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Kromhout, Jessamy; Scheckle, Eileen M. – Reading & Writing: Journal of the Literacy Association of South Africa, 2021
Background: Much of the research in literacy focuses on what learners fail to do, especially in the early grades, but it is equally important to research successful readers. In particular learners' experiences with literature contribute to our understanding of the possibilities literary texts offer. This article focused on learners' responses to…
Descriptors: Reader Text Relationship, Literature, English Instruction, High School Seniors
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Marlatt, Rick – Multicultural Perspectives, 2018
This article describes a recent implementation of digital literacies in which high school literature students engaged in literary analysis of a novel using the video game Minecraft. Students who had previously expressed reluctance with reading and dissatisfaction with school experiences used their gaming skills to re-create scenes, respond to…
Descriptors: Technological Literacy, High School Students, Video Games, Literature
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Lee, Klaudia Hiu Yen; Patkin, John – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2016
This article uses the findings from an empirical study on Hong Kong students' reading practices as collected through face-to-face interviews on major university campuses in Hong Kong to argue for the importance of "affective" and "imaginative" engagement with literary texts if students are to develop an interest in reading.…
Descriptors: Imagination, Reading Processes, Student Centered Learning, Creativity
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Jacoby, Jay – CEA Critic, 1990
Discusses reader-response theories and response-centered literature instruction. Outlines fundamental problems that impede the transfer of authority from teacher to community to reader, and offers suggestions for their correction. (PRA)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
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Elster, Charles A. – Language Arts, 2000
Illustrates how poems engage readers in heightened experiences of the world and of language itself. Shows some of the strategies that adults and elementary students employed when reading and responding to poems: summarizing the poem, entering in and opening out, entering the world of the poem, opening to the outside world, finding rich…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Instruction, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation
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Tabers-Kwak, Linda; Kaufman, Timothy U. – English Journal, 2002
Discusses two approaches that engage both students and teachers as they come to share an understanding of Shakespeare's relevance to all ages. Suggests teaching Shakespeare through picture books and through music. Notes that one of the first ways to modernize Shakespeare is to allow students to interact with the work. (SG)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Instructional Innovation, Literature Appreciation, Music Activities
Moss, Joy F. – Teaching and Learning Literature with Children and Young Adults, 1998
Uses excerpts from fourth graders' literary discussion to describe literary language and reading strategies these students use to analyze and talk about literature and to generate meaning in response to literary texts. Rethinks the nature of literary discussions and outlines the importance of these literary discussions. Lists seven characteristics…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades
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Hobgood, Jayne M. – Voices from the Middle, 1998
Describes how the author has her students create "found poems" and use them in conjunction with the students' own Readers/Writers Logs to help students make more of a text, own it, and discover the power of effective language. Includes instructions, student samples of found poems, and samples of the entire process. (SR)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation, Poetry
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Hatters, Cathy – English in Australia, 2001
Notes that teaching literature in a Technical and Further Education setting presents its own special set of problems and paradoxes not usually encountered by teachers in more conventional classrooms. Discusses students and their literature experiences; impact of the canon on teaching; and influence of modern literary theory on the reader-text…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English Instruction, Foreign Countries, Instructional Effectiveness
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Johnson, Barbara; Garber, Marjorie – College English, 1987
Offers a psychoanalytically based reading of Conrad's "The Secret Sharer" and points out the similarities between analysis of a text and analysis of a patient in a psychoanalysis session. (JC)
Descriptors: College English, Content Analysis, English Instruction, Literary Criticism
Williams, Barbara M. – 1989
Activities related to women's issues are many and varied at Slippery Rock University in Pennsylvania, but it is doubtful how much of this sensitivity trickles down into actual literature courses. Efforts at moving students away from passive reading and into a more critical stance that would promote active engagement with texts must be encouraged…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Feminism, Feminist Criticism, Gender Issues
Norris, Dale – 1988
What kind of meaningful learning goes on when an introverted and intuitive traditional professor imparts his knowledge to an extroverted student of the new wave generation? In a project exploring how teaching personalities influence student learning, a traditional professor of literature and a "new wave" (defined as characterized by…
Descriptors: College English, Conventional Instruction, English Curriculum, English Instruction
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Scholes, Robert – English Journal, 1999
Presents a humorous speech given to high school English teachers on two serious subjects: externally imposed standards and standardized testing, and anti-intellectualism in the classroom and in the culture. Argues that English teachers themselves are responsible for some of the anti-intellectualism they encounter by teaching literature in an…
Descriptors: Anti Intellectualism, Curriculum, English Instruction, Language Arts