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Ruta Gajauskaite – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2025
The paper aims to explore how teachers learn by incorporating pupils' experiences into the curriculum in the context of applying Dogme ELT (also known as the "Teaching Unplugged" movement) in English classes and how a state of un/certainty comes about. Existing research into the movement provides quantitative and qualitative findings and…
Descriptors: Integrated Curriculum, Student Centered Curriculum, Learning Experience, English (Second Language)
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Hamda Hanan; Mufeeda T.; Sajid A. Latheef – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2025
Earlier research has shown that translation holds the potential to combine close reading and critical authorship practices. But despite that, translation has occupied a marginal position as a creative writing practice in classrooms. Through practice-based research involving the students, the translators and the authors of the translated poems, the…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Creative Writing, Translation, Revision (Written Composition)
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McKnight, Lucinda – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2021
With artificial intelligence (AI) now producing human-quality text in seconds via natural language generation, urgent questions arise about the nature and purpose of the teaching of writing in English. Humans have already been co-composing with digital tools for decades, in the form of spelling and grammar checkers built into word processing…
Descriptors: Robotics, Artificial Intelligence, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Bali, Reetu – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2015
This essay explores what the development of writing might look like and how it might take shape in a secondary English classroom. The study problematises current definitions of progress. In direct opposition to standards-driven models, I propose an alternative way of thinking about the development of writers through a series of narrative accounts…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, English Instruction, Grade 7, Secondary School Students