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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Dalrymple, Roger; Green, Andrew – English in Education, 2022
Margaret Meek Spencer's writings on literacy evoke reading and storymaking as processes of inquiring; of searching into mystery. This paper considers how Meek's preoccupations with reading process; genre literacy; and text-image dialogism resonate deeply with the genre of young people's mystery and detective fiction. Drawing on Meek's seminal…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Childrens Literature, Literary Genres, Reading Comprehension
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Taylor, Lucy – English in Education, 2022
This paper focuses on "How Texts Teach What Readers Learn" (Meek, 1988) and considers how texts teach readers in a digital age. I use Meek's book as a frame for exploring the ways children learn about narration, structure, voice, discourse and language, and becoming an "insider" in the text. To demonstrate this, I use Meek's…
Descriptors: Reader Text Relationship, Reading Instruction, Writing (Composition), Reading Processes
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Prezioso, M. G. – English in Education, 2023
In light of recent concerns in the United States and the United Kingdom regarding the rote and restrictive nature of English literature instruction, this article offers an approach to teaching literature rooted not in knowledge, as literary pedagogy is often conceptualised, but instead in understanding. Reading for understanding extends beyond…
Descriptors: English Literature, Teaching Methods, Reading Processes, Reading Comprehension
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Kaya, Jean – English in Education, 2023
Awareness of vocabulary learning strategies has been identified as crucial in supporting learners' vocabulary development. Using interview data from 21 adolescent first language speakers of English identified as gifted students in the U.S. education context, I analysed the vocabulary learning strategies that they used to learn, remember, and make…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Learning Strategies, English Instruction, Native Language
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Mackey, Margaret – English in Education, 2019
In a time of significant change, it can be useful to explore what remains constant in literate behaviours. This article follows Oatley's suggestion that looking at the psychological function of a literate event is more productive than worrying about the analogue/digital divide. Starting with the activity of learning to read, it investigates…
Descriptors: Recreational Reading, Critical Reading, Literacy, Social Media
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Alexander, Joy – English in Education, 2022
While speaking, reading and writing are identified in the Newbolt Report as components of English and are still acknowledged as such one hundred years later, Reading Aloud, which the Report ranks alongside them, is no longer accorded any prominence. The Newbolt Report connects Reading Aloud with literature and announces it as a method of…
Descriptors: Poetry, English Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Aloud to Others
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Cohen, Omri – English in Education, 2021
Teaching and reading literature are commonly viewed as contributing to the cultivation of empathy. This article presents critical and pedagogical approaches to test this view and suggests a distinction between low-level, simple empathy inspired by the reading and teaching of "The Tortilla Curtain" and a more complex, self-critical…
Descriptors: Empathy, Literature, Teaching Methods, Literary Criticism
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Glover, Margaret – English in Education, 2018
This article is a discussion of some aspects of reader response. It attempts to track the development of various theories: from the view of the text as an entity set in stone, through structuralist and phenomenological arguments, to the point where the text becomes a virtual dimension. But not only is the importance of the text within the literary…
Descriptors: Authors, Literature, Reader Response, Text Structure
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McLean Davies, Larissa; Bode, Katherine; Martin, Susan K.; Sawyer, Wayne – English in Education, 2020
While "born digital" artefacts such as video games and e-books have been part of secondary school English in Anglophone countries for over two decades, databases of mass-digitised (hence "re-mediated") literary texts are yet to have a significant presence in, or influence on, literary work in subject English. The authors…
Descriptors: Databases, English Literature, Reading Processes, Technological Literacy
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Lawrence, Clare; Celia*; Collyer, Edward; Poulson, Melissa – English in Education, 2021
There has, to date, been little discussion of how autism may affect the experience of the reading of fiction for pupils in the classroom, other than through a deficit model. One of the researchers in this study ("Celia") is training to be a secondary school English teacher and identifies as autistic. Her experience provides an enriched…
Descriptors: English Literature, Games, Theory of Mind, Fiction
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Cushing, Ian – English in Education, 2020
This paper explores the application of texture and textual attractors within a cognitive stylistic pedagogy for English teachers. Texture, defined as the feeling of building and experiencing a fictional world, is here taken up as a facilitative way of thinking about how reading, language, experience and cognition operate in the classroom. On the…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Teaching Methods, Grammar, Schemata (Cognition)
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Cushing, Ian – English in Education, 2018
This article draws on research into using reader-response theory as a way of thinking about teaching grammar and poetry in the English classroom. Framing my discussion around world-based models of reader-response such as Transactional Theory (Rosenblatt 1938, 1978) and Text World Theory (Gavins 2007; Werth 1999), I argue that this approach is…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Poetry, Teaching Methods, Grammar
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Lefroy, Rebecca – English in Education, 2018
This paper aims to explore whether the teaching of the abstract literary concepts of symbolism, narrative perspective and style to young readers can be made more effective by the study of art in an art museum context. The research is an interpretive qualitative case study exploring the learning of 6 participants within a class of 28 students aged…
Descriptors: Museums, Teaching Methods, Art, Case Studies
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Giovanelli, Marcello; Mason, Jessica – English in Education, 2015
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In particular, we consider how students' ability to engage with a text, which we term authentic reading, can be facilitated or restricted. We draw on two case studies featuring Year 7 students working with the novel Holes (Sachar 2000), and the short story…
Descriptors: Reader Text Relationship, Learner Engagement, Foreign Countries, Literary Genres
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Rogers, Asha – English in Education, 2015
In 1998 the Northern Examination and Assessment Board selected the poem 'Nothing's Changed' by the South African writer Tatamkhulu Afrika as the last of its ten "Poems from Other Cultures and Traditions." Published in the NEAB "Anthology" (1998), 'Nothing's Changed' became a favourite at GCSE for its vivid depiction of…
Descriptors: Poetry, African Culture, Authors, Social Change
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