Nour Jalloul
(M.A., )
The sign on the wall â âliving your writerly lifeâ â grabbed Nour Jalloulâs attention the moment she began her internship at the American Community School of Beirut. So did the students partnering on writing projects and hunkered in intense discussions of books.
âIt was a completely different approach than any other school in Lebanon in teaching the reading and writing of either English or Arabic,â recalls Jalloul, who grew up in Lebanon and attended the American University in Beirut.
âLiteracy is more than about reading and writing. Literacy is what kids bring into the classroom and working on their learning styles.â
â Nour Jalloul, M.A., Curriculum & Teaching
Jalloul asked around and learned that the workshop approach sheâd âfallen in love withâ was based on a model developed by Lucy Calkins, TCâs Robinsonâs Professor of Childrenâs Literature and founder of the TC . The summer before her senior year of college, she came to the United States for a workshop led by Calkins herself. As she walked the campus corridors, Jalloul says, âI knew I had to be here.â
She spent the next four years teaching at the American Community School before finally returning to a pursue a masterâs degree in TCâs Literacy Specialist program â an experience she describes as a whirlwind of learning and enlightenment.
For example, a course taught by Education Professor Marjorie Siegel awakened her to the power of âmulti-modality.â
âShe challenged our thinking around literacy,â Jalloul says. âLiteracy is more than about reading and writing. Literacy is what kids bring into the classroom and working on their learning styles.â
A âwriterâs craftâ class taught by Calkins motivated Jalloul to deconstruct her own writing.
âIt was really powerful because I was able to go back to my fieldwork and try methods Iâve tried with students in conferencing or small group work.â
She also is grateful for the opportunity to absorb lessons on the practical applications of core leadership, staff development and mentoring principles by observing Reading and Writing Project staff working with students in New York City and Long Island classrooms.
âIt was a program that prepared me to take on leadership positions in the future,â she says. âA program that versed me not just in theory but also practice and research, which is what teaching is all about.â
Jalloul will be applying those lessons in Beirut later this year when she returns to the American Community School as a literacy coach. Sheâll be specializing in digital literacy and innovative teaching strategies, but her ultimate focus is on Lebanese students who lack the wherewithal to attend a prestigious private institution.
âMy goal is to âbe the changeâ in Lebanon that I can become if I work in public schools.â â Steve Giegerich
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