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Showing 1 to 15 of 892 results Save | Export
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Dahlbeck, Johan – Ethics and Education, 2022
To what extent should teachers promote the view from nowhere as an ideal to strive for in education? To address this question, I will use Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger as an example, illustrating the stakes involved when the view from nowhere is taken to be an attainable educational ideal. I will begin this essay by offering a description…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Literature, Educational Philosophy, Ethics
Hadjioannou, Xenia; Cappiello, Mary Ann; Bandré, Patricia; Burgess, Matthew; Crawford, Patricia; Dávila, Denise; Gardner, Roberta Price; Johnston, Kari; Lowery, Ruth; Stewart, Melissa – National Council of Teachers of English, 2023
Contemporary nonfiction for young people plays a crucial role in the reading and writing lives of K-12 students. It is a rich and compelling genre that supports students' development as critically, visually, and informationally literate 21st century thinkers and creators. Unlike many textbooks and materials written for online or print-based school…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Nonfiction, Literature, Teaching Methods
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Campbell, Kimberly Hill – Democracy & Education, 2019
This article explores why we need to be intentional about the literature we explore in our English language arts classrooms. It explores the question of what literature should be considered and strategies for using democratic practices in support of literature circles. It also reinforces the importance of collaborative practitioner research to…
Descriptors: Empathy, Imagination, Literature, Educational Practices
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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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Essa, Alfred – Journal of Learning Analytics, 2019
In "Funes the Memorius," Jorge Luis Borges tells the tale of an Argentinian man who falls off a horse, becomes paralyzed, and acquires the strange gift of infinite memory (Borges, 1993). Funes remembers everything, which is to say he forgets nothing. The author will use Borges's story as the backdrop for his response to Professor…
Descriptors: Literature, Memory, College Faculty, Criticism
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James, David L. – Community College Enterprise, 2018
A recent article in "The Weekly Standard," "Kenyon College Cancels Play About Immigration; Starts 'Whiteness Group,'" describes a current call for censorship. Wendy MacLeod's play, "The Good Samaritan," is about an immigrant family in the U.S. surviving "without pay and living in dire conditions," according…
Descriptors: Censorship, Literature, Theater Arts, Drama
National Council of Teachers of English, 2015
Now is the time for National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) to advocate for increased publication of culturally diverse literature that reflects human, cultural, linguistic, and family diversity. This proposed resolution emphasizes the publication and production of literature to intentionally reflect human diversity. The NCTE resolved to:…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature, Young Adults, Literature
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Alarcón, Wanda – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2020
This essay examines the practice of building a syllabus that centers butch-femme literatures as a pedagogy of gathering and recuperation. Prompted by the loss of an early syllabus on lesbian histories, I examine the genre of the syllabus and contend that "butch-femme" is not the same as "queer" or "LGBTQ." Through…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Hispanic Americans, Females, Self Disclosure (Individuals)
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Miller, Karl – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2014
In this reflective piece, Karl Miller looks down the lens at an ancient world, once his own. He does so with the help of a memoir, "Rebecca's Vest," which he published much later, in the mid-1990s: a mid-term report in which he describes how he became a reader and about what he read. With the end of the term approaching, he offers a…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Literature, Authors, Reading
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Diglin, Greg – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2014
This article offers an academic critique of new media culture, as viewed comparatively with George Orwell's "1984." The author makes the argument that a number of plot elements of "1984" are reflected within contemporary Western societies. The assertion is made that these parallels have developed as a consequence of new…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Mass Media Effects, Social Influences, Political Issues
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VanPatten, Bill – Hispania, 2015
Most collegiate departments where one can find Spanish, French, German, and other non-English disciplines are referred to as "language departments," either formally or informally. Such designations are interesting as they suggest to the outsider (i.e., non-language person) that these departments consist of experts in language. In this…
Descriptors: Departments, College Second Language Programs, Specialists, College Faculty
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Levisohn, Jon A. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2014
Michael Rosenak uses the twin metaphors of "language" and "literature," borrowed from Oakeshott and Peters, to argue that the goal of education is initiation into a language. This goal transcends the study of literature in that language. It includes, as well, the development of the capacity both to critique literature and to…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Literature, Educational Objectives, Language Acquisition
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Denzin, Jen – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2013
Promoting student power in the choice of high school literature can prove uncomfortable, unruly, and contentious. Without enough preparation, research, and reading, teachers may find language, content, and themes to be more mature than initially anticipated. This essay explores one teacher's reflection of two instances when choice reading…
Descriptors: High School Students, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Reading Material Selection, Student Attitudes
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Steinnes, Jenny – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This paper is an attempt to stage some questions concerning methodology and education, inspired by Ophelia in Shakespeare's "Hamlet" and by Jacques Derrida's poetic philosophical oeuvres. What are at stake are the long traditions of preferences of sanity over madness, friend over enemy, male over female and of clean, unambiguous univocal language…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Literature, Language Usage, Teaching Methods
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Jacobs, Struan – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2011
C. P. Snow's "The Two Cultures" controversially contrasted science and literature, suggesting that neither scientists nor literary intellectuals have much in common with, and seldom bother speaking to, the other. Responding to Snow, Michael Polanyi argued that specialization has made modern culture, not twofold but manifold. In his major work,…
Descriptors: Sciences, Literature, Culture, Intellectual Disciplines
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