EP 18 - ANNA COACH-UP PODCAST | OCT. SERIES 2 | Series of Tips for Teachers: Applying to Yardstick episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 7, 2025 · 15 MIN

EP 18 - ANNA COACH-UP PODCAST | OCT. SERIES 2 | Series of Tips for Teachers: Applying to Yardstick

from CoachUp Podcast with Anna Roseboro · host Jerry Royce

Coach-Up Podcast with Anna RoseboroEP 18 — Week 2 | Series of Tips for Teachers: Applying the YardsticksEpisode SnapshotHost: Coach Anna RoseboroAudience: Middle school, high school, college educators; parents, youth leaders, caregiversTheme: Planning with purpose—guiding students to evaluate literature using the “Nine Yardsticks of Value”Focus: How to scale from a short story to a full-length text; how to scaffold group → independent literary critique; how to integrate quotation, organization, and evidence with confidence and integrity—grounded in faith and purposeWhat You’ll Learn (Learning Objectives)By the end of this episode, you’ll be able to:Apply the Nine Yardsticks of Value to familiar classroom texts over a 3–4 week arc.Sequence learning from whole-class reading to small-group (“lit circle”) analysis to independent critique.Coach students to craft evidence-based essays: strong openings, purposeful structures, effective quotation use, and reflective conclusions.Facilitate a low-prep, high-impact “review of reviews” activity to build critical literacy and confidence.Differentiate between subjective (e.g., emotional response, real-life resonance, clarity) and objective qualities when evaluating texts.Episode Outline (Segment Guide)Welcome & Framing: Learning, leading, lifting—with faith at the center.Why Yardsticks? Build a shared language for evaluation; teach students to think and write with criteria.Scaling Up: From short story → whole-class novel/play → small-group book → independent book.Planning the 3–4 Week Unit: Concrete steps for a whole-class text.Writing the Critique: Openings, organization, evidence, quotations, and conclusions.“Review of Reviews” Lab: Modeling how to analyze a published review (featuring Carmen Kennard’s review of Linguistic Justice by April Baker-Bell).Academic Integrity with Confidence: Quote, cite, and synthesize—don’t copy.Coach Anna’s Challenge: Teachers do the assignments alongside students (NWP ethos).Closing Encouragement: Keep God at the center; teach with purpose.The 3–4 Week Classroom Plan (Do-Now → Whole Class → Groups → Independent)Week 1: Launch & Whole-Class ReadingIntroduce the Nine Yardsticks of Value and provide a one-page chart (students keep it with their book).Model applying the yardsticks to a short story first.Select a core text (examples mentioned: The Giver, The Diary of a Young Girl, Romeo and Juliet, To Kill a Mockingbird).Active Reading Routine: Students keep a running list of page numbers and passages to support future ratings.Week 2: Whole-Class Discussion → First Writing PassSocratic Seminar / Fishbowl: Students discuss the text using beginning, middle, and end evidence.Mini-Lesson: Openings that WorkRequired in paragraph 1: Title, Author, General Response.Optional thesis: signal the essay’s organizational pattern.Hook options: startling statement or a direct quotation (with page number).Drafting: Students write a 3-criterion analysis (apply any three yardsticks).Week 3: Small-Group (“Lit Circle”) ApplicationForm Groups: Students read a shared choice book (per circle).Assign: One group-written critique applying three new yardsticks.Peer Coaching Mini-Lesson:Quotation discipline: Use sparingly; integrate smoothly with phrases like “This shows…,” “On the other hand…,” “So you see…”Organization choices:Strong → weak or weak → strongSubjective qualities together; objective qualities togetherEvidence bar: At least three quotations with page numbers.Week 4: Independent Mastery & “Review of Reviews”Independent Book: Each student applies the yardsticks to a self-selected or independently read book.Review of Reviews (In-Class Protocol):Provide 3–5 short published reviews of the class text (favorable, neutral, critical).Add a small graphic icon to each handout for quick, silent grouping.Three read-alouds of one review (repetition boosts comprehension).Students mark their yardsticks chart: “How would this reviewer score the work?”Substantiate with words/phrases/lines from the review.12-minute write (set a timer) to capture their analysis.Culminating Essay: Students choose their organizational pattern, include the required opening elements, and close with a reflective or summarizing conclusion (not mere repetition).Writing Requirements (Student-Facing)Opening Paragraph (must include):Title, 2) Author, 3) General response (+ optional thesis indicating organization).Body: Apply the yardsticks using specific references from the beginning, middle, and end.Evidence: ≥ 3 quotations with page numbers in parentheses.Quotations: Use sparingly and integrate seamlessly with connective phrases.Conclusion: Choose a reflective or summative close; avoid repetition.Integrity: Quote, cite, and explain—don’t copy. Your truth has value when substantiated.Materials & SetupNine Yardsticks of Value chart (one per student).Standard text + choice books for groups.Critique packet: 3–5 short reviews (favorable/neutral/critical).The timer is set for 12 minutes for the quick-write.Graphic icons on handouts for fast group formation.Sentence stems anchor chart (e.g., “This shows…,” “By contrast…,” “Therefore…”).Discussion Prompts (Use Any Time)What is your general response to the work—and why?Which yardsticks did you score highest/lowest, and what evidence supports that?Where does the text reflect real life or challenge it?How did your group decide on organization (subjective vs. objective; weak→strong or strong→weak)?In the published review we read, what does the reviewer value most, and how can you tell?Featured Review (Read-Aloud Protocol)Examine the review of April Baker-Bell’s Linguistic Justice:Black Language, Literacy, Identity, and Pedagogy (2020), read three times by three voices.Task: Use the yardsticks to infer how reviewer Carmen Kennard would score the work.Substantiate with phrases/lines from the review.Share and compare in small groups.Coaching Notes from Coach AnnaEarlier is better: Introduce the yardsticks early in the year to compound benefits.Teacher as writer: Do the assignment with your students (National Writing Project ethos).Confidence grows: Starting with subjective qualities helps students warm up to objective analysis.Faith & purpose: Keep God at the center; your classroom can nurture truth, voice, and courage.Extension & EnrichmentPublished Review Hunt (Seniors/Adults): Students locate positive, neutral, and critical online reviews of their chosen text; bring links to class; synthesize viewpoints with their own yardstick-based claims.Younger Learners: Teacher curates reviews; model quote → explain cycles together.Public Showcase: Post exemplar critiques (with permission). Invite families to a “Yardsticks Gallery Walk.”Sample Assessment Rubric (Quick View)Criteria Application (30%) – Accurate, consistent use of yardsticks.Evidence & Citation (25%) – ≥3 well-integrated quotations with page numbers.Organization & Coherence (20%) – Clear structure (stated or implied); logical progression.Voice & Insight (15%) – Original thinking; respectful engagement with differing views.Conventions (10%) – Grammar, usage, formatting, and citation accuracy.References Mentioned in the EpisodeLois Lowry, The GiverAnne Frank, The Diary of a Young GirlWilliam Shakespeare, Romeo and JulietHarper Lee, To Kill a MockingbirdApril Baker-Bell, Linguistic Justice: Black Language, Literacy, Identity, and Pedagogy (2020)Review referenced by Carmen Kennard (used for classroom analysis)Call to ActionDownload/prepare your Yardsticks chart and critique packet before Monday.Pick your whole-class text and identify three mini-lessons (openings, evidence, conclusions).Commit to doing the following critique alongside your students. Model the process.Thanks for listening to Coach-Up with Anna Roseboro! Keep shining, keep learning, and keep coaching—with God at the center, we can all do better.

Coach-Up Podcast with Anna RoseboroEP 18 — Week 2 | Series of Tips for Teachers: Applying the YardsticksEpisode SnapshotHost: Coach Anna RoseboroAudience: Middle school, high school, college educators; parents, youth leaders, caregiversTheme: Planning with purpose—guiding students to evaluate literature using the “Nine Yardsticks of Value”Focus: How to scale from a short story to a full-length text; how to scaffold group → independent literary critique; how to integrate quotation, organization, and evidence with confidence and integrity—grounded in faith and purposeWhat You’ll Learn (Learning Objectives)By the end of this episode, you’ll be able to:Apply the Nine Yardsticks of Value to familiar classroom texts over a 3–4 week arc.Sequence learning from whole-class reading to small-group (“lit circle”) analysis to independent critique.Coach students to craft evidence-based essays: strong openings, purposeful structures, effective quotation use, and reflective conclusions.Facilitate a low-prep, high-impact “review of reviews” activity to build critical literacy and confidence.Differentiate between subjective (e.g., emotional response, real-life resonance, clarity) and objective qualities when evaluating texts.Episode Outline (Segment Guide)Welcome & Framing: Learning, leading, lifting—with faith at the center.Why Yardsticks? Build a shared language for evaluation; teach students to think and write with criteria.Scaling Up: From short story → whole-class novel/play → small-group book → independent book.Planning the 3–4 Week Unit: Concrete steps for a whole-class text.Writing the Critique: Openings, organization, evidence, quotations, and conclusions.“Review of Reviews” Lab: Modeling how to analyze a published review (featuring Carmen Kennard’s review of Linguistic Justice by April Baker-Bell).Academic Integrity with Confidence: Quote, cite, and synthesize—don’t copy.Coach Anna’s Challenge: Teachers do the assignments alongside students (NWP ethos).Closing Encouragement: Keep God at the center; teach with purpose.The 3–4 Week Classroom Plan (Do-Now → Whole Class → Groups → Independent)Week 1: Launch & Whole-Class ReadingIntroduce the Nine Yardsticks of Value and provide a one-page chart (students keep it with their book).Model applying the yardsticks to a short story first.Select a core text (examples mentioned: The Giver, The Diary of a Young Girl, Romeo and Juliet, To Kill a Mockingbird).Active Reading Routine: Students keep a running list of page numbers and passages to support future ratings.Week 2: Whole-Class Discussion → First Writing PassSocratic Seminar / Fishbowl: Students discuss the text using beginning, middle, and end evidence.Mini-Lesson: Openings that WorkRequired in paragraph 1: Title, Author, General Response.Optional thesis: signal the essay’s organizational pattern.Hook options: startling statement or a direct quotation (with page number).Drafting: Students write a 3-criterion analysis (apply any three yardsticks).Week 3: Small-Group (“Lit Circle”) ApplicationForm Groups: Students read a shared choice book (per circle).Assign: One group-written critique applying three new yardsticks.Peer Coaching Mini-Lesson:Quotation discipline: Use sparingly; integrate smoothly with phrases like “This shows…,” “On the other hand…,” “So you see…”Organization choices:Strong → weak or weak → strongSubjective qualities together; objective qualities togetherEvidence bar: At least three quotations with page numbers.Week 4: Independent Mastery & “Review of...

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EP 18 - ANNA COACH-UP PODCAST | OCT. SERIES 2 | Series of Tips for Teachers: Applying to Yardstick

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Coach-Up Podcast with Anna RoseboroEP 18 — Week 2 | Series of Tips for Teachers: Applying the YardsticksEpisode SnapshotHost: Coach Anna RoseboroAudience: Middle school, high school, college educators; parents, youth leaders, caregiversTheme:...

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