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Bruce Goebel – English Journal, 2018
What if the literacy and social justice work educators are trying to do via literature is being foiled by its often tragic seriousness? What if the emotion work students are being asked to do when engaging with such literature is debilitating for some of them? One might argue that many students' reluctance to read and their lack of success at…
Descriptors: Humor, Literary Devices, Literacy Education, Literature Appreciation
DeFelice, William – English Teaching Forum, 2012
Teaching in a monolingual/monocultural, non-English speaking environment can at times be frustrating. Teachers want their students to genuinely communicate with each other in socially acceptable ways, and at the same time become more aware of cultural traits. What is needed in a classroom is a reaction that is real because it is spontaneous. This…
Descriptors: Cultural Traits, Monolingualism, Humor, Speech Acts
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Ruggieri, Colleen A. – English Journal, 1999
Describes how one high school English teacher used humor when teaching Shakespearean tragedy. Describes how this improved students' attitudes and appreciation of the tragedies, helped them appreciate literature devices in the plays, and helped them review prior to their exam. (SR)
Descriptors: English Instruction, High Schools, Humor, Language Arts
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Reynolds, Katherine; Schwartz, Robert; Bower, Beverly – Journal of Educational Thought/Revue de la Pensee Educative, 2000
Examines humorous literature in higher education and categorizes the genre into humorous academic stories and novels, essays, and expressions. Explores the first of these types. Demonstrates that Freud's "superiority theory" is alive and well in humorous campus literature but that it generally does not rise to the instrumental level of pure…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Fiction, Higher Education, Humor
Heitzmann, William Ray – 1998
This essay focuses on the ability of the political cartoon to enhance history instruction. A trend in recent years is for social studies teachers to use these graphics to enhance instruction. Cartoons have the ability to: (1) empower teachers to demonstrate excellence during lessons; (2) prepare students for standardized tests containing cartoon…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Elementary Secondary Education, Figurative Language, History Instruction