Humor in the Classroom - National Council of Teachers of English
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Humor in the Classroom

Bruce A. Goebel, author of Humor Writing: Activities for the English Classroom, says that incorporating humor writing into the classroom not only reduces student anxiety but also provides them with an opportunity to study and practice the careful and effective use of language. Perhaps most important, these activities offer students the rare opportunity to express their creative, divergent-thinking sides in an increasingly serious classroom space.

As we approach April Fool’s Day, see how else humor can be incorporated in the classroom with these resources from ReadWriteThink.org and NCTE.

The ReadWriteThink.org podcast episode, Tickle Your Funny Bone, shares an interview with kids’ humorist Mike Artell and explores three books which gets kids reading, speaking, and laughing out loud.

In exploring examples of parody and writing their own short parodies in “Parody: An Introduction” through Poetry students are drawn into a close examination of writers’ form, language, and style.

The themed issue of English Journal titled “For the Fun of It!” shares numerous ways to incorporate humor into the classroom. “Comic Relief: Engaging Students through Humor Writing” shares ten engrossing and enriching humor-writing activities for students.

Exploring Satire with The Simpsons, a lesson plan from ReadWriteThink.org, uses an example from popular culture as a means to explore the literary technique of satire and to analyze a satirical work. Similarly, the movie Shrek introduces the satirical techniques of exaggeration, incongruity, reversal, and parody. Students brainstorm fairy tale characteristics, identify satirical techniques, then create their own satirical versions of fairy tales in Exploring Satire with Shrek.

The use of humorous texts in the writing class can help students improve skills in effective writing while encouraging critical thinking and an increased range in expression as described in the Teaching English in the Two Year College article “Not Just a Humorous Text: Humor as Text in the Writing Class.” In addition, because of the accessible nature of humor and the focus on purpose and audience that is necessary when writing it, students show a natural inclination toward peer review and recursive writing, with an enthusiasm that is often lacking when working with traditional texts in the writing class.

How do you incorporate humor into the classroom?