More than half of students from low鈥慽ncome households
Data about students' economic need comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education.
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Part of being an AP student is reading high level literature independently and as a class. I'm hoping to fill my classroom with engaging and thought provoking titles that will help the young women at my school be ready to tackle their AP exams, analyze at a deep level, and develop a deeper understanding of the world around them through literature.
I hope to build a classroom library that is as diverse and brilliant as my students, which is why I've included titles from Zora Neal Hurston to Shakespeare. The young women in my classroom should be able to walk up to our shelves and pick out a high level book to use for our independent study projects that will help them analyze the way authors use literary devices to communicate important and relevant themes. Having these books at their disposal will not only be world opening, but it will help them succeed on their AP exams. I want to use these titles as a first step in building complete class sets of novels for our in-class reading and project based learning.
Every novel we read as a class is linked to a project. For example, during our reading of 'To Kill A Mockingbird', students created argumentative podcasts in which they either defended, critiqued, or qualified the use of the controversial novel in the classroom. Every title on the list will be used to build engagement and create real-world products.
About my class
Part of being an AP student is reading high level literature independently and as a class. I'm hoping to fill my classroom with engaging and thought provoking titles that will help the young women at my school be ready to tackle their AP exams, analyze at a deep level, and develop a deeper understanding of the world around them through literature.
I hope to build a classroom library that is as diverse and brilliant as my students, which is why I've included titles from Zora Neal Hurston to Shakespeare. The young women in my classroom should be able to walk up to our shelves and pick out a high level book to use for our independent study projects that will help them analyze the way authors use literary devices to communicate important and relevant themes. Having these books at their disposal will not only be world opening, but it will help them succeed on their AP exams. I want to use these titles as a first step in building complete class sets of novels for our in-class reading and project based learning.
Every novel we read as a class is linked to a project. For example, during our reading of 'To Kill A Mockingbird', students created argumentative podcasts in which they either defended, critiqued, or qualified the use of the controversial novel in the classroom. Every title on the list will be used to build engagement and create real-world products.