I grew up in the rural southeastern United States. Like most children who grew up to be English teachers, I loved to read. And when I would tell my momma that I was bored, she replied, “go write.” So I did.
When I was eighteen-years-old and left my small town, I knew I wanted to be an English teacher. But leaving my rural world made me realize that I sounded different from other people. Strangers would point out my Southern accent and proceed to tell me who I was because of it. That same decade, when I started teaching, I heard others talk about who my students were because of the language they used. I wasn’t buying it.
I knew language was more complicated than simple stereotypes and dead rules in musty books. I just didn’t know how to tell people what my gut knew.
So I kept going to school to find the answers.
Over the years, I earned three degrees in English Education (bachelors, masters, and Ph.D.–the last degree from The University of Virginia). When I began my career in the university classroom where I prepare future secondary English teacher, I started my research on how grammar and linguistic instruction can help students become thoughtful creators and consumers of the English language. 
And over twenty years later, here we are.
Profile
Dr. Michelle Devereaux is the Director of the English Education Program at Kennesaw State University in Georgia. She is an internationally recognized scholar in Grammar and Linguistics, having presented on three continents. She has written six books on the topic. 
 
  • Devereaux, Michelle D., & Chris C. Palmer. “Integrating Linguistics into a Secondary ELA Curriculum in a Changing South: Difference, Understanding, and Empathy.” LAVIS V: The Changing South. The University of Georgia Press. Under Review.
  • Crovitz, Darren and Michelle Devereaux. “Reimagining Grammar Instruction as an Integrated and Rhetorical Activity.” mETAphor, the flagship publication for the English Teachers Association of New South Wales, Australia. October 2024. Invited. 
  • Devereaux, Michelle & Chris Palmer. “Linguists and Teachers Collaborating in an ELA Classroom: Teaching Around the Test.” Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America. Volume 9, No. 1. 2024.
  • Devereaux, Michelle. “When Strangers Become Sages.” ROVA. June/July edition, 2024.
  • Devereaux, Michelle. “Mr. Roger’s Mother Was Right: There Are Always Helpers, Even on the Road.” ROVA. April/May edition, 2024.
  • Devereaux, Michelle D., & Chris C. Palmer. “Using Memes to Teach Linguistic Concepts in the ELA Classroom.” In How do you Meme? Critical Memetic Literacies in English Education. Darren Crovitz and Leah Panther (Eds.). Routledge. December 2023. 
  • Devereaux, Michelle D., Chris Palmer, & Victoria Thompson. “Motivations and Frameworks for Pandialectal Learning.” American Speech. Spring 2021: 235-252.
  • Crovitz, Darren, & Michelle D. Devereaux. “Developing Thematic Units: Is There a Place for Grammar?” Connections. Fall, 2017: 22-27. Print.