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Showing 1 to 15 of 655 results Save | Export
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Juri Kato; Jimpei Hitsuwari – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2024
Haiku is the world's shortest form of poetry, describing nature and ordinary everyday life. Previous studies and quotes from professional haiku poets suggest that haiku can foster self-transcendent emotions, such as gratitude and awe. This study compares how those who did and did not create at least one haiku in the past month experience…
Descriptors: Poetry, Psychological Patterns, Well Being, Attitudes
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Sam Illingworth; Marita Grimwood – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
This research uses poetry as a form of data to explore a sense of 'belonging' for staff working in higher education. Poetic content analysis was explored as a research method and using poetry in this way has allowed for a nuanced exploration of questions of belonging in the context of individual intersectional identities. Following an analysis of…
Descriptors: Poetry, Reflection, Sense of Community, School Personnel
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Danielle A. Morris-O'Connor – Brock Education: A Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2024
It is important for instructors to reflect on and develop their teaching practices and pedagogy. Using a poetic inquiry method, this article offers an alternative model for reflecting on academic writing and teaching practices using a found poetry cluster. My example focuses on graduate academic writing instruction. I create found poems from my…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing (Composition), Poetry, Teaching Methods
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Dennis Sumara; Claire Robson; Rebecca Luce-Kapler – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2025
This article uses excerpts from poetry, memoir and epistolary genres emerging from research that has utilized close writing practices to interpret the interplay among memory, narrative, and agency. Biographical, historical, archival, and interpretive processes are used to reveal deferred, not noticed, and/or not counted experiences of those…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Poetry, Personal Narratives, Letters (Correspondence)
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Schreuder, Mary-Celeste – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2022
In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, challenges with adolescent mental health are on the rise, making the need for spaces where teens share their emotions and experiences all the more vital. This single-case study explores the impact of writing on one young woman's (Celia) mental health during Girl Power, a gender empowerment poetry writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Sex, Mental Health, Adolescents
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Adam A. Ahlers; Traci Brimhall – Natural Sciences Education, 2023
Undergraduate students enrolled in ecology courses read peer-reviewed, scientific literature to learn how hypotheses are tested and to understand conclusions from research. This technical material can be difficult to understand for many students, thus inhibiting learning processes and reducing interest in courses or associated content. Using…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Ecology, Poetry, Scientific Research
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Kimberly Athans – English in Texas, 2024
The author discusses essential skills and strategies teachers can use to create a shared linguistic space in today's English classrooms. Topics such as increasing reading enjoyment and developing voice, agency, purpose, and authenticity in student writers are a major focus. Readers will learn how to unpack information overload in the digital age…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Literacy Education, English Teachers, Reading Attitudes
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T. Revell; W. Yeadon; G. Cahilly-Bretzin; I. Clarke; G. Manning; J. Jones; C. Mulley; R. J. Pascual; N. Bradley; D. Thomas; F. Leneghan – International Journal for Educational Integrity, 2024
Generative AI has prompted educators to reevaluate traditional teaching and assessment methods. This study examines AI's ability to write essays analysing Old English poetry; human markers assessed and attempted to distinguish them from authentic analyses of poetry by first-year undergraduate students in English at the University of Oxford. Using…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Authors, Integrity, Essays
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Whitaker, Adam – English in Texas, 2023
Schools are becoming increasingly diverse, and teachers must recognize the social, cultural, and personal experiences that students bring to the classroom and must leverage this knowledge to develop curriculum and instructional strategies to meet the needs of a growing, diverse student population. The author uses Winn and Johnson's (2011)…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Writing Instruction, Poetry, Writing (Composition)
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Anne-Marie Smith; Sharon Padt; Kirsty Jones – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2024
This is the story of a series of writing workshops with four undergraduate final year students, in a non-formal, non-graded, non-curriculum space. Students were introduced to 'writing for wellbeing' (WfW), using expressive writing strategies adapted from poetry/bibliotherapy practice. Initially intended as a research method for their dissertation…
Descriptors: Writing Workshops, Undergraduate Students, Individual Development, Student Welfare
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Willis, Alison; Manathunga, Catherine; OChin, Hope; Davidow, Shelley; Williams, Paul; Raciti, Maria M.; Gilbey, Kathryn – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2023
The "Wandiny" creative gathering of Indigenous and non-Indigenous poets, artists, Elders, and participants across Australia actively sought to foreground First Nations voices, stories, poetry, art, and ontology. This paper presents the auto-ethnographic reflections from the event organisers, demonstrating that participation in a…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
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Davies, Adam W. J. – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2023
In this article, the author forwards the importance of mad autobiographical poetic writing to challenge and disrupt epistemic injustice within pre-service early childhood education and care. They explore their own mad autobiographical poetic writing as a queer, non-binary, mad early childhood educator and pre-service early childhood education and…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Early Childhood Education, Poetry, Social Justice
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Harris, Judith – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
Grief scholars have concurred that continuing bonds with the deceased represent normal adaptive behaviour in the face of loss, and numerous researchers have stressed the therapeutic benefits of writing through trauma; however, few have interrogated the potential therapeutic effects specific to elegy writing, which offers robust opportunities to…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Coping, Writing (Composition)
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Sano-Franchini, Jennifer – Composition Studies, 2023
Asian American Rhetoric and Representation was a graduate-level course taught at Virginia Tech in 2019. The course overviewed disciplinary conversations and concerns in and around Asian American rhetorical studies over time, with a focus on the affordances of Asian American rhetorical theory for the study of rhetoric and writing more broadly.…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Graduate Study, Rhetoric, Writing (Composition)
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Sernaker, Emily – Teaching Artist Journal, 2020
This paper examines what it takes to call yourself "a poet" through the lens of inclusive programming at Brooklyn Public Library.
Descriptors: Poetry, Community Programs, Public Libraries, Writing (Composition)
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