Part-time English Teacher, High School - Chicago, United States - The University of Chicago

Mark Lane

Posted by:

Mark Lane

beBee recruiter


Part time
Description
Department

Lab School High School Faculty

About the Department

At the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, students in Nursery through Grade 12 experience a world-class educational journey.

Founded in 1896 by John Dewey as a place for educators to develop and explore novel approaches to pedagogy and curriculum, Lab continues to provide excitement and imagination in learning to this day.

Academic rigor, experiential learning, and intellectual discourse are hallmarks of a Lab education. Lab educators are recognized for excellence in teaching and pride themselves on innovation in the classroom.

Students in every grade have access to unparalleled resources, and all members of the Lab community benefit by partnerships and connections with the University of Chicago.

Families who choose Lab care deeply about curiosity, inquiry, and creativity.

No less than scholarship, Lab's mission prioritizes honoring diversity and exhibiting kindness.

We are committed to building and supporting a teaching and learning community where young people see aspects of their backgrounds and identities reflected around them, where they feel a deep sense of belonging, and where they discover and use their voices to full effect.

Today, 53-59 percent of Lab's student body are students of color. Families report speaking nearly 40 different languages in their homes. Approximately 60 percent of Lab families are also affiliated with the University of Chicago.

Half of our families live in Hyde Park, and the rest come from across Chicago, the suburbs, and northwestern Indiana.

Inclusion is a fundamental value at Lab, such that we celebrate every facet of community members' identities, and even where we disagree, we emphasize respect, civility, and maintaining a spirit of community.

Job Information


Job Summary:


Critical analysis of literature stands at the core of our English Department as we develop thoughtful, reflective, independent readers and writers.

We love literature and its power to inspire, question, and change perspective, and we hope that, along with building disciplined critical skills, we pass that love on to our students to carry on in their lives and out into the world.

We strive for pedagogical diversity in how we invite students to enter texts, and we prioritize cultural and socio-political diversity in the material we teach.

The department's working statement on diversity, equity, and inclusion is available here

)


Our foundational courses are not based on traditional content areas (no American lit, Brit lit, world lit, etc.), but rather are designed around the literature that best facilitates skill development.

We're more about "how" than "what," though we know our texts very, very well. Our courses all build or reinforce a well-scaffolded, evidence-first process for developing original critical essays.

We also, however, offer significant alternative assignments - such as poetry translation, text illustration, cross-textual explorations, playwrighting or story writing - to give students a variety of paths to think about what they read and what writers do.


We want students to step back and objectively consider the text on its own terms, and we want them to step forward and bring themselves to the text.

Teachers are expected to create an environment that allows students to think critically, creatively, and independently; to foster engaging discussions in class; to help students follow a clear, structured writing process; and to adapt classroom instruction to various learning styles.


Responsibilities:


  • Teachers are responsible for developing curriculum, supervising students both in and out of the classroom and maintaining uptodate teaching techniques to provide students with a quality educational experience.
  • Teachers are also expected to build deep relationships with students, families, other faculty and staff to communicate about student progress and to foster a culture of community. We are looking for team members who will emanate optimism, solve problems collaboratively, reflect on how your actions impact others, create an engaging and inclusive school culture, and share in the united pursuit of Lab's mission.
  • The English Department is responsible for educating students in grades 912. The courses taught by the department are designed to teach reading, writing, and thinking skills, and the content of the courses is chosen to support those goals.
  • English teachers report to their respective Principals and are responsible to the English Department Chair. The high school currently supports separate History and English departments and middle school supports a combined Humanities department.
  • The school is developing more interdisciplinary programming and is keen to have teachers collaborate and teach across departments and divisions. Demonstrated interest and ability to do both are strongly preferred.
  • All teachers are expected to perform in accordance with the terms and conditions of th

More jobs from The University of Chicago