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Kyle Long; Bernhard Streitwieser; Joy Gitter – Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2024
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, commentators in broadly accessible media have offered a surfeit of predictions about the future of higher education. Due to the absence of accountability mechanisms, however, the accuracy of these claims has been heretofore unknown. Research shows that op-eds and other forms of public scholarship influence public…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Research, Scholarship, Pandemics
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Hanratty, Brian – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
While "Rebecca" is not currently a set text for A-Level English Literature, this paper argues that the novel's multi-faceted richness would justify its inclusion in any list of recommended texts. Divided into four interconnected parts, the paper offers, firstly, some approaches to the reading and teaching of fiction, generally. The…
Descriptors: English Literature, English Instruction, Novels, Fiction
Megan Jacklynn Busch – ProQuest LLC, 2021
In this dissertation project, I examine how professionals in the South use their Southern United States English (SUSE) to communicate in business situations. My goals are to (1) understand how regional language variety rhetorically shapes written professional communication and (2) establish a pedagogical framework for business writing that attunes…
Descriptors: Language Variation, Geographic Regions, Business Communication, Writing (Composition)
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Weida, Courtney Lee – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2020
Zine making involves not only the creation of handmade and self-published books, but also local distribution in zine communities, as well as archival processes of zine collecting in university and community libraries. These creative and communal practices, as part of the intellectual discourse known as zine studies, engender valuable arts-based…
Descriptors: Publications, Art Teachers, Professional Identity, Research Methodology
Arshad, Muminah; Dada, Rachel; Elliott, Cathy; Kalinowska, Iweta; Khan, Mehreen; Lipinski, Robert; Vassanth, Varun; Bhandal, Jotepreet; de Quinto Schneider, Monica; Georgis, Ines; Shilston, Fiona – London Review of Education, 2021
Within the literature on decolonizing the curriculum, a clear distinction is frequently made between diversity and decolonization. While "decolonization" entails dismantling colonial forms of knowledge, including practices that racialize and categorize, "diversity" is a policy discourse that advocates for adding different sorts…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Educational Change, Diversity, Political Science
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Trinidad Galván, Ruth – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2016
Feminists have consistently engaged with ontological and epistemological issues about what counts as knowledge, based on whose worldview, and what knowledge and worldviews remain unrecognised or ignored. Utilising Mexicana and Chicana fictional and conceptual writings and public art installations on the Juárez feminicides, the article focuses on…
Descriptors: Memory, Violence, Females, Feminism
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McKnight, Lucinda – Gender and Education, 2018
This article looks to three inspirational Black women, bell hooks, Stacey McBride-Irby and Patricia Williams, in the pursuit of radical curriculum. While today curriculum is critiqued as racialised, gendered, sexualised and classed, the formats of curriculum documents such as text books, units of work and lesson plans have changed little. These…
Descriptors: African Americans, Gender Differences, Lesson Plans, Curriculum Design
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Fike, Matthew – CEA Forum, 2017
In this article, the author discusses binary oppositions and the imperative of achieving a middle way with his sophomore "Critical Reading, Thinking, Writing" students in connection with chapters 3 and 5--"Entering Into the Serpent" and "How to Tame a Wild Tongue"--in Gloria Anzaldúa's "Borderlands/La Frontera:…
Descriptors: Authors, Teaching Methods, Critical Reading, Critical Thinking
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Srisermbhok, Amporn – LEARN Journal: Language Education and Acquisition Research Network, 2016
This paper aims to demonstrate the impact of feminist writing as a new paradigm for education in the 21st Century to provoke awareness of gender inequity issues and to maintain justice and healthy living in society. It discusses the two selected works by prominent feminist authors: Alice Walker's "The Color Purple" and Amy Tan's…
Descriptors: Feminism, Novels, Gender Issues, Sex Fairness
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Devine, Nesta – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
In this article I attempt to engage with Charlotte Bronte as both a teacher and a philosopher. In her depiction of two impoverished gentlewomen as teachers Bronte is, as is often pointed out, drawing on her own history, but she is also exploring two conflicting contemporary philosophic notions: the romantic ideal and the ideal of rationality, as…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Authors, Females, Novels
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Boisseau, T. J. – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2014
In searching for a way of teaching American history as something that truly belongs to women, and men, to the powerful as well as to those who lack power in a formal sense, as something that is not the story of white people with an interesting person of color charitably thrown in for good measure, Boisseau writes that while many influential…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, African American History, Females
Jeremy Jimenez – ProQuest LLC, 2017
In my three-article dissertation, "Concerning the Other: Empathic Discourse in Worldwide, National, and Student-Authored Textbook Historical Narratives," I explore how textbook authors empathize with marginalized groups. My data includes approximately 1,000 textbooks published from 1910 to 2010 from over 100 countries around the world,…
Descriptors: Empathy, History Instruction, Disadvantaged, Diversity
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Lammers, Jayne C. – Learning, Media and Technology, 2013
Videogames, such as "The Sims," are a digital media passion drawing adolescents to online spaces where they create and share content. This article explores how discourses and expectations are taught in one online, videogame-related fan site of adolescents who read and write "Sims" fan fiction. Using Bernstein's pedagogic…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Fiction
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Scantlebury, Kathryn; Murphy, Collette – Irish Educational Studies, 2009
Maria Edgeworth was a nineteenth century novelist, primarily remembered for her adult and children's novels. Yet her book, "Letters for literary ladies" discussed the importance of science education for girls and in conjunction with her father, Richard Edgeworth, she wrote several treatises on education. Their book "Practical education" advocates…
Descriptors: Observation, Novels, Science Education, Authors
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Morgan, William W. – College English, 1979
Describes a course in "Images of the Male in Women's Writing" and the contribution a man can make in teaching such a course. (DD)
Descriptors: Authors, Course Descriptions, Females, Higher Education
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