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Fitz Gale, Dana – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This pretest/posttest nonequivalent groups study explored the relationship between classroom-based creative writing instruction and the figurative language abilities of fourth grade students. Figurative language is widespread within the oral and written discourse of K-12 classrooms and is an essential component of higher-level language and…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Measures (Individuals), Comparative Analysis
Olga Elizabeth Minchala Buri – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The paradigm of "Buen Vivir" (Good Living) in education turns on the educational purpose regarding the transformation of the world. This autoethnography, which draws from "transnationalism theory" (Vertovec, 2009) and "transnational academic mobility" (Kim, 2010), explores how my critical self-examination of…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Global Approach, Self Concept, Personal Narratives
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
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
Gilbert, Francis – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2021
This article examines the deeper purposes behind the teaching of creative writing. To extend an analogy created by William Blake in his poem 'The Tyger', its furnaces are examined and its 'deadly terrors' clasped. It re-interprets the different views of teaching English, as drawn up in the United Kingdom's Cox Report. It argues that these views…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Creative Writing, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
Rutherford, Marty – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2009
This paper is about a writing and literary translation program called Poetry Inside Out (PIO). Students in the PIO program study poetic form and structure, figurative language, and the fundamentals of literary translation in an extended workshop format. During a typical Poetry Inside Out workshop, participants read, discuss, translate and recite…
Descriptors: Translation, Spanish, English, Syntax
Morrow, Stephen; Hermsen, Terry – Teaching Artist Journal, 2008
In the late 1970s, poet Lewis MacAdams labeled the many writers beginning to visit schools as "wild cards in the deck of education," bringing fresh possibilities to a somewhat staid curriculum. Now, nearly thirty years later, the authors wonder if it isn't time to renew the metaphor, as everyone strive to name what happens when poets bring their…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Poetry, Student Evaluation
Pacheco, Denise L. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
In an era of reductionist approaches to teaching and assessment, this dissertation returns to the fundamental question: "What is the value of writing, particularly poetry writing, in our society today?" The poet's central task, to abstract reality through symbols, requires profound cognitive and emotional work (Vendler, 2004; Steele,…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Environment, Recognition (Achievement), Student Participation

Kulkosky, Edward – College English, 1976
Describes an "aphorism generator" used to stimulate audience participation in poetry. (DD)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Higher Education, Poetry
Schackleford, Ruby P. – Elementary English, 1972
Writing poetry by adapting the Japanese form to English is simple enough so that children can enjoy doing it. (Author/MF)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Haiku, Imagery

Holmes, Stewart W. – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1996
Suggests that composing "haiku" requires a discipline in a person's thinking and emoting patterns similar to that of a general semantics system for training people to make sense. Describes how such haiku are written and gives some guidelines to help individuals create their own. (PA)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Haiku, Literary Genres
Corn, Alfred – 1997
This introduction to prosody--the art and science of metrical composition in poetry--teaches the reader how good poems work. The guide discusses the basic building blocks of poetry, such as rhyme, rhythm, meter, and form. Each of the 10 chapters is a progressive, step-by-step presentation with illustrative examples. The guide does not deal with…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Independent Study, Language Rhythm
Lenhart, Gary – Teachers & Writers, 1998
Discusses four poems by William Carlos Williams used to teach creative writing to college students. Uses "Portrait of a Woman in Red" and "The Last Words of My English Grandmother" because they contain speakers who are clearly not the poet, which gives undergraduate students opportunities to discuss details Williams uses to…
Descriptors: Characterization, Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Higher Education
Behn, Robin, Ed.; Twichell, Chase, Ed. – 1992
Based on the idea that poetry, like any art, is best mastered through practice, this handbook for poets combines poetry-writing exercises with personal essays by each contributing poet. Some of the poets represented in the handbook are: Maxine Kumin, Rita Dove, Roger Mitchell, Carol Muske, Sydney Lea, and J. D. McClatchy. The exercises in the…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Poetry, Writing Exercises
Stein, Debra – Today's Education, 1972
Poets assisted in the teaching of poetry in elementary and high schools in New Jersey. Development of sense perceptions, emotional reactions, metaphor, rhythm and sound were emphasized. (AF)
Descriptors: Creative Expression, Creative Writing, Figurative Language, Poetry