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In 202511
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Journal Articles11
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Michael Conklin – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2025
This teaching note presents an active learning exercise using a clip from the television show "The Office." The exercise centers on a promise to pay for the college education of a group of third graders, raising questions about capacity, consideration, offer, acceptance, statute of frauds, revocations, promissory estoppel, and other key…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Television, Contracts, Business Education
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Jesse R. Ford; Jason K. Wallace; Johnnie L. Allen – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
Hip-hop music and culture have existed for decades in the United States. Since the 1970s, five critical elements have been defined as parts of hip-hop culture: the MC (oral), the DJ (aural), graffiti (visual), knowledge (mental), and breakdancing (physical). The existing literature connects each of these forms of hip-hop to the experiences of…
Descriptors: African American Students, Popular Culture, Music, Leadership Training
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Alecia Marie Magnifico; Jayne C. Lammers; Francesca Kennedy; Bethany Silva – Reading Teacher, 2025
Fans often express their love of authors or books by creating and sharing "fanfiction," a genre wherein fans write new narratives that add to beloved works or take place in existing story worlds. In this article, we describe a kindergarten teacher's efforts to enhance students' foundational literacy skills by combining author studies…
Descriptors: Fiction, Literary Genres, Preschool Teachers, Literacy
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Brittany Devies; Derrick Raphael Pacheco; Lauren A. Haynes; Madison B. Drummond; Derek Estrella-Padilla – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
Pop culture has served as a catalyst for leadership development, both creating and manufacturing culture while also creating the parameters for us to understand culture in a public context. While pop culture has influenced how people engage with leadership development across contexts, celebrities have been the manifestation of pop culture…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Leadership Training, Change Agents, Reputation
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Alexa Quinn; Stephen Day; Lauren Shifflett – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2025
In this article, we describe ways to use the television series "Bluey" to examine economic concepts in children's daily lives. We identify and unpack parts of Bluey episodes that might serve as the basis for lessons or discussions with young children. We explain how economic decision-making can have either "market" or…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Childrens Television, Young Children, Economics Education
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Jess Mullen; Rainamei Luna – Journal of Music Teacher Education, 2025
In this article, we propose a framework for a critical pedagogy of popular music for teacher education to better prepare music teachers to enact anti-racist praxis within their classrooms. Although a growing body of literature in music education addresses issues of racism within the field, fewer scholars have studied this within teacher education.…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Popular Culture, Music Education
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Theresa Redmond – English Journal, 2025
To start teaching about climate change in an immediately attention-grabbing and fully somatic way, the author begins with an activity called Singer/Songbird. The goal is for students to quickly identify that media and technology influence our environmental knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors toward climate change. Besides learning that…
Descriptors: Climate, Teaching Methods, Popular Culture, Influence of Technology
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Raffi Sarkissian – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
This article applies the critical media concept of organic representation to leadership studies as an analytic of how various creators in popular culture today are not just writing inclusive storytelling but, more notably, modeling new modes of production and self-presentation that are actively challenging hegemonic industry practices and larger…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Interdisciplinary Approach, Ideology, Leadership
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Kathleen Callahan; Sean Connable – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
Popular culture exists as an expression of cultural history. It speaks to who we are, what we aspire toward, and where our generation stands in relation to the major issues of the day. This article is a conversation about the myriad perspectives offered in this issue of "New Directions for Student Leadership," exploring the contributions…
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Popular Culture, Story Telling, Current Events
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Aude Hansel; Natassia Schutz – Language Learning in Higher Education, 2025
Collaboration is essential for all English for Specific Purposes practitioners, whether they are a part of a Faculty or a Language Centre. Conducting needs analyses to determine students' specific English requirements necessitates interaction with subject specialists within their institution. The present report presents an innovative pedagogical…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Science Education, English for Academic Purposes, Second Language Learning
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S. Gavin Weiser; Linsay DeMartino – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
Like the depiction of plagues in apocalyptic science fiction, neoliberalism continues to infect education at all levels. This infection causes educators to care not for the children, but to embrace the figure of the Child. Reproductive futurism, in the imagined redemptive figure of the Child has been regulating the structure of education not for…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Science Fiction, Neoliberalism, Futures (of Society)