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Fay, David – English Teaching Forum, 2007
If you are interested in using sequential art forms such as comic books in your EFL classroom, this article is full of helpful advice. Reading sequential art is beneficial because students can work with authentic texts with real language and graphic support. Students can also apply research and cultural knowledge to the creation of their own…
Descriptors: Story Telling, English (Second Language), English Instruction, Cartoons
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Pritchard, Ruie J. – English Journal, 1978
Urges teachers to sometimes reverse the order in which they present units on literature. (DD)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Literature, Literature Appreciation, Secondary Education
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Hamilton, Harley; Jones, Gary – Volta Review, 1989
The article describes the application of the box method for teaching English skills with hearing-impaired students. The method employs teaching steps which make use of sequential fading techniques to achieve a low error rate. Examples demonstrating improvement in English syntax, morphology, and semantics of two profoundly hearing-impaired…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Deafness, Elementary Education, English Instruction
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Olsen, James B.; And Others – 1977
A total of 169 college students participated in two experiments investigating the effects of eight instructional sequences and the presence of a heuristic rule in the teaching of four coordinate concepts: trochaic, iambic, dactylic, and anapestic poetic meters. A four-factor experimental design was used: pure simultaneous or sequential…
Descriptors: Concept Teaching, Educational Research, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Rippey, Robert M. – The School Review, 1967
The purpose of a study undertaken by the Center for the Cooperative Study of Instruction was to learn if a set of instructions could be prepared for students of composition which would indicate in behavioral terms what kind of writing was expected of them. These instructions, called "cognitive maps" consisted of a strategy and an exemplar which…
Descriptors: Constructed Response, English Instruction, Models, Programed Instruction
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Brause, Rita S.; And Others – English Journal, 1979
Reviews research on sequences in language development and suggests ways to base instruction on each student's level of development. (DD)
Descriptors: Educational Research, English Instruction, Junior High Schools, Language Acquisition
Sipple, Jo-Ann M. – 1977
This paper discusses strategies for teaching college composition, emphasizing "mechanical-meaningful-communicative" (M-M-C) sequencing. Under the M-M-C sequence, a student performs the following exercises: mechanical exercises, which build success in stimulus-response learning; meaningful exercises, which provide stimuli for problem-solving tasks;…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Educational Strategies, English Instruction, Higher Education
Friedmann, Thomas – 1983
To learn correct grammar, developmental students must practice writing correctly. However, the traditional exercises offered in handbooks, workbooks, and textbooks not only fail to provide habituation in correctness, they actually provide practice in "wrongness." Instead of isolating individual problems, they promote confusion by linking them.…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Developmental Programs, English Instruction, Grammar
Portales Public Schools, NM. – 1980
The instructional program described in this guide is designed to provide a sequential language arts curriculum for kindergarten through grade 12. Information contained in the guide includes (1) a statement of philosophy; (2) language arts objectives for each grade level; (3) a guide to language arts skills; (4) learner outcomes for grades one…
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Drama, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education
Squire, James R., Ed. – 1968
The encouragement and formulation of a student's imaginative response to and "engagement" with literature and the concerns of the papers and summaries of discussions in this Dartmouth Seminar report. James Britton discusses refining the student's natural response to literature by developing his increased sense of form ("principally…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Elementary Education, English Instruction, Figurative Language
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Lawson, Anton E.; Kral, Elmer A. – Educational Forum, 1985
This article presents 10 practical teaching procedures to encourage students to develop formal reasoning skills. A twelfth-grade English course is used as an example. Procedures include pretesting, sequencing instruction, providing students with concrete experiences, discussing reasoning patterns and forms of argumentation, assigning argumentative…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Development, Critical Thinking, Debate
Carlson, Constance Hedin – 1968
Thirty-seven secondary and four college English teachers in Maine participated in research on a two-fold problem: late adolescents' indifference to writing and their typically superficial themes. The secondary teachers planned 12th-grade writing sequences integrating the study of composition and literature and relating it to problems of immediate…
Descriptors: College Bound Students, College Preparation, College School Cooperation, Educational Research
Hanson, Lincoln F., Ed. – Office of Education, US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1963
This bulletin lists materials available in the fall of 1963 to assist educators in their selections of programmed instruction materials, and updates the inaugural issue, "Programs '62." Since the 1962 edition provided a number of first analyses of programmed material available, some of the present statistical data have been related to last year's…
Descriptors: Educational History, Programmed Instructional Materials, Guides, Teaching Methods