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Larkin Weyand; Jon Balzotti; Derek L. Hansen – English Journal, 2019
Educational simulations provide students authentic contexts. These authentic contexts require situated and complex real-world arguments. Such writing scenarios help students recognize why there are often multiple interpretations of evidence, who their audience is, what they want, and what kind of genre is needed. Playable Case Studies help…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Persuasive Discourse, Writing Instruction
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Villanueva, Victor Jr. – English Journal, 1987
Questions Richard Rodriguez' position that linguistic assimilation for minorities is like alchemy, creating something new and greater than what was. Concludes that it is better for teachers to teach students to use the conventions of standard discourse without accepting the ideology of those for whom the standard dialect is the language of…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences, Individual Differences
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Coulter, Shannon E.; Groenke, Susan L. – English Journal, 2008
Shannon E. Coulter and Susan L. Groenke recognize that student differences in interests, learning styles, and readiness for certain knowledge necessitate individualized processes for effectively learning vocabulary. They offer strategies and word games that help students make meaningful connections and improve comprehension. They also give advice…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Individualized Instruction, Literature, Vocabulary
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Younker, Keith – English Journal, 2003
Outlines the 15 major points the author has learned while being involved in a three year commitment to the National Council of Teachers of English's Reading Initiative. Concludes that reading/writing across the curriculum is a viable incentive to student learning when there is a trained faculty willing to recognize individual differences, both in…
Descriptors: High Schools, Individual Differences, Instructional Improvement, Professional Development
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Reid, Virginia – English Journal, 1973
The school experience should increase a child's sense of humanity and of the potentialities for depth and range in human relations. (MM)
Descriptors: Educational Experience, Elementary Education, Human Relations, Humanization
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Tucker, Bill – English Journal, 1995
Discusses the theory of multiple intelligences and what it tells English teachers about students' writing processes. Discusses results of a study of the writing processes of 10 high school juniors whose cognitive profile featured visual-spatial intelligence and subordinated linguistic aspects. Discusses the importance of matching instructional…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Individual Differences, Multiple Intelligences, Secondary Education
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Gardner, Howard – English Journal, 1995
Discusses applications of the theory of multiple intelligences in the field of education. Distinguishes between "surface" and "deep" applications of the theory. Responds to earlier articles in this journal about the theory of multiple intelligences. (RS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles, Elementary Secondary Education
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Smagorinsky, Peter – English Journal, 1995
Reviews the theory of multiple intelligences. Offers suggestions for high-school English instruction. Presents a case study of two female students in an alternative school who choreographed a dance in response to a short story. (RS)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Style, Dance, English Instruction
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Nadig, Henry D. – English Journal, 1974
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Discovery Learning, English Instruction, Humanization
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Gage, Richard – English Journal, 1995
Suggests that accommodating students' learning styles will bring English classrooms alive. Discusses various learning styles. Describes five strategies for kinesthetic learners. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Style, English Instruction, Individual Differences
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Simeone, Wendy F. – English Journal, 1995
Describes several activities for the kinesthetic learner that were developed for a high-school World Literature curriculum. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Style, English Instruction, High Schools
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Evans, Cynthia – English Journal, 1995
Discusses the consequences of tracking students, how one English teacher moved to heterogeneous grouping, and multiple intelligences and tracking. Asks why educators continue to track students when Howard Gardner has shown that there are at least seven distinct ways that humans come to know and learn. (RS)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Cognitive Style, Heterogeneous Grouping, Individual Differences
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James, Michael A. – English Journal, 1981
Middle school and junior high school students are caught "in between" in terms of their emotional, physical, psychological, and educational development. Paradoxically, with so many common problems, these students need to be treated as special and unique--as individuals. (RL)
Descriptors: Individual Development, Individual Differences, Junior High School Students, Junior High Schools
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McClaskey, Janet – English Journal, 1995
Gives practical examples of multiple intelligences in the English classroom. Discusses Howard Gardner's "radicalism,""teaching" intelligence, teaching literature and multiple intelligences, and how a student developed strength in his own intelligences through poetry. (RS)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style, English Instruction, Individual Differences