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Chang, Hawk – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
The mysterious and unspoken secrets of life can be a source of fascination for young people. The bildungsroman quest for identity is often coupled with a protagonist's attempts to decode a range of secrets. Jamaica Kincaid's work of fiction, "Annie John" (1985), illustrates this journey. In this novel, the female protagonist's maturity…
Descriptors: Females, Self Concept, Novels, Fiction
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Stolz, Steven A. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
The use of narrative has been a time-honoured way of exploring complex ideas, and a valuable way to learn. An obvious example that epitomises this thesis, are the dialogues of Plato. Indeed, what gives significance to these dialogues is the way in which complex ideas are revealed through the struggles and conflicts of one or more characters. With…
Descriptors: Justice, Dialogs (Language), Story Telling, Fiction
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Dickey, Jan; Pahk, Sang-hyoun; Rost-Banik, Colleen – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
In this article we attempt to envision what utopian higher education could be given the realities that currently shape students' experiences. Postsecondary education is fraught with admissions that favor those with social, cultural, and economic capital; with course enrollment, class size, and instructor accessibility governed by bureaucratic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Futures (of Society), Fiction, Democracy
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Gupta, Sukanya – Intercultural Education, 2022
This article is a reflection of the author's experiences teaching a course titled 'Women In Islam' [WIS] in an English Department at a medium, public, Masters granting, Liberal Arts university in the Midwestern United States. This paper argues for the importance of teaching WIS through a multi-genre, interdisciplinary, and global approach. The…
Descriptors: Islam, Females, Higher Education, Course Descriptions
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Wellard, Ian – Sport, Education and Society, 2014
This paper provides a response to questions which emerged when reading Gilbourne et al's paper, questions it is suggested which compel us to go back to the very heart of what critical social science is (or can be) about. Central to this debate is the extent to which a perceived starting point in any investigation has implications upon the…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Personal Narratives, Fiction, Social Science Research
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Brown, Angela – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2014
It has been created within the larger realm culture, in that "Black methodology differs from most colonial differences by members of a minority community who reside within a nation of cultural biases."
Descriptors: African American Literature, Poetry, Fiction, Authors
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Graf, Steve – Journal of Precision Teaching and Celeration, 2011
In this article, the author talks about Lone Ranger and describes ways of monitoring, charting, and modeling the Lone Ranger and Tonto. He shares how he incorporated principles of the Lone Ranger character into his professional development. I also describes how he was also able to promote Standard Celeration Charting by using examples from Lone…
Descriptors: Role Models, Fiction, Professional Development, Evaluation
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Martusewicz, Rebecca – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2014
In this paper I argue that education must be defined by our willingness to experience compassion in the face of others' suffering and thus by an ethical imperative, and seek to expose psycho-social processes of shame as dark matters that inferiorize and subjugate those expressing such compassion for the more-than-human world. Beginning with…
Descriptors: Fiction, Racial Bias, Social Influences, Social Responsibility
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Alsup, Janet – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2013
The recently released Common Core State Standards increase classroom emphasis on informational texts in high school and recommend a three-part measurement for text complexity when selecting texts for classroom use. In this commentary I argue that fictional narratives can not only meet these stated criteria for complex texts and result in critical…
Descriptors: State Standards, Criteria, Reader Text Relationship, Difficulty Level
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Boyle-Taylor, Marilyn – College Quarterly, 2011
Douglas Coupland, a prolific author/artist/lecturer and now prognosticator, is in the forefront of the arts movement in both Canada and the US. His works, starting with his breakout novel "Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture," have consistently worked as a bellwether of current perspectives and values, both noting our cultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Novels, Story Telling, Literary Devices
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Moss, Barbara, Ed. – Voices from the Middle, 2013
In this column, the author reviews books and other resources that address issues related to teaching tolerance for those of other religions, races, gender orientations, and cultures. It reviews titles related to Jewish oppression, including Doreen Rappaport's (2012) "Beyond Courage, the Untold Story of Jewish Resistance during the…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Jews, Foreign Countries, Multicultural Education
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Pantaleo, Sylvia – Children's Literature in Education, 2010
Narrative embedding is a common narrative structural device. Genette (1980, 1988) distinguished among various diegetic levels to explain the discrete narrative levels in embedded narratives and he defined metalepsis as the deliberate disturbing or breaking of narrative boundaries. Metalepsis, described by Malina (2002) as a mutinous narrative…
Descriptors: Narration, Fiction, Picture Books, Postmodernism
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Fitzhugh, Will – Academic Questions, 2011
As concerns mount over the costs and benefits of higher education, it may be worthwhile to glance at the benefits of high school education at present as well. Of course, high school costs, while high, are borne by the taxpayers in general, but it is reasonable to hope that there are sufficient benefits for such an outlay. One of the most…
Descriptors: Reading Assignments, High Schools, Textbooks, Nonfiction
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Barnes, Jim – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author recounts how he has become a writer and shares his experience in discovering who he is and what he does. The author didn't know who he was really until Ken Lincoln told him many moons ago in one of the seminal books of criticism of time. "Native American Renaissance" (1985) did much to pave the road that had been little…
Descriptors: American Indians, Authors, Literary Genres, Personal Narratives
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Upadhyay, Samrat; Schilb, John – College English, 2012
This article presents an interview with the noted Nepali American fiction writer Samrat Upadhyay. Samrat Upadhyay's fiction is mostly about his native country of Nepal, but he writes mainly for an Anglo-American audience. In the interview, Upadhyay not only discusses his own work, but he also examines samples of prose by other Asian or Asian…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Audiences, Foreign Countries, Asian Americans
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