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Maya Borhani – in education, 2021
Amongst a group of poet-scholar friends, all of us students of the American poet Robert Bly, we often speak of our "gratitude to old teachers," the title from one of Bly's (1999) poems. We cherish a meditative awareness of deeply rooted presences holding us up, buoying us as we stride across "Water that once could take no human…
Descriptors: Poets, Poetry, Teacher Student Relationship, Futures (of Society)
Dasgupta, Sanjukta – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2020
Rabindranath Tagore (1861--1941) is primarily known worldwide as the first Asian poet to receive the Nobel Prize in literature, in 1913. He lived and died in colonial India as a British subject. However, any engagement with studies of Tagore would reveal that, despite his outstanding achievements in creative writing and music, he deserves to be…
Descriptors: Poets, Foreign Policy, Foreign Countries, Institutional Mission
Botha, Louis; de Villiers, Phillippa Yaa; Maungedzo, Robert – Education as Change, 2020
This article presents the reflections of a research team from the ZAPP-IKS project. ZAPP (the South African Poetry Project) undertook a three-year NRF-funded research project titled "Reconceptualising Poetry Education for South African Classrooms through Infusing Indigenous Poetry Texts and Practices". The research on which we report…
Descriptors: Poetry, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Blick, William M. – Community & Junior College Libraries, 2015
For decades, popular culture was neglected and frowned upon by academics. In recent years, cultural critics, including librarians, have found popular culture materials to be didactic tools, and vital to the study of society and the zeitgeist that has prevailed at the time of their production. As a result, many academic librarians have found it…
Descriptors: Library Materials, Poets, Popular Culture, Academic Libraries
Hawken, Paul – NAMTA Journal, 2013
Paul Hawken's commencement address presents a picture of the deterioration that is being wrought by human activity and motivates college graduates to join the invisible, ordinary masses who are already saving the planet with everyday processes. In a call to live and hope for something better, he stresses, in the language of a poet, how nature…
Descriptors: Speeches, Conservation (Environment), Poets, Positive Attitudes
Flannery, Kathryn – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2012
Whether teaching undergraduate or graduate classes, the author integrates lesser-known women poets as part of the inquiry, not as curiosities, but as opportunities to discover something in the "raw" as contemporaries might have done. That the author's courses focus on or include in a substantial way the work of women is important, but does not by…
Descriptors: Females, Poetry, Feminism, Poets
Shanahan, Maureen G. – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2010
Malaika Favorite's "Furious Flower Poetry Quilt" (2004) is an acrylic painting that depicts 24 portraits of leading poets of the African Diaspora. Commissioned by Dr Joanne Gabbin, English professor and director of the Furious Flower Poetry Center at James Madison University, the painting is part of a larger programme of poetry…
Descriptors: United States History, Poets, African American History, Slavery