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Manolescu, Dan – Journal of Practical Studies in Education, 2022
The present article is a plea for the value and the obvious relevance of reading in the formation of every generation of students and teachers. Reading brings us knowledge and it usually comes as a pleasant surprise. It helps us and it guides us in our quest for knowledge, especially when we break open different kinds of texts -- scientific,…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Classical Literature, History Instruction, Ethical Instruction
Katerina Zacharia; Marientina Gotsis – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2025
This article presents the design, goals, and evaluation of "Enthralled" following the 2022 playtesting in three undergraduate Liberal Arts core courses. "Enthralled" draws on ancient Greek myths and the classical tragedy "Bacchae" by Euripides. As an immersive pedagogical intervention, "Enthralled" promotes…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Educational Games, Classical Literature, Greek Civilization
Richmann, Christopher J.; Fogleman, Alex – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) is a new discipline, with seeds sown by educational theorists of the early twentieth century and blossoming in the 1990s. As an inherently interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary field focusing on higher education, SoTL interrogates a range of subjects, encompasses a variety of genres, and uses a…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
Carson, Christie – Research in Drama Education, 2020
Emily Hockley, of Cambridge University Press, and Margaret Bartley, of Bloomsbury Publishing, highlight the way that working directly with scholars, students and digital resources creators, through partnerships and collaborative relationships, has helped to frame the current form of their respective online platforms. While the focus of the debate…
Descriptors: Drama, Theater Arts, Teaching Methods, Technology Uses in Education
Baize, Jonathan – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2019
The author shares his experience in effecting change in an AP English Literature and Composition course by employing book trailers as an assessment. Using multimodal responses fostered a shared classroom space that combined the students' preferred, everyday communicative modes with the canonical literature study required by the curriculum. This…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement, English Literature, Classical Literature, Writing (Composition)
Ögütcü, Murat – Research in Drama Education, 2020
Although teaching Shakespeare in Turkey naturally creates barriers of language, space and time, the use of digital humanities helped me to overcome these obstacles. My experiences at Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey, showed me that combining conventional methods of teaching Shakespeare in Turkey with digital tools helps to familiarise students…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Classical Literature, Teaching Methods, Literature Appreciation
Bell, Henry – Research in Drama Education, 2020
This interview and response explore Tom Bird's reflections on how digital processes functioned within an educational context in relation to Shakespeare's Globe's large scale, international work delivered between 2012 and 2016 - specifically in relation to the 2012 "Globe to Globe Festival" and the 2014-2016 "World Hamlet" tour.…
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Drama, Theater Arts, Teaching Methods
Kidd, Stephen E. – American Journal of Play, 2017
The episodic structuring of ancient novels gives rise to the impression that they are not a serious genre in contrast to other genres like tragedy. Episodic plots tend to imply a playfulness not bound to causality but instead a spontaneity that includes the freedom to reinvent themselves. The author argues that novels like Longus's "Daphnis…
Descriptors: Novels, Play, Classical Literature, Humor
McCoy, Brandon – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2021
This issue brief seeks to add to the discussion of educational pluralism by highlighting the history, features, and successes of the classical education model. The model is unique for its emphasis on building the student to be a scholar and an active citizen. Classical schools come in the form of private and charter schools, homeschooling, and…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Classical Literature, Classical Languages, Liberal Arts
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
Navarre, Joan; Kayser, Maddie; Pass, Dylan; Bisch, Marilyn; Smith, Catherine; Williamson, Andrew – Honors in Practice, 2019
In spring 2018, two honors colleges--Indiana State University (ISU) and University of Wisconsin-Stout (UW-Stout)--came together to create a cross-institutional collaboration blurring the boundaries between campuses. This project connected first-year honors students with the core curriculum of two geographically separated honors colleges. Building…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Classical Literature, Mythology, Story Telling
Catherine Louise Kennedy – English Journal, 2015
If the average teenager was asked how he or she feels about reading ancient poetry, the response would probably be something akin to an eye roll or grunt of disgust. Young students generally have a visceral response to this sort of curriculum decision; it makes them shudder. One of the biggest challenges facing English teachers is to connect…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Poetry, Teaching Methods, Classical Literature
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
Wintrol, Kate – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2014
The liberal arts, first described in Republican Rome, have been a component of higher education since the advent of the medieval university in the eleventh century. Despite such historical lineage, the value of a liberal arts education is continuously and publicly called into question, and this is a special problem for honors programs, most of…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Educational Benefits, Higher Education, Role of Education
Eis, Andrea – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2013
This essay explores silent conversations with the past, but also navigates through the labyrinth of artistic process, with its manifold passages of research, chance occurrence and aesthetic experimentation. The double metaphors of silent conversations and labyrinths apply to the essay and the artwork within it, to the research and to the practice.…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Products, Research, Indo European Languages