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Dan Valenti – Peter Lang Publishing Group, 2024
Poetry has been around for nearly five millennia, yet never has it been more puzzling. Technology, social media, and the blinding pace of contemporary life leave many students and readers in the dark. Just in time, this book comes to the rescue not just with a response to the problem of understanding and enjoying poetry, but it offers a solution.…
Descriptors: Poetry, Teaching Methods, Authors, Poets
These Roots That Bind Us: Using Writing to Process Grief and Reconstruct the Self in Chronic Illness
Bertrand, Jennifer – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
Chronic illness diagnoses frequently cause the shattering of personal assumptions about the self and the world, resulting in an experience of alienation and fragmentation of identity. Multiple studies on the effects of expressive writing have demonstrated physical, emotional, and psychological health benefits, yet little is known about how it…
Descriptors: Chronic Illness, Grief, Coping, Expressive Language
Khan, Saima – International Online Journal of Education and Teaching, 2020
Besides numerous positive transformations and unique opportunities in language pedagogy, the post-method era brought with itself several challenges for language teachers. After intensive research and empirical studies, the use of literature was welcomed in ELT classrooms. But the question arises as to what extent and in what ways does literature…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Poetry, Teaching Methods
McClocklin, Patricia A.; Lengelle, Reinekke – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2018
Writing creatively, expressively, and reflectively to aid the grieving process is founded on the idea that in order to survive and thrive after loss, personal meaning must be made of what has been suffered. The individualisation and secularisation of society has put the onus of meaning making on the individual while an abiding reservation about…
Descriptors: Grief, Poetry, Writing (Composition), Privacy
Van Buskirk, William; London, Michael; Plump, Carolyn – Journal of Management Education, 2018
Traditional management education has been widely criticized for an overemphasis on rational, analytic, arms-length approaches to the detriment of softer, more intuitive capacities. Most critics agree that today's management students are overdrilled in the routines of calculation and analysis, but underprepared for the dynamic and turbulent…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, Aesthetics
Edie, Fred P. – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2016
Christian Catechumens of antiquity participated bodily in a variety of deeply evocative ritual symbolic practices. At the Syrian church where Ephrem served as a deacon, they would also have spoken or sung poetic verse juxtaposing images from the biblical story to symbols and practices of the baptismal rites of initiation. Although Ephrem's aim was…
Descriptors: Imagination, Poetry, Christianity, Biblical Literature
Mali, Yustinus Calvin Gai – Teaching English with Technology, 2021
This paper introduces "Postermywall" and presents three lesson plans that integrate the technology based on the relevant literature and the International Society for Technology in Education standards to support English language learning and practice students' communication and creativity. Specifically designed for an English as a Foreign…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Lesson Plans, English (Second Language)
Murphy, Marilyn – Center on Innovations in Learning, Temple University, 2018
This topic brief is one in a series on personalized learning prepared for Conversations with Innovators, 2018. Student voice is a critical element in implementing student-driven personalized learning. Yet it is one that is often marginalized or ignored. Student-driven personalization is a critical concept in the pursuit of a personalized learning…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Decision Making, Student Role
Tomlinson, Carol Ann – Gifted Child Today, 2018
Complex Instruction is a multifaceted instructional model designed to provide highly challenging learning opportunities for students in heterogeneous classrooms. The model provides a rationale for and philosophy of creating equity of access to excellent curriculum and instruction for a broad range of learners, guidance for preparing students for…
Descriptors: Gifted, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Equal Education
Ye, Chao; Wu, Jinye – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2018
This paper introduces a new teaching method, poetry, into the geography classroom, accompanied by an out-of-class discussion on a blog, and finds that its effects are rather different from those of traditional teaching methods, as it allows new perspectives on instructional content related to migrant workers' lives and identities in China. The…
Descriptors: Poetry, Teaching Methods, Migrant Workers, Self Concept
Daiya, Krishna – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2014
Percy Bysshe Shelley was a poet whose name itself is a Metaphor for exquisite, rhythmic poetry laden with images of Nature as well as Man. He possesses the magical power of transporting the reader into an alternative world with the unique use of metaphors and imagery. His personal sadness was translated into sweet songs that are echoed in the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Art, English Literature, Nineteenth Century Literature
Prendergast, Monica – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2012
Embracing "metaphor as method" (Prendergast, 2005; see also Prendergast, 2006a, 2006b, 2008a), which I suggest is a key characteristic of thinking poetically and doing poetic inquiry, is the process conveyed in this suite of found poems. The investigation began with a cross-disciplinary scholarly database search on the term "education as art" that…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Poetry, Art, Education
de Champourcin, Ernestina – Hispania, 2014
After thirty-three years of exile in Mexico, Ernestina de Champourcin returned to Madrid in 1972, in time to witness the profound political changes in Spain prompted by the death of Franco and by the cultural revolution originating in the capital known as the "movida madrileña." Between 1979 and 1980, she responded to the explosion of…
Descriptors: Social Change, Foreign Countries, Political Power, Mass Media
Frankham, Jo; Smears, Elizabeth – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2012
This paper argues for the importance of ethnography in the conduct of educational research and the ways in which it can threaten, in a good sense, the certainties and dominance of performativity. The paper uses the poetry of Emily Dickinson to signal the importance of indirection in the conduct of ethnographic work and, more specifically, the ways…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Ethnography, Accountability, Research Methodology
Van Buskirk, William; London, Michael – Journal of Management Education, 2012
In this article, the authors argue that poetry provides a valuable if overlooked resource to the organizational behavior professor. The authors describe a workshop designed to evoke students' innate poetic metaphors to enable a more lively engagement with course material. Because many of students' personal, private, and emotionally charged…
Descriptors: Poetry, Workshops, Figurative Language, Student Attitudes