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Janzen, Melanie D. – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2015
Teachers are caught in a tug of war between what they are supposed to be and who they are trying to become. The teaching subject, striving to be recognisable, is socially constructed and discursively constituted through ongoing relations with power--an identity essentially determined in advance. What is it to live--to become, as…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Professional Identity, Power Structure, Psychiatry
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Amanda Haertling Thein; Mark A. Sulzer – English Journal, 2015
Grounded in the three-part literary concept of the narrator, the narratee, and the implied reader, this article provides teachers and students with a heuristic for -- uncovering, attending to, and critiquing assumptions about youth found in the first-person narrative form that predominates in young adult literature.
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Narration, Personal Narratives, Reader Response
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Kim, So Jung – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2016
The current study explores how picture books can be used in bilingual classrooms to support more critical understandings of gender stereotypes by preschool children. The research uses a reader-response perspective that stresses the importance of the reader's role in interpreting texts as well as sociocultural theory to analyze the social dynamics…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Bilingual Education, Sex Stereotypes, Gender Issues
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Christenson, Lea Ann – Educational Research and Reviews, 2016
In kindergarten classrooms (5 to 6 year olds) in the United States, interactive reading aloud has long been considered an important part of a comprehensive emergent literacy program. However, while individual components of interactive reading aloud (for example, teacher activity, student activity and text) have been studied, researchers have…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Reading Aloud to Others, Holistic Approach, Emergent Literacy
Flint, Tori K. – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Play in the school setting is a highly contested issue in today's restrictive academic environment. Although many early childhood educators advocate the use of play in their classrooms and emphasize the importance of play for children's learning and development, children beyond the preschool and kindergarten years are not often afforded…
Descriptors: Play, Teaching Methods, Grade 1, Elementary School Students
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Jeffrey D. Wilhelm; Michael W. Smith – English Journal, 2016
The authors share findings from a recent study of teens who freely select to read texts typically marginalized by schools (dystopia, vampire, romance, horror, fantasy), revealing the distinct functional and psychological benefits of pleasure reading. The students who participated in the study that the authors report on were eighth graders who…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Attitudes, Recreational Reading
Li, Jun – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Chinese has intimidated heritage language learners as it is believed to be notoriously difficult (Liu, 2008). Traditional Chinese education, which focuses on linguistic skills and is mainly acquired by recitation and memorization, tends to drive students from maintaining and regaining their inherited language and culture (Curdt-Christiansen,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Teaching Methods, Heritage Education, Learner Engagement
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Zimmerman, Frederick J. – Developmental Psychology, 2014
To make a scientific contribution, a reanalysis must be firmly rooted in the identification of a clearly superior methodological innovation over the original research. By contrast, a reanalysis rooted in dissatisfaction with previous results will necessarily be biased and can only obscure scientific discoveries. The reanalysis published by…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Child Development, Language Acquisition, Television Viewing
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Datta, Lois-ellin – American Journal of Evaluation, 2013
Jill Chouinard, in her article "The Case for Participatory Evaluation in an Era of Accountability" (this issue, p. 237), may be re-iterating what has often been claimed and arguably is infused already in much of our theory and practice: the value of participatory approaches in some, perhaps many situations. She summarizes these claims eloquently…
Descriptors: Accountability, Evaluation Methods, Reader Response, Evaluation Research
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Michael Hoffman – English Journal, 2015
Keri Franklin has proposed that creating the appropriate social-emotional environment for peer response (or peer conferencing, as she calls it) is a necessary first step. Within the context of her peer response process, though, are there strategies that can be adopted that would further scaffold students' ability to take each other's work…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Poetry, Peer Evaluation, Feedback (Response)
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Davis, Cheryl J.; Zane, Thomas – Journal of Educators Online, 2016
It is common in college courses to test students on the required readings for that course. With a rise in online education it is often the case that students are required to provide evidence of reading the material. However, there is little empirical research stating the best written means to assess that students read the materials. This study…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Comparative Analysis, Academic Achievement, Scores
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Price-Dennis, Detra; Holmes, Kathlene; Smith, Emily E. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2016
This article examines classroom practices that draw upon students' understandings of race and equity as they engage in critical literature inquiry to explore issues of power in our society. Our research team, comprising a fifth-grade classroom teacher, a doctoral candidate, and a university professor, analyzed students' written and digital…
Descriptors: Race, Inquiry, Grade 5, Elementary School Students
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Tunstall, Tricia – Music Educators Journal, 2013
Herein, Tricia Tunstall presents a critique of the article by Melissa Lesniak published in the December 2012 "Music Educators Journal," and offers a new perspective on the Venezuelan youth orchestra program known as "El Sistema." The program, which began in Caracas thirty-eight years ago, is dedicated to changing the lives of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Musicians, Reader Response, Musical Composition
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van Woerkum, Cees – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2012
How writers can adapt to their readers is an important issue in effective communication strategies, and certainly crucial in the case of functional texts. Therefore, it is necessary to look at how readers are constructed as partners in a communication co-production. This article explores the concept of the "active reader," which is getting more…
Descriptors: Communication Strategies, Authors, Reader Response, Classification
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Michael DiCicco; Paula Taylor-Greathouse – English Journal, 2014
When it comes to morality in young adult (YA) literature, one often hears from parents, educators, or members of community groups who are challenging a book's moral content, yet there is not an opportunity to hear from the authors themselves. Educators see the value of YA literature in the classroom as a medium for not only academic growth but for…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, Reader Text Relationship, Ethics
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