” listening actively, referring to the text only and avoiding ad hominem attacks.

Step 2: As the teacher, start by asking for any questions about the article — fact-based information students need to know before discussing larger issues.

Step 3: Have one student start the discussion by asking one of the open-ended questions he or she came up with (see preparation sheet). Students share their thoughts, ideas and interpretations of the text. It’s important for participants to refer back to the text and provide specific examples to support their viewpoints.

Have students take notes during the discussion on the right-hand side of the preparation sheet.

Step 4: After discussion, have students reflect on the seminar as a whole and on their participation and thinking in particular. What did they learn from the discussion? How did their opinions evolve? What challenges did they face during the seminar? Have students evaluate and grade their contribution to the seminar.

Discussion Strategy

In this activity, students adopt a role — either a doubter or a believer — and read the text from that point of view. The purpose of this game, which comes from Peter Elbow’s book “Writing Without Teachers,” is to have students work on perspective. As believers, they learn to empathize with people with whom they may disagree. As doubters, they learn to read a text critically. In the end, they are able to deepen their understanding of an argument and better formulate their own positions.

Step 1: Students should read the text from the perspective of their assigned role:

  • Doubters: What doesn’t work in this text? Where does the writer’s logic or reasoning fail? What doesn’t make sense?

  • Believers: What is reasonable and good in this text? What makes sense? How would this idea improve lives?

Step 2: As a group of doubters or believers, students should develop their argument using at least three examples from the text.

Step 3: Each group presents its argument to the class.

Step 4: After the presentations, discuss what the students realized as they read the text from each mind-set. For example, what evidence became more or less convincing? Which arguments held up, and which fell flat in the face of criticism?

Step 5: You might end with them formulating their own position on the subject, taking into account what they heard.

For this activity, students write a poem in response to an article. The objective is to encourage them to engage critically with a text and creatively express their thoughts and emotions through poetry.

Other versions of this activity include a found poem, a lifted line poem and a blackout poem.

Step 1: Read and analyze.

  • Instruct students to read the article carefully, highlighting or noting lines, phrases or quotations that resonate with them or evoke strong emotions.

  • Discuss the article briefly as a class, focusing on key themes, ideas and emotions.

Step 2: Brainstorm.

  • Encourage students to reflect on their emotional response to the article and the lines they highlighted.

  • Have students jot down the thoughts, the feelings and the ideas they want to incorporate into their poem.

Step 3: Craft the poem.

  • Explain the concept of using lines or phrases from the original article in their poems.

  • Instruct students to start writing their poems, integrating the lines or phrases they selected from the article. Most of the poem should be their original work (unlike in a found poem).

  • Remind students to focus on creativity, expression and the emotional impact of their poems.

Step 4: Share and reflect.

  • Give students the opportunity to share their poems with a partner, in small groups or with the whole class.

  • After each reading, encourage listeners to provide feedback and discuss how the lines from the article were used effectively in the poems.

Step 5: Finalize the poems.

Writing Strategy

The purpose of the 3-2-1 activity is to have students identify specific elements of a piece, which can change depending on what you’re working on in class.

In this example, I have students find the elements of an argument or position in an argumentative text, but you could also have them focus on grammar and diction in a literary text or write about their takeaways and questions for an informational text.

This activity works well as an “exit ticket” at the end of the class period.

  • Select a text: Choose a thought-provoking article or essay that has a clearly developed argument. This article on online learning, which comes from the Learning Network prompt Is Online Learning Effective?, works well because it is full of research and many of the claims are clear in the subheads.

Step 1: Have students read the article.

Step 2: Have students write three claims the author makes, two pieces of evidence that support the points and one main idea.

(Note: You can change up the 3-2-1 to whatever you like depending on what you’re working on in class. For example, in a lesson on grammar and diction, you could ask for three vivid verbs, two adjectives and one complex sentence.)

Writing Strategy

In this activity, students are challenged to creatively adapt an existing New York Times article into a different genre while preserving the essential information and elements of the original work. By exploring various genres, students will deepen their understanding of writing styles.

Step 1: Instruct students to read the article thoroughly and identify its main ideas, key details and important quotations.

Step 2: Introduce the list of diverse writing genres (e.g., letter, short story, diary entry, poem, dialogue, script, travel brochure and so on).

  • Discuss each genre briefly, explaining its conventions, style and purpose.

  • Instruct students to select a genre from the list that they would like to adapt the article into OR add to the article. Each student or group must choose a different genre.

Step 3: Explain that students need to retain the main ideas, as well as some key details and people from the original article, while reimagining it in the chosen genre.

Step 4: Have each student or group share their genre piece on a class Google Slides presentation. Students will present their new genre to the class, explaining its essential components (form, writing style, word choices and so on) and their new writing.

Writing Strategy

In this activity, students will change the existing tone of an article. The purpose is to explore how changes in language, word choice and sentence structure can alter the tone of a piece. By experimenting with different tones, they will gain a deeper understanding of the role of language in shaping the overall message of a text.

Step 1: Have students read the article individually, paying close attention to the author’s word choice, sentence structure and overall tone. What emotions or attitudes does the article convey? How would you describe its tone? Make notes of specific language elements that contribute to the tone.

Step 2: With their partners, students should identify and agree upon the tone of the article. Is it informative, formal, casual, critical, optimistic or skeptical? The list of tone words can help.

Step 3: Now comes the creative part. Tell students to change the tone of the article. Select a new tone that is different from the original one. For example, if the original tone is formal, try changing it to a more casual or conversational one. Use the same content and main ideas, but rewrite the article’s sentences, paragraphs and headings to reflect the new tone.

Step 4: Select a few pairs of students and have them share the identified tone and the adjusted versions with new tones. Ask them to explain the reasoning behind the changes they made.

Writing Strategy

The purpose of this activity is to analyze the use of ethos, pathos and logos in an article and to practice embedding a quotation from that article to support their analysis. This will help students develop their skills in critically assessing persuasive techniques and effectively incorporating evidence into their writing.

Step 1: Explain the concepts of ethos, pathos and logos:

  • Ethos: Shows the credibility and the authority of the author or the source.

  • Pathos: Appeals to emotions, evoking feelings in the audience.

  • Logos: Appeals to logic and reason using facts, evidence and reasoning.

Step 2: Instruct students to read the article and identify examples of each persuasive technique. Encourage students to jot down notes about their findings in the worksheet.

Step 3: Review guidelines for effective quotation embedding, including:

  • Introducing the quotation with context.

  • Using appropriate signal phrases and “says” verbs: argues, asserts, claims, concludes, contends, discusses, emphasizes, examines, explores, focuses on, has determined that, highlights the fact that, maintains, mentions, notes, points out that, recommends, reports, states, suggests. …

  • Integrating the quotation smoothly into the sentence and citing the source. Choose passages where the author’s exact wording is uniquely powerful or necessary for accuracy or context. Quote “scintillating phrases,” not entire sentences.

  • Explaining why this quotation is important to your argument.

    Example: In the article “The Threat of Terrorism Is Being Reduced,” John Ashcroft, the U.S. attorney general, claims that “terrorism is relatively inexpensive to conduct and devilishly difficult to counter” (Viewpoint 27). This point is troublesome. America is spending billions of dollars on the war on terror and using its military might to fight an elusive enemy.

Step 4: Have students select a compelling quotation from the article that demonstrates one of the persuasive techniques (ethos, pathos or logos). Instruct them to practice embedding the chosen quotation.

Step 5: Ask several students to share their embedded quotation with the class.

Step 6: Conclude by asking students to reflect on what they’ve learned about analyzing and incorporating persuasive elements into their own writing.

Speaking Strategy

In this activity, students will make up a story inspired by an image from The Learning Network’s What’s Going On in This Picture? series and then share it in an oral presentation.

The purpose of this activity is to get students to tell a coherent story verbally. To do this, students should have a basic understanding of story elements (e.g. plot, characters, conflict and scene).

  • Select at least three engaging and varied images from the What’s Going On in This Picture? column. Prepare a slide show with the images, putting each photo on its own slide.

  • Break students into pairs or small groups.

  • Give the students index cards to write on and use during their speech.

Step 1: Determine your speaker order; I like to draw names from a hat.

Step 2: When it is their turn, students should choose one of the three images from the slides.

Step 3: Give students three to five minutes to construct a brief short story that explains or captures what is going on in their chosen picture.

  • Their story can be silly but needs to make sense: Characters should be doing something for some reason by some means while in some place.

  • Stories should incorporate specific details from their selected image.

  • Students should take notes on their index cards.

Step 4: Give each group one to two minutes to present their stories to the class.

  • Each member of the group should contribute.

  • Students should be encouraged to explain the information in the images that support their stories.

  • Optional: Audience members may ask questions about the image that encourage the presenters to add additional details to their stories.

Step 5: To wrap up, have groups complete a quick self-reflection about what worked well in their story and those of other groups. For instance, a 3-2-1 reflection might include:

  • Three things their group did well.

  • Two ways they can use these skills in their next presentation.

  • One group (other than their own) that did an excellent job and why.

Speaking Strategy

This is another activity that invites students to make up a story using images from The Learning Network’s What’s Going On in This Picture? series, but with a twist that tests their on-the-spot speaking skills. Students will choose an image and present a fictional news story related to it. Then, they will draw another random image and have to integrate it into their newscast in some way.

  • Print a large collection of images (approximately three per student) from the What’s Going On in This Picture? column.

  • Break students into pairs or small teams; one person or group should be “in the studio” while the other is “on location.”

Step 1: Have students randomly select two images from the collection. They can choose one to use as the visual for their newscast and discard the rejected image back into the pile.

Step 2: Give students three to five minutes to prepare brief (one to two minute) stories to present as newscasts explaining the events related to their image.

Step 3: At the end of their presentation, give the students a second image — breaking news! — that they will need to integrate into their newscast.

Step 4: To wrap up, discuss with students what they learned about the skills they need to present effectively when they have little time to prepare. For example:

  • Identify situations where these skills are important, such as interviews, business and committee meetings and class discussions.

  • Consider skills to use to stay organized, such as breaking down information into small chunks, asking and answering comprehension questions or telling a narrative (with a beginning, middle and end).

  • Consider skills for processing new information quickly, such as relating it to past information on a topic, identifying main ideas rather than focusing on details and asking themselves audience-centered questions (what will listeners wonder, need to know or be confused about?).

Speaking Strategy

In this activity, students are challenged to communicate the information in a graph, a chart or a table to an audience who cannot see it. The purpose of this assignment is to develop students’ ability to verbally explain information and data in a succinct and clear manner.

Step 1: Put students in groups of four or five. Assign each student a different graph to analyze.

Step 2: Give students time to develop their own understanding of the data in their graph or chart. Once they are confident they understand the information, they should have a few minutes to prepare and make notes.

Step 3: Each student will have one to two minutes to present the information in their graph to their group members. Students should work to use effective presentation skills (focusing on the audience, directing attention to specific information on the graph and explaining concepts in a clear and organized manner).

Step 4: At the conclusion of each speech, audience members should have a chance to ask questions and assess how well the information was communicated by the speaker.

From the Military to the Ivy League: Two Veterans Pursue Dartmouth’s Online Master of Engineering

0
From the Military to the Ivy League: Two Veterans Pursue Dartmouth’s Online Master of Engineering

John Murphy and Felix Hong have traversed unique yet parallel journeys, from serving their country to pursuing advanced degrees through Dartmouth’s online Master of Engineering in Computer Engineering (MEng). Both veterans are applying the discipline and skills they honed in the military to tackle intellectually enriching challenges in hardware and software engineering. Here’s a glimpse into their stories and what drives them as they navigate the online program.


John Murphy: Bridging the Gap Between Software and Hardware

After spending five years in the Navy, including a deployment to Iraq, John Murphy transitioned to civilian life with a drive to excel in both entrepreneurship and technology. His career evolved from leading construction projects in aerospace and defense to launching two small businesses focused on industrial IoT (Internet of Things) solutions. Despite this series of accomplishments and creating a balancing act between his career and being a father to three young children, John sought out more opportunities for personal growth.

“I needed more formal education,” John said. “I wanted something between software and hardware—where the industrial IoT space lives for me.”

When John received an email from Coursera about Dartmouth’s program, the timing couldn’t have been better. With his Post-9/11 GI Bill expiring in 2029, he knew this was his opportunity to explore getting his master’s degree. Dartmouth’s program was a perfect fit—offering flexibility, rigorous coursework, and a balance between software and hardware engineering.

For John, the online format was non-negotiable. “I’m a working dad with three young kids,” he said. “The flexibility was critical. Dartmouth’s program is everything I could have hoped for—small, well-thought-out, and curated.”

Despite the online format, the hands-on nature of the program stood out to John, particularly the Embedded Systems course, where students received hardware kits at home to debug real systems. “It was so practical and directly relevant to what I do every day,” he shared. 

Balancing work, family, and school is no small feat, but John credits his military background for preparing him to handle intense pressure. “The curriculum is challenging—10 weeks packed with an entire semester’s worth of material,” he said. “But I don’t want to just get by. I want to do well.”

Collaboration has also been key to his success. The program’s Slack community fosters a sense of camaraderie allowing learners to stay in touch and help each other throughout the program. John notes, “The students are incredibly supportive. My team from the first course still keeps in touch, even though we’re scattered across the globe.”


Felix Hong: From IT in the Army to Engineering the Future

Born and raised in Hawaii, Felix Hong discovered his passion for computers early in life, which led him to pursue a degree in computer engineering at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. After graduating in 2020, Felix sought a way to align his career with his academic background.

His military experience, which included IT support, computer networking, and satellite communications, reinforced his fascination with how computers communicate across the world. “In the military, I had to figure out how to solve problems in remote locations, often with limited resources,” Felix explained. “That taught me how to adapt and work with people from different cultures and backgrounds.”

When Felix’s wife came across Dartmouth’s program on LinkedIn, she encouraged him to apply. The asynchronous format and flexibility were perfect for his schedule as a contractor working in classified environments. “Dartmouth’s reputation as an Ivy League school and the birthplace of AI sealed the deal for me,” he said.

Like John, Felix has found the Embedded Systems course to be a highlight. Challenges arose during courses like Natural Language Processing (NLP), which pushed him to break down abstract concepts into tangible results. “It’s like chemistry—you don’t understand table salt until you see the elements come together,” he explained.

Felix sees a bright future in engineering fields like quantum computing and AI-driven cybersecurity, where he hopes to address critical challenges like quantum-resistant encryption. “The current algorithms aren’t prepared for the age of quantum computing,” he said. “I’d love to work on devices that push the boundaries of security and communication.”

The program’s interactive elements have impressed Felix, particularly the professors’ active presence on Slack. “It’s great to get immediate updates or ask questions about coursework,” he said.

Deployed in Guam, Felix credits the military with instilling the structure and discipline needed to succeed. “In the service, life is organized chaos,” he said. “You know each day starts with the bugle and ends with the flag coming back down the flagpole.” With civilian life being a bit more abstract and open-ended, Felix is grateful for the structure that higher education provided him, and the opportunities he knows a Dartmouth degree will bring. 


Shared Values, Unique Paths

For both John and Felix, Dartmouth’s online MEng program offers more than just technical expertise—it provides a community of like-minded peers and an opportunity to grow beyond their military experiences.

Whether it’s John applying industrial IoT solutions or Felix tackling quantum computing challenges, both veterans embody the resilience, adaptability, and curiosity needed to excel in engineering and beyond. As they continue their journeys, we thank them for their service and wish them well on their road to graduation. 

Weekly Student News Quiz: President Trump, TikTok, College Football Champion

0
Weekly Student News Quiz: President Trump, TikTok, College Football Champion

Above is an image related to one of the news stories we followed over the past two weeks. Do you know what it shows? At the bottom of this quiz, you’ll find the answer.

Have you been paying attention to current events recently? See how many of these 10 questions you can get right.