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John T. Hackworth – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2024
The purpose of this article is to show that health and physical education (HPE) teachers who implement humor in the classroom intentionally create a more relaxed classroom environment, build stronger relationships with students, and engage students in the learning process. Humor used as an instructional strategy eases teacher stress and engages…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Physical Education Teachers, Teaching Methods, Humor
Griffin, Shayla Reese – Harvard Education Press, 2015
In "Those Kids, Our Schools," Shayla Reese Griffin examines patterns of racial interaction in a large, integrated high school and makes a powerful case for the frank conversations that educators could and should be having about race in schools. Over three years, Griffin observed students, teachers, and administrators in a…
Descriptors: Racial Relations, Interaction, High School Students, Racial Composition
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Mills, Carol Bishop; Carwile, Amy Muckleroy – Communication Education, 2009
In recent years, the research on teasing and bullying has grown dramatically and is coupled with a rise in the development of intervention programs targeted to teachers, principals, and parents. Ultimately the goal of these programs is to reduce or eliminate teasing and bullying within school settings. The aim of this project is to clarify how…
Descriptors: Intervention, Bullying, Disabilities, Interpersonal Relationship
Walraven, Bill – Communication: Journalism Education Today (C: JET), 1980
A humorous account of the hazards of taking groups of students on field trips. (TJ)
Descriptors: Field Trips, Humor, Secondary Education, Student Behavior
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Damico, Sandra Bowman – Contemporary Education, 1980
By distinguishing between students' creative and hostile clowning behavior, a teacher can reduce classroom disruption and enhance social interaction. (JD)
Descriptors: Group Dynamics, Humor, Leadership Qualities, Peer Relationship
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Kilmer, Paulette D. – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 1998
Discusses how one journalism instructor deals with disruptive students in her reporting, communication history, and ethics courses. Lists reasons for students' disenchantment. Notes that sometimes humor eases tensions. Addresses building respect in the college classroom. (RS)
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Classroom Environment, Higher Education, Humor
Hobday-Kusch, Jody; McVittie, Janet – Canadian Journal of Education, 2002
Using a post-structural, interpretive perspective, we studied children's humour in a grade-1 and -2 classroom. In this article, we report our observations of two boys who took on the role of "class clown." The boys used humour to negotiate power, which we defined as participation in discourse, taking on the role of class clowns and…
Descriptors: Males, Grade 1, Grade 2, Humor
Brooks, Katherine Walker – 1997
This publication introduces the concept of therapeutic recreation (TR), illustrating its natural fit into the educational process and its use with at-risk students, and providing resources for further use. Section 1 examines what places a child at risk, focusing on educational goals, student behaviors, and home life. Section 2 defines TR as a…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Creative Art, Early Intervention, Elementary Secondary Education
Berzsenyi, Christyne – Writing Instructor, 2004
Concentrating on the unintentionally dominant group, the author considers how Walter Ong demonstrates that novice writers have a narrow concept of audience that is really a narcissistic fiction projected as an ideal reader (1975). Given this, writing instructors can work to broaden their students' sense of audience to consider readers who are not…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Rhetoric, Audiences, Reader Response