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Showing all 15 results Save | Export
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Johnny B. Allred; Sean P. Connors; Christian Z. Goering – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
This research study explores the role of social annotation in supporting dialogic teaching in secondary English language arts. Grounded in Bakhtin's dialogism and building upon research into online discussion, this study describes how a high school English teacher and her students used a digital annotation tool to read and talk about texts.…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Teachers, Dialogs (Language), Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Keisha McIntyre-McCullough – English Journal, 2020
Overall, the author wanted to teach using culturally responsive approaches. The ELA teacher can fuel social justice teaching. In this article, the author discusses how their personal biases affected their classroom instruction and how they shifted their educational philosophy to consider the needs and interests of their students. In US education,…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Advanced Placement, Social Justice, Course Content
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Leah M. Van Vaerenewyck – English Journal, 2017
Because we live in an increasingly globalized world, teachers are tasked with cultivating social and cultural competencies in their students to prepare them to act as responsible global citizens. This article explores how including diverse global literary narratives in the English language arts (ELA) classroom is an important step toward preparing…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Aesthetics, Reading, Global Approach
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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
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Clark, Sarah K.; Andreasen, Lindi – Literacy Research and Instruction, 2014
The purpose of this embedded mixed methods study was to examine how sixth graders with high and low reading attitudes perceive teacher read aloud. We utilized quantitative data by surveying sixth graders (N = 87) about their reading attitudes and then collected qualitative data by interviewing five students, interviewing the teacher, conducting…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Reading Attitudes, Student Attitudes, Reading Aloud to Others
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Romano, Tom – English Journal, 2009
Students have fun with Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, and video games. They have fun text messaging, talking on cell phones, listening to iPods. They have fun at theme parks and hanging out with friends. As their teacher the author wants to introduce students to another kind of fun. This fun can be time consuming, rigorous, and fulfilling. It's the…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Motivation, Learner Engagement, Teacher Responsibility
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Chapman, Lauren; Greenfield, Renee; Rinaldi, Claudia – Literacy Research and Instruction, 2010
This investigation is part of a larger study examining the effects of a school-wide literacy reform effort through a multi-leveled system of instructional delivery. The research question addressed was, "How do students perceive reading instruction within their elementary language arts classroom?" Students' perceptions were analyzed through…
Descriptors: Group Instruction, Intervention, Student Attitudes, Reading Instruction
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Whitney, Anne Elrod – English Education, 2011
School is sometimes framed as a place for preparing, a place for becoming college and career ready. At times this approach positions school as an important space "within" the world of college and careers, envisioned perhaps as Dewey imagined it, as a safe place to try things, a space where real work of participation in society could be done but in…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Relevance (Education), School Role, Children
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Kelly, Patricia R.; Farnan, Nancy – New Advocate, 1994
Argues that the primary value of literature lies within the work itself, an appreciation of it, and the connections readers make to it. Discusses how a reader response approach offers one way to open the door for children to the lived-through experience of literature as art with intrinsic value. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
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Elster, Charles A. – Language Arts, 2000
Illustrates how poems engage readers in heightened experiences of the world and of language itself. Shows some of the strategies that adults and elementary students employed when reading and responding to poems: summarizing the poem, entering in and opening out, entering the world of the poem, opening to the outside world, finding rich…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Instruction, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation
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Swindall, Vickie; Cantrell, R. Jeffrey – Reading Teacher, 1999
Describes "Character Interviews," a class activity that guides children, especially reluctant readers, to the meaning of a story through a thoughtful understanding of character as they consider a character's emotions and motives, to respond to a question as that character would. Describes the interview process. Offers sample interviews…
Descriptors: Characterization, Class Activities, Elementary Education, Interviews
Moss, Joy F. – Teaching and Learning Literature with Children and Young Adults, 1998
Uses excerpts from fourth graders' literary discussion to describe literary language and reading strategies these students use to analyze and talk about literature and to generate meaning in response to literary texts. Rethinks the nature of literary discussions and outlines the importance of these literary discussions. Lists seven characteristics…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades
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Hobgood, Jayne M. – Voices from the Middle, 1998
Describes how the author has her students create "found poems" and use them in conjunction with the students' own Readers/Writers Logs to help students make more of a text, own it, and discover the power of effective language. Includes instructions, student samples of found poems, and samples of the entire process. (SR)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation, Poetry
Andrews, Sharon Vincz – 1992
Students in a language arts methods class work in learning teams in literature circles. They read novels, keep journals, and use a variety of strategies in exploring the novels and relating the authors' work and ideas to their own lives. Occasionally, the group is asked to develop questions which they would like to ask the author. Invariably,…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Higher Education, Language Arts, Methods Courses
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Scholes, Robert – English Journal, 1999
Presents a humorous speech given to high school English teachers on two serious subjects: externally imposed standards and standardized testing, and anti-intellectualism in the classroom and in the culture. Argues that English teachers themselves are responsible for some of the anti-intellectualism they encounter by teaching literature in an…
Descriptors: Anti Intellectualism, Curriculum, English Instruction, Language Arts