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Arslantas, Fatma; Wood, Eileen; Boersen, Brooke; Pulla, Victoria; Ferrier, Monika – International Journal of Higher Education, 2019
Terms such as 'compulsion' and 'addiction' are often used when describing young adults' response behaviors regarding texts and messages. Purpose of the Research: The present study documents response patterns for texts and messages in a higher education classroom context. Both the number of texts and messages responded to and the time taken between…
Descriptors: Student Reaction, Reader Response, Social Media, Computer Mediated Communication
Perham, Andrea J. – 1992
In an introductory-level Romantic Poetry course, a loose-leaf notebook is kept on reserve in the library to serve as a classbook or collaborative journal in which all class members (including the teacher) write comments as the semester progresses. Entries are dated and addressed to individuals or to the class as a whole. Informal entries allow…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Reader Response
Svoboda, Frederic J. – 1995
A course on detective fiction proved to be very popular at the University of Michigan, Flint. Fifty students signed up for the class, which was supposed to be limited to 45. Surprisingly, though, only 10 of these identified themselves as readers of detective fiction; those remaining were mainly curious. The course featured a range of works…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres, Literature Appreciation
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Miall, David S. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1985
Examines the use of the repertory grid technique to describe student responses to the poem "Frost at Midnight" by Coleridge. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, English Instruction, English Literature, Higher Education
Donehower, Kim – 1995
An instructor teaching a 20th-century fiction course was surprised by her students' response to a series of stories she asked them to read about the South. Apparently representing the feelings of many in the class, one student said, "These people are weird. And we don't like them." Though they were used to encountering differences in…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Fiction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism