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Stasha Huntingford – Educational Action Research, 2025
This paper/visual art/puppet show is about the more-than-human entities who help me include my whole self in my teaching and other research. It is about how generative it is to be our whole, sacred, profane, glorious selves. This art reminds us of the importance of dreaming beyond what we have been told is possible. It demonstrates how irreverent,…
Descriptors: Play, Deception, Visual Arts, Puppetry
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Noah W. Sobe – History of Education, 2025
How might historians of education bring joy to their work and make our scholarship of use to the world? This article suggests returning to Welland Hendrick's 1909 "A Joysome History of Education." This minor but well-circulated text uses humour and irony to poke fun at some of the more obtuse, sacrosanct, and self-righteous aspects of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Historians, Psychological Patterns, Satire
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Dunphy, Steve – Journal of Instructional Pedagogies, 2022
This manuscript suggests that comic art or cartoons can be used for illustrating, depicting, skewering, or even satirizing ethical, unethical, and other practices associated with business decision-making. As a classroom instructional project, the approach presents arguments for why cartooning is a useful tool for business, education, and the arts.…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Teaching Methods, Decision Making, Art Activities
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O'Neill, Arthur – Australian Universities' Review, 2020
The universities said it! Arthur provides a (thinkable) scenario, via the University of Central Tasmania.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Recruitment, Satire, Educational Innovation
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Rucynski, John, Jr.; Prichard, Caleb – English Teaching Forum, 2021
From a cultural perspective, humor may be a universal feature of all cultures, but what is considered funny varies greatly from culture to culture. In this article, the authors demonstrate the importance of understanding kinds of humor that differ across cultures and offer clear suggestions for teaching three kinds--verbal irony, memes, and…
Descriptors: Humor, Teaching Methods, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language)
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Prichard, Caleb; Rucynski, John, Jr. – TESOL Journal, 2019
Satirical news is a type of humorous media that mixes parody and satire to critique contemporary figures, events, and situations (Ermida, 2012; McClennen & Maisel, 2014; Peters, 2013). In addition to satirical television news programs like The Daily Show, satirical news websites such as "The Daily Mash," "The Onion," and…
Descriptors: Humor, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Peters, Lloyd – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2015
The BBC Radio 4 comedy-drama "A Higher Education" was written in 1999 to present a satire of a dysfunctional and cash-strapped university (Northfield) led by the egotistical and amoral Head of Drama, Don Crookfield (played by Rik Mayall). For those of us passionately engaged in the provision of higher education today, the satire also…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Change, Educational Practices, Satire
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Bintz, William P. – Reading Teacher, 2011
According to Merriam-Webster dictionary, a parody is "a literary or musical work in which the style of an author or work is closely imitated for comic effect or in ridicule." A parody is a respectful yet critical satire, takeoff, or spoof of an original. In literature, a parody is when a person imitates an author's style or work to ridicule or…
Descriptors: Parody, Writing Across the Curriculum, Elementary School Teachers, Literary Genres
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Davies, Lynn – International Review of Education, 2009
This paper is based on a recently published book, "Educating Against Extremism" (Davies, "Educating Against Extremism," 2008), which explores the potential role of schools in averting the more negative and violent forms of extremism in a country. It examines the nature of extremism; identity formation and radicalisation; religious belief, faith…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Young Adults, Religious Factors, Terrorism
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Blackerby, Christine – Social Education, 2008
For 53 years, Clifford K. Berryman was a political cartoonist for "The Washington Post" and "The Washington Evening Star". He drew thousands of cartoons commenting on the congressional and presidential candidates, campaigns, issues, and elections of the first half of the twentieth century. Berryman was a Washington institution, and his decades of…
Descriptors: Elections, Cartoons, Political Campaigns, United States History
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Trier, James – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
Comedy Central's popular program "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart" is the best critical media literacy program on television, and it can be used in valuable ways in the classroom as part of a media literacy pedagogy. This Media Literacy column provides an overview of the show and its accompanying website and considers ways it might be used in the…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Television, Web Sites, News Media
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Trier, James – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
"The Daily Show With Jon Stewart" is one of the best critical literacy programs on television, and in this Media Literacy column the author suggests ways that teachers can use video clips from the show in their classrooms. (For Part 1, see EJ784683.)
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Television, Comedy, Satire
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Meskill, Carla – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2007
There is little question that popular television shows influence the shaping of social norms, identities, and the ways we navigate daily life. High profile shows are also a common magnet for critical attention. No primetime television show has provoked as wide a range of reactions as Fox's "The Simpsons." From shock radio to public broadcasting…
Descriptors: Television, Popular Culture, Cartoons, Satire
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Lee, Mary – English Journal, 1989
Explains how Louis D. Rubin's theory of the "Great American Joke" (the gap between our cultural ideal and the everyday facts of American life and society) can be used to help students understand humor in an American literature unit. (SR)
Descriptors: High School Students, Humor, Satire, Secondary Education
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Bergmann, Linda S. – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1996
Shows that while student humor has definite pedagogical usefulness in teaching the conventional academic modes of discourse and language, it also can become a vehicle of subversion. (TB)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Humor
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