Using Journals in the Secondary Classroom

Student writing at desk in classroom

Journal writing is an incredibly flexible instructional tool, useful across the entire curriculum. While often used as a class startup activity, it is used primarily to give students an opportunity to speculate on paper, confident that their ideas, observations, emotions, and writing will be accepted without criticism.

Benefits

The potential benefits of journal writing are many, including opportunities to:

By reading journal entries, teachers get to know students':

Negative Aspects

Use of journals does have two possible downsides, including:

1. The potential for the teacher to hurt students' feelings with criticism.

Remedy: Offer constructive criticism rather than a critique.

2. The loss of instructional time needed to teach course material.

Remedy: Instructional time can be conserved by simply limiting journal writing to five or ten minutes a period.

Another approach to conserving time, however, is to assign journal topics relating to the instructional topic of the day. For example, you could ask students to write a definition of a concept at the beginning of the period and at the end of the period to describe how their concept had changed.

Subject Matter Journals

Curriculum oriented journal entries have the advantage of letting students relate personally to the topic before instruction begins. Asking for a summary of learning or for a question or two the student still has at the end of the period enables students to process and organize their thoughts about the material covered.

Student Privacy

Whether the teacher should read journals is debatable. On one hand, the teacher may wish to provide privacy so the student will have maximum freedom for expressing emotions.

On the other, reading entries and making an occasional comment on an entry helps establish a personal relationship. It also allows the teacher to use the journal for start-up activities which must occasionally be monitored to assure participation. This is particularly important for academic journal topics and the use of journals for a start-up activity.

Sources:

Cite this Article Your Citation

Kelly, Melissa. "Using Journals in the Secondary Classroom." ThoughtCo, Jun. 25, 2024, thoughtco.com/journals-in-the-classroom-6887. Kelly, Melissa. (2024, June 25). Using Journals in the Secondary Classroom. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/journals-in-the-classroom-6887 Kelly, Melissa. "Using Journals in the Secondary Classroom." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/journals-in-the-classroom-6887 (accessed September 5, 2024).

copy citation The Best Jobs for Former Teachers American Government Journal Topics Teacher Interview Questions and Suggested Answers October Writing Prompts 7 Ways Teachers Can Improve Their Questioning Technique The Importance of Teacher Reflection ELL Students' Background Knowledge as an Academic Fund What to Include in a Student Portfolio Mini-Lessons to Upgrade Downtime Bloom's Taxonomy in the Classroom Journal Topics for Self Understanding Good Emergency Lesson Plans Can Take the Stress out of an Emergency Creative Journal Topics Involving Different Perspectives November Writing and Journal Prompts January Writing Prompts 9 Tips for Successful Textbook Adoption ThoughtCo is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

We Care About Your Privacy

We and our 100 partners store and/or access information on a device, such as unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.

We and our partners process data to provide:

Store and/or access information on a device. Use limited data to select advertising. Create profiles for personalised advertising. Use profiles to select personalised advertising. Create profiles to personalise content. Use profiles to select personalised content. Measure advertising performance. Measure content performance. Understand audiences through statistics or combinations of data from different sources. Develop and improve services. Use limited data to select content. List of Partners (vendors)