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Kelly K. Wissman – English Education, 2018
Within this qualitative case study, I describe how a fifth-grade teacher in an affluent and culturally homogenous school attempted to "disturb the waters" through teaching global literature. Framed by transactional theories of response and critical language awareness, I identify three central pedagogical moves that supported disruptions…
Descriptors: Grade 5, World Literature, Student Attitudes, Beliefs
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Brinda, Wayne – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2008
Shouldn't reading be aesthetically, emotionally, and intellectually enjoyable? Yet, as literature becomes complex in middle and high school with multiple characters, points of view, or difficult language, many adolescents forgo the idea of discovering enjoyment in literature. Based on the author's experience as an educator, researcher, and…
Descriptors: Literacy, Nonfiction, Reader Text Relationship, World History
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Crocco, Margaret Smith – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2005
This paper discusses inclusion of global literature in social studies curricula, especially in teaching about women of the world. It analyses the attraction of, and difficulties with, a popular work of young adult fiction, "Shabanu," often taught in US middle-school social studies and humanities classrooms. It uses the framework of post-colonial,…
Descriptors: Fiction, Females, Young Adults, World Literature