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Alexa R. Kulinski – Art Education, 2023
Within the past 2 decades, comics and graphic novels have garnered attention for their educative possibilities. However, scholars recognize that comics and graphic novels have yet to reach their fullest potential within educational settings, highlighting the need to explore further pedagogical strategies for integrating and critically engaging…
Descriptors: Novels, Books, High School Students, Cartoons
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Nancy Taber – Brock Education: A Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2024
Drawing from the literature and the historical fiction-based feminist antimilitarist research I conducted in writing my debut novel, "A Sea of Spectres." This article discusses the what and why of fiction-based research. I detail how to: (a) move from inspiration to fiction-based research; (b) frame the research; (c) develop research…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Creative Writing, Fiction, Novels
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Angela Hostetler – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2025
In this paper, I explore the transitional spaces of teaching and writing by restorying an anomalous event in my teaching of Canadian literature in a grade seven classroom and my efforts to decolonise that teaching. Thinking with Elizabeth Ellsworth's concept of pedagogy as it relates to knowledge in the making and the learning self, I take…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literature, Language Arts, Grade 7
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Stephanie D. Sears – Teaching Sociology, 2024
This teaching note reviews a four-part discussion post assignment that asks Black-identified students enrolled in a class connected to a Black living-learning community to make sociological and personal connections to concepts related to race, anti-Blackness, and institutional racism in Yaa Gyasi's novel "Homegoing." Reflecting on their…
Descriptors: African American Students, Novels, Racism, Intersectionality
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Saba Khan Vlach – English Journal, 2024
The five young adult "Honor List" books of 2023 are all visual texts. These award-winning books offer tremendous stories in both pictures and words in the genres of realistic fiction, memoir, and historical nonfiction.
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Books, Awards, Illustrations
Samantha Archibald Mora; Amy Bingham – Knowledge Quest, 2023
The Wood River Middle School (WRMS) serves approximately 600 students a year. The school is diverse, with roughly half Latinx students and a large English language learner population. The library collection boasts almost 16,000 books. The most popular section? If you combine the manga and graphic novel sections, they win the top prize, with 38% of…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, School Libraries, Cartoons, Novels
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Lynch, Brian – Schools: Studies in Education, 2023
This article describes the author's journey into the world of teaching. The author begins with his transition into academia and his goal to become an antiracist educator. He reflects on teaching (and observation) moments in the classroom and moves to descriptions and insights of specific lessons teaching Eve Ewing's "1919" poetry…
Descriptors: Racism, Teacher Role, Social Justice, Poetry
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Adrian M. Downey – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
This paper revisits the well-known and often-taught novel "The Chrysalids" toward a reconsideration of the novel's place within curriculum and the pedagogies it may offer. Framed as a mourning ceremony, a way of revisioning what the novel could mean in the present by saying goodbye to what it has meant in the past, the paper progresses…
Descriptors: Novels, Literature Appreciation, Grief, Affective Behavior
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Jillian Rudes – Knowledge Quest, 2022
If you are ready to add a Manga collection to your school library, Rudes offers everything you need to know to get started. Understanding Manga, how this genre connects to reading and literacy, as well as programming, and titles by age group are offered to get you started.
Descriptors: School Libraries, Librarians, Library Services, Library Materials
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Danielle L. DeFauw – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
Personally and professionally, the author shares experiences with school safety and how the English Language Arts (ELA) classroom may utilize middle grade novels to address gun violence with adolescents. Highlighting five middle grade novels that address school shootings--Katherine Erskine's (2011) "Mockingbird," Emily Barth Isler's…
Descriptors: School Violence, Weapons, Middle School Students, Novels
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Sylvia Pantaleo – Literacy, 2024
Student engagement in the process of transduction concomitantly affords them with opportunities to develop and express their critical and creative thinking competences. Reconfiguring or remaking knowledge or meaning in modes other than those of the original sources of information requires affective, imaginative and cognitive activity by…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills
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Lee, S. P. – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
This article offers a reading of Kate Darbishire's novel Speechless Stickhouse Publishing, London, 2018), following Harriet, a girl with cerebral palsy. It examines her irritation, born of her resentful awareness of her disability, as well as how she grapples with her life as an ordinary schoolgirl. The novel presents Harriet as an everyday child,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Novels, Cerebral Palsy, Disabilities
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Medina, Yvonne – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
Theodore Taylor's "The Cay" received a great deal of criticism upon its publication in 1969 for its racism, yet it has remained in American public school curricula for over fifty years. Defenders of the novel have argued that it advocates for color-blindness, a position that has helped entrench it in schools. Meanwhile, few critics have…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Novels, Racism, Disabilities
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Kristen Harmon – Sign Language Studies, 2023
The idea of a sign language town, or a Deaf utopia, where Deaf and signing people can come together to live in a geographical or figurative homeland has long persisted in US Deaf life, letters, and literature. In the wake of the Milan Congress of 1880, Alexander Graham Bell's alarming rhetoric concerning "a deaf mute variety of the human…
Descriptors: Deafness, History, Sign Language, Literature
Ryan Brown – Geography Teacher, 2024
In this student analysis, Ryan Brown examines two critical themes from the global migration literature found throughout Leila Abdelrazaq's graphic novel "Baddawi," including the "geographical lens" and "citizenship and belonging." The author intertwines these themes throughout her story by depicting her father Ahmad's…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Novels, Cartoons, Refugees
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