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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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Reynaldo Reyes – Teachers College Record, 2024
Giving quizzes to get students to read may continue to be misunderstood, even grossly undervalued. Using a quiz to encourage (enforce) reading plays a significant role not only in students learning content of their chosen field, but also as the critical first step toward an awakening of the mind--or, at the very least, the mind being more…
Descriptors: Educationally Disadvantaged, Social Justice, Reading Tests, Reader Text Relationship
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Danvers, Emily; Hinton-Smith, Tamsin; Webb, Rebecca – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
The paper explores questions of power arising from feminist facilitators running a doctoral writing group at a UK university. Butler's [2014. Re-thinking Vulnerability and Resistance. [Online]. Accessed September 12, 2017.…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Feminism, Doctoral Programs, Writing (Composition)
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Carr, Jamie M. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2016
Getting students to read actively for a required introductory course in literature poses several challenges, to say nothing of trying to make required reading personally meaningful. This essay outlines assignments that encourage students to make literature meaningful by establishing personal connections to texts in ways that can also impact…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Literature, Assignments, Introductory Courses
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Katherine Mason – English Journal, 2014
Young adult literature (YAL) that features lesbian athletes helps provide adolescent readers with a more inclusive and accurate picture of who female athletes are and can be. In exploring how these texts might serve as counternarratives to televised media's heteronormative representations of female athletes, the author wondered: Do lesbian…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, LGBTQ People, Sexual Identity, Athletes
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Winans, Amy E. – College English, 2012
Although emotions are an important facet of teaching and learning in all classes, emotional literacy plays an especially significant role in classes that engage critically with difference. My article redefines and theorizes critical emotional literacy, proposing that we understand it as a social practice that must be developed not only by means of…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Emotional Response, Role, Critical Literacy
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Short, Kathy G. – Language Arts, 2012
Stories are woven so tightly into the fabric of our everyday lives that it's easy to overlook their significance in framing how we think about ourselves and the world. Stories are meaning making, providing a means of structuring and reflecting on our experiences in order to understand their significance. Story is also life making, a way of…
Descriptors: Story Reading, Role, Self Concept, Literature
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Hyland, Ken – Written Communication, 2010
Recent research has emphasized the close connections between writing and the construction of an author's identity. While academic contexts privilege certain ways of making meanings and so restrict what resources participants can bring from their past experiences, we can also see these writing conventions as a repertoire of options that allow…
Descriptors: Authors, Self Concept, Academic Discourse, Identification
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Tate, Stacie – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2011
Building on the work developed by Morrell (2003) on critical textual production, this paper provides a glimpse into a critical text produced by a student during a summer research seminar at a West Coast University. This paper highlights the process of critical textual production, the writing that resulted from this method and how a critical…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Literary Criticism, Reader Text Relationship, Seminars
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Connelly, Jan – English in Australia, 2011
As the tectonic plates of technology shift across human networks, dedicated and determined educators understand that the integration of digital mediated texts and the new literacies competencies they engender, amount to little without pedagogical ingenuity, innovative adaptation, and creative application. This article is a response to the rapidly…
Descriptors: Schools, Educational Technology, Computer Simulation, Females
Reid, J. Courtney – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2009
This paper explores how three nineteenth-century women writers guided my thinking about education, oppression and spirituality during different decades of my twentieth-century life. In order to re-collect my epistemological journey, a process that requires analysis and reflection, the paper combines the critical lens of feminist theory with the…
Descriptors: Females, Personal Narratives, Reader Text Relationship, Time Perspective
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Karpiak, Irene E. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2010
Instructors in academic settings may be naturally inclined to view their students from the outside, their style of communication, their level of competence and engagement, or their punctuality with attendance and assignments. Consequently, they risk missing the rewards afforded by the view from the inside. Autobiography can be an important means…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Story Telling, Time Perspective, Cultural Influences
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Jewett, Pamela – Journal of Children's Literature, 2011
Children's literature can broaden and enhance readers' views of themselves and others. When children's literature from abroad as well as from the United States is incorporated into the literacy practices of a first grade class, the potential exists to widen the children's perspectives of the world and build insights about others. Additionally…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Stereotypes, Grade 1, Cultural Pluralism
Bernstein, Susan Naomi – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2008
This essay focuses on how young women students in a first-year, first-quarter basic reading and writing course wrote about their connections to the process of identity development as portrayed in the graphic novel "Persepolis 2: The Story of a Return" by Marjane Satrapi. While the circumstances of becoming a student in a required…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Females, Novels, Self Concept
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Brooks, Wanda; Browne, Susan; Hampton, Gregory – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
This article describes a study of both textual and reader response analyses of "The Skin I'm In" by Sharon Flake. Because gender and race constitute central themes in the narrative, Black feminist thought and feminism undergirded the textual critique. Critics' reviews, scholarly articles, and published author interviews also supported the textual…
Descriptors: African American Students, Middle School Students, Reader Response, Feminism
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Lysaker, Judith T. – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2006
To understand difficulties in early literacy most research has focused on print related knowledge. Knowing about print, however, is only one aspect of reading and may neglect how successful early readers also develop capacities to enter the text world and make sense of it through a personal, relational experience. To explore this other aspect of…
Descriptors: Young Children, Emergent Literacy, Picture Books, Self Concept
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