Wild Child Annotations

Literature and Education Resources for the Wild at Heart

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  • I’ve read this book a number of times now as an adult, but this time around, I found myself struck by something new nonetheless… Read more

  • There are many things worth discussing in Fahrenheit 451, certainly more than just the ones listed below. However, this introduction to the characters will act, I hope, at least as a starting point. Read more

  • You may have noticed there are a lot of allusions (references to other writers and texts) in this book. Some help to really illuminate the message of the book; others might come in handy at trivia night. Besides going over background information on author and context, perhaps this list could serve to introduce the book… Read more

  • Considered one of the great dystopian novels of our time, Fahrenheit 451 was written by Ray Bradbury and published in 1953. It’s set in a nightmarish future with book-burning firemen who set fires, rather than extinguish them. Read more

  • Why do I love the Socratic Seminar? Let me count the ways . . . . Read more

  • The more essays one writes, the more one is able to bend the rules. In its purest form, however, a body paragraph follows a fairly straightforward format. Welcome to this classic version: Introductory sentence(s), Evidence, Thesis tie-in, Analysis. IETA, if you will. Rolls right off the tongue. Read more

  • One of my favorite teaching experiences was hosting a weekly Creative Writing Club. Maybe you are lucky enough to be in this same position. Maybe you’re looking for prompts for yourself, or for a young aspiring writer, or for a group. Maybe… Read more

  • By now you know how much I love the student essay. But how to go about teaching or writing one? I’m so glad you asked! Traditionally, the first essay a student learns how to write is the five paragraph essay. From there, he or she can learn to write a longer essay by… Read more

  • In Praise of the Essay

    I am very passionate about the essay writing process being an amazing, if not critical, way to engage with the big questions in a good book. Putting structure to thought is to make order of the jumbled up ideas in our own brain, and that is the point (one of the points) of an English… Read more