English Journal is NCTE’s award-winning journal of ideas for English language arts teachers in junior and senior high schools and middle schools. It presents information on the teaching of writing and reading, literature, and language, and includes information on how teachers are applying practices, research, and multimodal literacies in their classrooms. Browse recent articles below or click the Journal link to view current and past articles.
Research in the Teaching of English (RTE) is a broad-based, multidisciplinary journal composed of original research articles and short scholarly essays on a wide range of topics significant to those concerned with the teaching and learning of languages and literacies around the world, both in and beyond schools and universities. Browse recent articles below or click the Journal link to view current and past articles.
Voices from the Middle publishes original contributions in English Language Arts by middle level teachers, students, teacher educators, and researchers in response to specific themes that focus on our discipline, our teaching, and our students. Voices offers middle level teachers innovative and practical ideas for classroom use that are rooted in current research; this is a journal for teachers by teachers. Browse recent articles below or click the Journal link to view current and past articles.
Practitioner journals differ from research journals in that they feature articles written primarily by professionals in a given field (in this case, teachers!). These articles often feature real-life experiences or observations, and are geared towards offering advice, establishing best practices, and noting trends within the field. Articles may still be scholarly, but they are not always necessarily reporting original research.
Research journals differ from practitioner journals in that they typically feature original scholarly work. Articles are more likely to be primary sources, featuring the methods and results of a study conducted by the author(s). Research journals are almost always peer-reviewed.
You may notice that some of the journals are listed twice, with different dates listed after them. This means that different issues or volumes of the journal are available through different databases - so for example, one database may only offer issues published before 2005, and another only issues of the same journal published after 2001. Older issues may be useful if you are looking for seminal works, while newer issues will be useful for keeping up to date on trends in the field.