Username: ms-charleston-yawp
Gender: Female
Member since: December 4, 2008
Birthday: October 23, 1973
Approved eNotes Editor
Since Dec 9, 2008
I am a: Teacher
Grades:
High School - 11th Grade
Subjects:
English / Literature / Writing
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zue |
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jakishe2002 |
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sweetgurl19 |
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scott-locklear |
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brandih |
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chloesat |
About Me
Personal Info
Bio
I’m the craziest teacher you’ll ever meet who ALWAYS wears a bright smile. In personality I most closely resemble an amalgamation of Ms. Frizzle in the Magic Schoolbus series and Mr. Keating in Dead Poets Society. Lots of nonconformity and unconventionality. My trademarks? Using short movie clips and games to teach, dancing the Charleston with my students at the end of my 1920’s literature unit, and allowing my students to truly experience a Transcendentalist Yawp within nature. I am married to American Literature, but my true love is British Literature and anyone who writes it (especially the sexy Alfred Tennyson). In Ms. Charleston YAWP’s class, suddenly Literature ceases to be only educational, . . . and begins to be physical. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------I have taught for seven years, am in love with my profession and can’t wait to interact with students in a this new online format! My experience is divided as follows: half at Spartanburg High School (an inner city school in Spartanburg SC) and half at Sacred Heart Academy (a private all-girls prep school in Hamden, CT) in addition to teaching at Sylvan Learning Center in Cary, NC. I am, therefore, certified to teach secondary school in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Connecticut. How versatile I am! Any high school level of Literature excites me, but I most enjoy teaching American Literature (often to 10th graders), . . . but I can’t leave out my lust for teaching British Literature as well (often to 11th graders). There are certainly bright moments in teaching World Literature as well and, although I enjoy the subjectivity of grammar, I don’t usually enjoy teaching grammar as a subject. Furthermore, I’m all about making teaching FUN. Lots of awards under my belt from both students and colleagues including Teacher of the Week . I am also featured in Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers.
Interests
ms-charleston-yawp has not added any interests.
New Activity for ms-charleston-yawp
- Joined a group:
The Monk - Answered a question in A Christmas Carol:
Most everything "scotgill" said was spot-on in regards to the different elements... - Joined a group:
The Baptism - Answered a question in The Baptism:
First, congratulations on the baptism of your child! This is certainly a reason... - Answered a question in Macbeth:
Yes, Macbeth certainly did hire murderers to kill Macduff's wife and children. ... - Answered a question in Hamlet:
I totally agree with "mstultz72" about the difference in regards to madness, but I... - Joined a group:
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Added a post in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest:
I remember vividly my teacher from sophomore year of high school explaining the... - Answered a question in Ode on a Grecian Urn:
Ah, one of my favorite controversial subjects to discuss about one of my very... - Answered a question in The Scarlet Letter:
Ah yes, with the focus on Chapter 20, the "wicked impulses" you mention in your... - Answered a question in Guide to Literary Terms:
Metatheatre is a term coined by Lionel Abel, but there are various disagreements... - Answered a question in Romeo and Juliet:
In reference to some intense and general study skills, the best way to review for... - Answered a question in A Christmas Carol:
Although this is generally an opinion question, I think I can safely say that the... - Document posted in Document Exchange:
Setting/Diction/Tone in "Marigolds" & "Osage Orange Tree" (Day 5, 9th Grade, 1st... - Document posted in Document Exchange:
"Charming Billy" & "Wreck of the Hesperus" Lesson Plan (Day 4, 9th Grade, 1st... - Joined a group:
Twilight - Answered a question in Twilight:
In my opinion, this is a figurative description in regards to both New Moon and in... - Joined a group:
General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales - Answered a question in General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales:
The Squire is young, fashionable, and (perhaps most importantly) amorous. The... - Document posted in Document Exchange:
Expository Paragraph / Formal Essay Lesson Plan (Day 3, 9th Grade, 1st Quarter)
Groups
- The Monk
- The Baptism
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
- Twilight
- General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales
- Little Green Men
- A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings
- The Seafarer
- How I Met My Husband
- The Egypt Game
- A Haunted House
- The Witch of Blackbird Pond
- The Leap
- The Alchemist
- A Girl from Yamhill
- Seedfolks
- Suite Francaise
- The Name of the Rose
- Dover Beach
- The Bean Trees
- The Seafarer
- The Miller’s Tale
- The Remarkable Journey of Prince Jen
- Warriors Don’t Cry
- Moby Dick
- Indian English Poetry
- House of the Spirits
- My Last Duchess
- Speak
- Whoso List to Hunt
- The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
- The Twenty-One Balloons
- The Hiding Place
- The Pearl
- The Interlopers
- The Importance of Being Earnest
- The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
- Spoon River Anthology
- Don't Look Behind You
- Ode on a Grecian Urn
- The Bluest Eye
- The Lovely Bones
- This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
- The Far and the Near
- Hard Times
- Bud, Not Buddy
- If
- Pygmalion
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
- Winter Dreams

