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Showing 1 to 15 of 72 results Save | Export
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Natalia Kucirkova – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2024
Sensory reading refers to reading that engages all six of the human senses - vison, hearing, touch, gustation, olfaction and proprioception. The author proposes that increased attention be paid to the three 'hidden' senses of gustation, olfaction and proprioception to advance innovative reading studies. She articulates the problematic of visually…
Descriptors: Electronic Books, Electronic Learning, Sensory Integration, Olfactory Perception
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Scharnhorst, Rhiannon – CEA Forum, 2021
In this age of PDFs and free e-texts, literature gets separated from its initial context, perhaps even devoid of context all together. Taking Roald Dahl's most anthologized short story "Lamb to the Slaughter" as its object of study, this article proposes a pedagogy that embraces the return of paratextual material to the literature…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Literature Appreciation, Fiction, Reader Text Relationship
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Gary Soto – English Journal, 2019
Poet and essayist Gary Soto considers the senses while reading and the purpose of maintaining a reading life. According to the author, it's the pleasure of a story, and the intimacy of getting to know the characters well enough to exercise tenderness (or dislike) toward them. It's to weigh but not judge the behavior of characters, who are like…
Descriptors: Reading Habits, Reading Motivation, Reading Attitudes, Reader Text Relationship
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Bryan Gillis – English Journal, 2019
The 2018 "English Journal" young adult honor list selections are an amazing mix of truth and fiction, fact and fantasy. The protagonists, five females and one male, all demonstrate what it means to follow your heart and speak your truth. Consideration of young adult books for inclusion in the 2018 Honor List begins in January and…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Adolescent Literature, Books, Selection Criteria
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Logotheti, Anastasia – Research in Drama Education, 2020
The recent abundance of film adaptations and stage productions of Shakespearean drama as well as of digital platforms offering access to texts and to scholarly resources may impact the teaching of Shakespeare's plays significantly, especially for learners geographically remote from traditional centres of Shakespeare studies and from live…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Drama, Teaching Methods, Classical Literature
Lemov, Doug – Educational Leadership, 2017
Recent research shows that reading comprehension relies heavily on prior knowledge. Far more than generic "reading skills" like drawing inferences, making predictions, and knowing the function of subheads, how well students learn from a nonfiction text depends on their background knowledge of the text's subject matter. And in a cyclical…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Nonfiction, Fiction, Prior Learning
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Joan Lange; Patrick Connolly; Devin Lintzenich – English Journal, 2015
This article discusses how literacy and literature goals merged in a media project designed to encourage high school students to build new connections with the poetic elements of Shakespeare's plays "Romeo and Juliet" and "Julius Caesar." Using the free software Animoto movie maker, students were challenged to look closely at…
Descriptors: Poetry, Classical Literature, English Literature, Literature Appreciation
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Favila, Marina – CEA Forum, 2015
This personal reflection looks at the benefits of using performance pedagogy in the Shakespeare classroom, both in terms of a general understanding of the period and a student's personal connection to the text. Though the essay acknowledges our profession's ongoing dialogue in this area, it mostly seeks to look at how a student may change once she…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Reflection, English Literature, Reader Text Relationship
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Yager, Susan – Honors in Practice, 2015
Years after the publication of its seventh and final volume in 2007 and the completion of the film series in 2011, the "Harry Potter" series is still studied and cited by professionals in fields ranging from science and economics to law and theology (for recent examples see Gierzynski and Eddy; Reagin; Bassham). Its continuing popularity…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Play, Novels, Fiction
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McConn, Matthew – Texas Journal of Literacy Education, 2014
Many times students are directed to make a personal connection to literature without being guided toward how their connection works interdependently with the structure of the narrative to create a greater meaning, much less directed toward how this connection can hold meaning for their own lives. Through student samples, this article attempts to…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Reader Text Relationship, Teaching Methods, Literature
Turchi, Laura; Thompson, Ayanna – Phi Delta Kappan, 2013
The Common Core generally eschews mandating texts in favor of promoting critical analysis and rigor. So it's significant that Shakespeare is the only author invoked in imperatives. His explicit inclusion offers a significant opportunity for educators to rethink how we approach Shakespearean instruction. Rather than the traditional learning of…
Descriptors: State Standards, English Literature, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices
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LoMonico, Michael – English Journal, 2012
Why do educators teach literature? The author thinks they can hear the answer in the voice of Huckleberry Finn and David Copperfield and Holden Caulfield and the omniscient narrator in "Beloved." It's the wonderful sound of those words, the gorgeous flow of those well-crafted sentences, and the marvelous way Twain and Dickens and Morrison and…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation, Literary Styles
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Johnson, Angela Beumer; Augustus, Linda; Agiro, Christa Preston – English Journal, 2012
Bullying remains a wretched, pervasive problem in the society, especially for teenagers. Bullying is commonly defined as negative acts that occur repeatedly and involve an imbalance of power (Olweus 413); since this widely accepted definition excludes one-time acts of cruelty, the authors prefer to use the word "conflict" in their conversations…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Bullying, Conflict, Classics (Literature)
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Weissman, Gary – College English, 2010
Through an account of how his own students analyzed Ira Sher's short story "The Man in the Well," the author calls for teachers of literature to value and attend to their classes' misreadings rather than replace them with corrective interpretations. He argues that probing these misreadings enables one to see the limits imposed by any single…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Misconceptions, Teacher Attitudes, Perspective Taking
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Leggo, Carl – English in Australia, 2011
What is the hold of literature on a reader's imagination, on my imagination? I remember many hours spent with books in a kind of romantic entanglement, and heartful obsession, and joyful reverie. I certainly remember being lost with words, lost in enthusiastic abandonment. I loved the sounds of words, and the images they conjured, and the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Motivation, Reader Response
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