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Morrissey, Muriel Earhart – The English Leaflet, 1967
In the absence of guidelines for "a purely literary study" of the Bible at the secondary school level, this discussion is offered as one English teacher's approach to teaching the Old Testament. Among the unit's major purposes are to increase students' appreciation of the literary and ethical values of the Bible and to acquaint them with material…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Cultural Background, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Edelman, Murray Jacob – 1974
Linguistic cues evoke prestructured beliefs in people's minds regarding the nature and causes of public problems. Political language can shape people's opinions and thereby shape events. There appear to be two beliefs or myths that people use to explain social problems: the first sees the sufferer as responsible for his own plight in a basically…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Processes, Figurative Language, Language Patterns
Margulis, Joel B. – 1975
Historical incidents, photographs of sheet music, cartoons, and advertisements are employed to study language in this textbook. The text, suggestions, and quoted material in the book are to be used not only for the study of language but also as sources for writing. It is recommended that journal entries, more fresh and spontaneous than formal…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Communication (Thought Transfer), Dialects, Expressive Language
Rath, Tom; Clifton, Donald O. – Gallup Press, 2005
A simple metaphor about a dipper and a bucket and decades of research to show how even the briefest interactions affect relationships, productivity, health, and longevity, is used in this book. In the short time since the book's release, educators and administrators have already discovered that creating a positive environment can have a powerful…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, School Culture, Staff Development, Interpersonal Relationship
Wilson, Kirsty; Ainley, Janet; Bills, Liz – International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2005
We report on one aspect of a longitudinal study which seeks insight into the ways in which spreadsheet experience and teachers' pedagogic strategies shape pupils' construction of meaning for algebra. Using data from stimulated recall interviews we analyse the evolution of meaning for variable through the mediation of the variable cell and the…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Academic Achievement, Spreadsheets, Longitudinal Studies

Pickert, Sarah M. – Journal of Psychology, 1981
This study had two purposes: (1) to determine when children distinguish ambiguous from precise messages and when they can resolve ambiguity through additional questioning, and (2) to identify whether implicit messages were more difficult to identify than explicit ones. All children found ambiguous messages significantly more difficult to…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Development

Parks, John G. – College Teaching, 1996
Literature is examined for its metaphors for teaching and teachers, including the teacher as custodian and steward of knowledge, as sower of knowledge, and as "trickster," a picaresque, mythical figure who offers solutions, often inadvertently. The roles of kindness and cruelty in the learning/teaching process are also considered. (MSE)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Faculty, College Instruction, Educational Change

Gottlieb, Esther E.; La Belle, Thomas J. – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1990
Integrates the results of a formalist discourse analysis of Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" with field observations of his programs in Latin America. Identifies some features of Freire's discursive construction of knowledge. Documents the practice of Freire's rehumanizing discourse within consciousness-raising programs in both…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Developing Nations, Discourse Analysis, Educational Change

Gallo, Ernest – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 1994
The use of cellular automata to analyze several pre-Socratic hypotheses about the evolution of the physical world is discussed. These hypotheses combine characteristics of both rigorous and metaphoric language. Since the computer demands explicit instructions for each step in the evolution of the automaton, such models can reveal conceptual…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Science Education, Computer Software, Discourse Analysis
Zembylas, Michalinos – Science Education, 2004
An understanding of the importance of metaphors and beliefs in the development of teachers' practical knowledge has already been explored in science education research. However, the significance of "emotion metaphors" and the consequences of "emotional labor" as part of being a science teacher have been little addressed. This study describes the…
Descriptors: Rewards, Figurative Language, Teacher Attitudes, Science Education
Groth, Randall E.; Bergner, Jennifer A. – Statistics Education Research Journal, 2005
The study describes the nature of pre-service teachers' idiosyncratic metaphors for the concept of statistical sample. These metaphors were investigated because of their potential to provide insight about individuals' content knowledge and how that content knowledge is enacted during teaching. Personal metaphors were elicited from 54 pre-service…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Elementary School Teachers, Teaching Methods, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
Hamilton, Greg, Ed. – English Journal, 2003
Being a first-year teacher in New York City is not easy. The author received much of the same preparation and advice that he and his colleagues give their students. But even the best education courses and a positive student teaching experience do not seem to be enough to take the edge off of a year he remembers barely surviving. The author…
Descriptors: Student Teaching, Figurative Language, English Teachers, Teaching Experience
Kuo, Rita; Lien, Wei-Peng; Chang, Maiga; Heh, Jia-Sheng – Educational Technology & Society, 2004
This paper proposes a methodology to calculate both the difficulty of the basic problems and the difficulty of solving a problem. The method to calculate the difficulty of problem is according to the process of constructing a problem, including Concept Selection, Unknown Designation, and Proposition Construction. Some necessary measures observed…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Identification, Planning, Difficulty Level
Hui, Leng – Issues in Educational Research, 2005
Education in China, in its various forms and levels, is widely conceptualised as integrating the cultivation of "human souls" with the provision of students with knowledge. The English word "education" is "jiao yu" in Chinese, which means "teaching [and] cultivating". The analogy "shi nian shu mu, bai…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Intercultural Communication, Figurative Language, Teacher Role
Jones, Robyn L.; Wallace, Mike – Sport, Education and Society, 2005
The purposes of this paper are twofold. First, we argue that the rationalistic assumptions on which dominant conceptions of the coaching process rest are rather unrealistic. We therefore hold that they have relatively limited potential either for a theoretical understanding of coaching or for guiding practitioners. Second, we tentatively offer the…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Educational Practices, Change Strategies, Educational Change