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Caroline T. Clark; Suzanne G. Lewis; Alyssa Chrisman – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
Drawing on feminist and critical theories of politics and emotions, this paper attends to the hegemony of Social Emotional Learning (SEL) for multiply-marginalized students and explores what exemplary Young Adult (YA) novels can teach scholars, educators, and students about the productive use of anger in the face of injustice. Two acclaimed young…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Novels, Social Emotional Learning, Racial Factors
Jennifer Lindsay – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2024
The underrepresentation of women and girls in children's picture books and the use of gender stereotypes persists, as seen in a sample of 335 books published between 2010 and 2020. Previous research showed a significant lack of female representation in children's picture books and stereotyped presentation. A pilot study was conducted to establish…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Disproportionate Representation, Females, Content Analysis
da Silva, Marta Regina Paulo – Policy Futures in Education, 2018
The article discusses the production of children's cultures based on the experiences of 3-5-year-old children with the language of comic books, focusing on gender relations. It is part of a doctoral research project conducted at FE / UNICAMP and investigates a case study in a municipal pre-school in the Greater ABC region in São Paulo, Brazil. It…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Issues, Interpersonal Relationship, Cartoons
Reading Gender: A Feminist, Queer Approach to Children's Literature and Children's Discursive Agency
Earles, Jennifer – Gender and Education, 2017
Children's literature helps young people make sense of gender. However, while books offer children the imaginative ability to create their own worlds, normative gender can manifest in characters and stories. The study described in this article draws upon "disruptive" storytimes with 114 preschool children, interviews with 20 parents and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Gender Issues, Preschool Children, Interviews
Barry Gilmore – English Journal, 2017
The Bechdel test, the author's student Marley explained, is named for the US graphic novelist and cartoonist Alison Bechdel. To pass the test, a work of fiction must contain at least one scene in which two or more women (preferably named characters) discuss something other than a male. Students who read from the canon of works regularly encounter…
Descriptors: High School Teachers, Language Arts, Reading Teachers, Adolescent Literature
Patterson, Thomas H.; Crumpler, Thomas P. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2009
As a teacher with more than 30 years experience at the middle school, secondary, and college level, primarily in English studies, Patterson (the first author) decided a few years ago to reexamine his practices and instructional methods. He wondered what would be the effects on him and his students when he would begin to utilize ideas emanating…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Models, Reader Response, Intention
Sciurba, Katie – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The discourse on multicultural literature has focused on providing children of color opportunities to "see themselves" in the texts they read. Since the 1920s, advocates like W.E.B. DuBois have stressed that "visibility" in literature fosters positive psychological development among underrepresented groups of children, in…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Civil Rights, Males, Minority Group Students
Brooks, Wanda; Browne, Susan; Hampton, Gregory – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
This article describes a study of both textual and reader response analyses of "The Skin I'm In" by Sharon Flake. Because gender and race constitute central themes in the narrative, Black feminist thought and feminism undergirded the textual critique. Critics' reviews, scholarly articles, and published author interviews also supported the textual…
Descriptors: African American Students, Middle School Students, Reader Response, Feminism
Dunlop, Rishma – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2006
"Following the Curve of the Sentence: Notes From a Reader's Diary" is comprised of excerpts from the author's Reader's Diary, using experimental writing practices that can be modeled and used by English teachers in classrooms. The Reader's Diary is a subgenre of autobiography, memoir and poetic prose essay, a flexible, hybrid form of inquiry. The…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Autobiographies, Gender Issues, Sentences

Garner, Stanton B., Jr. – Theatre Topics, 2000
Outlines the author's experience of teaching David Mamet's play "Oleanna" in an introductory college drama class. Proposes that "Oleanna" in the classroom becomes a powerfully reflexive text, framing the student-teacher relationship. Concludes this work confronts teachers and students with the relationships of power and…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Drama, Gender Issues, Higher Education
Alvermann, Donna; And Others – 1996
Designed to help middle and secondary level teachers create spaces for students to explore multiple perspectives and interpretations of their texts, this brochure offers teachers who have experienced classroom talk that leads to gender divisiveness among students an opportunity to consider new ways of thinking about such talk. The brochure…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Gender Issues, Junior High Schools

Arizpe, Evelyn – Gender and Education, 2001
Examines interview responses of Mexican eighth graders about an adolescent novel that related the adventures of a female conquistador, including: their conceptions about gender, dynamics between the reader and the text, and the expression of response. Results revealed students' anxieties about gender issues, noting that how they understood these…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Females, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues

Wing, Alexis – Gender and Education, 1997
Explores the interaction between readers and books through classroom observations of 10 and 11 year olds reading and discussing the book "Bill's New Frock" (Anne Fine). Reactions from the 32 participating students appear to confirm the notion that girls and boys are treated differently. Included is a survey of the literature on feminist theories…
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Classroom Observation Techniques, Gender Issues

DeBlase, Gina – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2003
Discusses how three girls take up competing social messages about gendered identity in the different kinds of texts they read. Explains that it is in the complex transactions between the reader's prior lived experiences and the language of the text where meaning is shaped. Contends that when girls are encouraged to consider the actions of female…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Case Studies, Females, Gender Issues
Sullivan, Michael – School Library Journal, 2004
It's not that boys can not read, they just do not read. Study after study reveals that boys read less than girls. And according to the U.S. Department of Education, school-age boys tend to read a grade and a half lower than girls. How can librarians get guys to turn the page? For starters, they need to move beyond their traditional "here is a book…
Descriptors: Males, Reading Materials, Reading Motivation, Reader Text Relationship
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