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Safron, Carrie; Landi, Dillon – Sport, Education and Society, 2022
This paper draws on two separate research projects, one with Black and Latinx youth in the United States and another with LGBTQ+ youth in New Zealand, to explore the affective experiences of young people with the FitnessGram® assessment. We specifically use affect theory through poetic inquiry to entangle interview data from young participants…
Descriptors: African American Students, Hispanic American Students, Foreign Countries, LGBTQ People
Valladares, Maya – Journal of Museum Education, 2017
This article explores an education project in which artist Fred Wilson, poets from Lincoln Center's Poet-Linc program, and the Met Museum Education Department collaborated to produce a teen-led spoken-word poetry performance in the Met's galleries. Wilson drew from his own knowledge of the collection to facilitate a group dialogue about objects…
Descriptors: Artists, Museums, Nonschool Educational Programs, Poetry
Leporati, Matthew – CEA Forum, 2018
William Blake's poetry seeks to inspire readers to participate in the construction of an intellectual community that he calls "Jerusalem." This process remains ever incomplete and is, in a sense, incompletable, for the work of producing such a community involves "continually building & continually decaying"…
Descriptors: Poetry, Writing Instruction, College Faculty, Thinking Skills
Watson, Wanda; Devereaux, Cathryn A. – Urban Education, 2022
This article examines how three Black women educators disrupt oppressive norms in urban schooling through their applications of critical race womanist pedagogy (CRWP). Using narrative excerpts formed from semi-structured interviews exploring how they contend with sociopolitical injustices through their pedagogical choices and actions, CRWP…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Urban Education, Student Centered Learning
Winn, Maisha T. – Urban Education, 2019
In this article, the author uses a "humanizing research" framework to analyze longitudinal data collected over the course of 10 years during a multi-sited ethnography of youth poets in a poetry collective called Power Writing. Using qualitative interviews to understand the role that literacy continues to play in the lives of Power…
Descriptors: Poetry, Youth Programs, Urban Areas, Writing (Composition)
Seltzer, Kate – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2020
As part of an ethnographic study of a secondary English Language Arts classroom, one teacher took a critical translingual approach to curriculum and instruction, encouraging students to engage in translanguaging and to explore the intersections of language with power and identity. The larger study's central question was, what does participation in…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Language Arts, Poetry, Code Switching (Language)
Sonu, Debbie; Aguilar, Luis Patricio – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2017
Before the words are spoken, a bright light shines from the eyes of second grade teacher Mr. Aguilar. "I do not teach poetry," he says, "poetic language is everywhere. It is a kind of movement, a wind." While poetry is typically characterized by its flexible form and accessibility, for Mr. Aguilar, now in his tenth year of…
Descriptors: Poetry, Grade 2, Elementary School Students, Teaching Methods
Adewumi, Samuel Idowu; Kayode, Moses Bolawale – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2014
Black American Literature is a microcosm of the history of the black people's presence on the American continent as it is known today. The literature of the Black Americans cannot be fully separated from the experience of Slavery and Racism which characterized their lives as a community of people whose social, economic and political privileges are…
Descriptors: African American Literature, Poetry, African American History, Slavery
Tolan, Jim – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2010
The world of contemporary poetry can be extremely polarised, most obviously between the so-called page poets, who are often academically trained in creative writing programmes, and the so-called stage poets, who are performers as well as poets and, even if they were so inclined, would be hard pressed to find a college or university where they…
Descriptors: Poetry, Ethnicity, Social Status, Community Colleges
Artful Reading, Spontaneous Design: Integrating Philosophy, English, and Art in a Creativity Cluster
Albrecht, Vera; Comins, Barbara – Learning Communities: Research & Practice, 2014
This article informs about a multidisciplinary learning community targeting first year students from diverse cultural backgrounds at an urban community college. The combination of English, art, and philosophy of art in a "Creativity Cluster" offers an excellent opportunity for great teaching and learning experiences. Yet, how can faculty…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Two Year College Students, College Freshmen, Cultural Background

Alschuler, Mari – Journal of Poetry Therapy, 1995
Discusses a poetry therapy group held at a supportive single room occupancy residence (SRO) in East Harlem, New York City. Describes the SRO, the group members, techniques, and work produced by members. Discusses issues of social integration, separation, and childhood as special difficulties of psychiatrically impaired people. Argues that poetry…
Descriptors: Group Activities, Mental Disorders, Poetry, Social Problems

Harwayne, Shelley – Language Arts, 2002
Presents a collection of letters, poems, and artwork by children in response to the tragedy of September 11, 2001. Tells how students throughout the United States picked up their pens, pencils, crayons, markers, and paintbrushes, and attempted to make sense of this most incomprehensible act. (SG)
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Elementary Education, Emotional Response, Poetry
Pflaum, Jeffrey, Comp. – 1997
This paper presents 26 selections of students' prose and poetry from the anthology "There's a Soul Arising in My Mind" and as presented on a New York City radio show. The prose selections come from a form of journal writing called "contemplation writing," a pre-poetry program that uses music, writing, and discussion to guide…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Journal Writing, Poetry, Prose
New York City Public Schools, Brooklyn, NY. – 1967
THE COMPOSITIONS IN THIS COLLECTION WERE WRITTEN BY STUDENTS IN A SECOND-GRADE CLASS IN A PUBLIC SCHOOL IN A DISADVANTAGED AREA IN NEW YORK CITY. THE CHILDREN SET THE TYPE, MADE THE LINOLEUM BLOCK ILLUSTRATIONS, PRINTED THE PAGES, AND BOUND THE BOOKLET. THE COLLECTION CONTAINS POEMS, COMPOSITIONS, AND LETTERS ON THE THEMES OF "HAPPY…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Disadvantaged Schools, Elementary School Students, Grade 2

Flores, Juan – Journal of Ethnic Studies, 1985
Discusses the cultural identity and experiences of Puerto Ricans residing in New York City. Explores, through excerpts of poetry by "Nuyoricans," the themes of assimilation, attachment to the island of Puerto Rico, relations with Black and White New Yorkers, and bilingualism. (GC)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cultural Images, Ethnic Relations, Ethnicity
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