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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Resnick, David – Religious Education, 2017
An 18th-century parable based on the Adam story offers a model of moral education rooted in communitarianism. Individual conscience arises from social norms, with a vital role for shame and pride. Emphasizing the nobility of being created in the divine image, this model overcomes shortcomings of rationalist, Enlightenment education. Moreover, the…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Ethical Instruction, Moral Values, Tales
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Sullivan, Ros; Carpenter, Vicki; Jones, Alison – Australian Journal of Outdoor Education, 2011
This paper investigates the repertoires teachers employ when talking about taking children outside of the classroom and keeping them safe. Research data were a series of individual and focus group interviews with primary school teachers. Three repertoires were identified: "safe practitioner," "adventurous risk-taker" and "fun, pleasure and…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Tales, Child Safety, Elementary School Teachers
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Wilson, Jonathan – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2012
In this article, the author discusses two books ("Tales of Burning Love" and "Bingo Palace" by Louise Erdrich) that highlight location and family as the foundation of home. The two novels suggest that "home" must be revised to include, negotiate, and, at times, embrace tenets of Western ideology in order to find or secure one's home. While various…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Tales, Novels, American Indians
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Crisp, Thomas; Hiller, Brittany – Journal of Children's Literature, 2011
In the world of children's literature, analyses of the distribution and representation of gender, biological sex, and gendered behavior in picturebooks often focused on Caldecott Award-winning literature. As the most prestigious award for American children's picturebooks, titles that receive this honor have a profound influence on the field of…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Recognition (Achievement), Criticism, Public Libraries
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Cullen, Fin; Sandy, Laura – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2009
This article provides a critical account of a selection of approaches that were used in the 26-month No Outsiders participatory action research project in education settings. The paper questions what challenges are presented to educators in critically exploring and challenging heteronormative sex-gender discourses. We revisit some of the tensions…
Descriptors: Action Research, Tales, Homosexuality, Sexuality
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White, Julie; Fitzgerald, Tanya – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2010
The tales we tell here focus on the ethical issues arising from our research practice with vulnerable young participants and those for whom research has been inextricably linked with European imperialism and colonialism. The importance of relational obligations, temporality and potential for a continuing narrative approach to ethical research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Tales, Ethics, Youth Programs
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Shafer, Peter William – Religious Education, 2009
This article analyzes the 1863 pseudo slave narrative entitled "Black and White; Or, the Heart, Not the Face" by white Northerner Jane Dunbar Chaplin. The article sets this tale within the historical and literary context of "domestic abolitionism." The logic behind the story is described as "sympathetic identification," a perspective that,…
Descriptors: United States History, Slavery, Religious Organizations, Christianity
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Russell, David L. – Children's Literature in Education, 2002
Considers how Francesca Lia Block's "The Rose and the Beast" attests to the resilience of the traditional folktale form. Describes how Block's work is a modern adaptation of some of the most familiar old tales, all with heroines struggling against plastic, soulless culture beset by drugs, sex, and violence. (SG)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Feminism, Fiction, Secondary Education
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Jarvey, Marya; McKeough, Anne; Pyryt, Michael C. – Research in the Teaching of English, 2008
Trickster tales, with their teachings on how to behave in the world, are a powerful means for transmitting social knowledge and cultural mores to children. In this study we compared two approaches to teaching fourth-grade students to write trickster tales. Although both instructional methods incorporated aspects of the writing process approach,…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Tales, Process Approach (Writing), Cognitive Development
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Molloy, Toni – Youth Theatre Journal, 1988
Focuses on Walt Disney and Shelley Duvall, mass media producers who furnish children with fairy-folklore. Compares and contrasts what Disney and Duvall do and do not convey through their fairy-folk tales. (MS)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Films, Mass Media, Popular Culture
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Trousdale, Ann – New Advocate, 1989
Discusses the quality of the heroines' beauty in several folktales from various cultures. Notes that, unlike Western cultures that equate physical beauty with virtue, in many cultures, beauty is viewed as spiritual and emotional as well as physical. (MM)
Descriptors: Characterization, Childrens Literature, Cultural Differences, Elementary Education
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Rubinstein, Robert E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Despite the tremendous changes wrought by technology, folktales contain certain truths about life, human nature, and what's needed to maintain a viable, socially sane society. Folktales are invaluable for stressing heroic actions, personal and social growth, and progress toward meaningful goals. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Goal Orientation, Individual Development, Maturity (Individuals)
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Lee, Jimmy Ho-Man; Lee, Fong-Lok; Lau, Tai-Shing – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2006
Folklore-based learning is a kind of situated learning paradigm in which students learn by solving problems embedded in a near-real situation. The proposed learning approach employs further interesting story plots from folklores as the background situation to motivate students to participate in learning activities. It is believed that such a…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Classroom Techniques, Web Sites
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Trousdale, Ann M.; McMillan, Sally – Children's Literature in Education, 2003
Examines a young girl's responses to "feminist" and "patriarchal" folktales. Explains that issues raised by tales involved the exercise of personal agency, physical strength of males and females, and the symbolic significance of dress. Contends that findings challenge psychological theories about the appeal of folktales to young children, and…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Elementary Education, Feminism, Gender Issues
Armstrong, Michael – Open University Press, 2006
In this book, the author reveals the creative force of children's narrative imagination and shows how this develops through childhood. He provides a new and powerful understanding of the significance of narrative for children's intellectual growth and for learning and teaching. The book explores a series of real stories written by children between…
Descriptors: Tales, Mythology, Anthologies, Imagination
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