I lean against my classroom door, fielding questions about last night’s homework and passing out early morning hellos. I watch students disperse into their assigned first-period classes. As I steal a quick sip of my morning coffee, I find myself pausing at this thought: A supposedly unbiased computer system serendipitously placed our students into their respective classes, but is this all there is to mixing it up [2]?
No.
During my coffee cup inquiry, I also recalled having heard students who sit in the same class together call each other “hey you” because they never bothered to learn each other’s names. The use of these unacceptable pseudonyms prompted me to work on a writing project designed to help students get to know their peers. My source was Write Source [3], which suggests a “phase autobiography” as a writing assignment for middle school students. I decided to adapt this idea and have my students write a “phase biography.”
A “phase biography” is piece of writing that focuses on a specific time in a person’s life. In this assignment, each student acts as biographer to another student they do not know well. This gives them an authentic reason to learn about someone they previously just thought of as being the occupant of the third desk in the row by the bulletin board.
To help students write a “phase biography” I suggest taking the following steps:
The main goal is to give students a chance to take part in an extended Mix It Up experience. It should help them see the classroom as more than just an assignment made by a computer. And even more importantly, it should help them see that the person sitting next to them as more than just a body on the alphabetically ordered class roster.
Yahn is a middle school language arts teacher in Ohio.
Links:
[1] http://www.tolerance.org/author/jacqueline-yahn
[2] http://www.mixitup.org
[3] http://www.thewritesource.com/studentmodels/wi-snapshots.htm