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Blasingame, James B., Jr. – English Journal, 2002
Asks seven successful poets to share their knowledge and experience of writing poetry by answering seven questions that provide classroom teachers with approaches for facilitating students' poetry writing. Addresses topic selection, writing processes, language usage, choosing a form, whether forms should be taught, revision, and whether hard work…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Usage, Poetry, Poets
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Blondel, Marion; Miller, Christopher – Sign Language Studies, 2001
Shows that the architecture of a children's poetic text is based on systematic use of repetition and contrast at different levels of analysis, which allow the continuous flow of gesture to be segmented into structural units of different relative size. Suggests the study of poetry allows the isolation of universals of language. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Rhythm, Language Universals, Nursery Rhymes
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Juzwik, Mary M. – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2004
This article employs rhetoric to examine the poetic dimensions of one performed narrative in teaching. The analysis stems from a larger study of oral narratives in classroom talk during a Holocaust unit in a middle school language arts classroom. A corpus of seventy-five teacher and student narratives was transcribed and analyzed for the broader…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Rhetoric, Middle Schools, Writing (Composition)
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Robbins, Rebecca L. – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2005
Tribal colleges and universities, in addition to providing our people with higher education, help to bridge the gap among cultures. The colleges sustain American Indian art forms through class and degree offerings that include traditional (shield making, drum making, arrow making, knapping, carving, masks, and pottery), contemporary (digital art,…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Poetry, Tribally Controlled Education, Art
Miller, Pat – School Library Media Activities Monthly, 2004
Winter, even if students don't see snowflakes, is a good time to examine the activities of animals, children, and nature. In this column, the author recommends pairs of fiction and nonfiction titles that can meet the needs of students from kindergarten to grade 5, as well as fulfill the requirements of the curriculum. Some winter activities are…
Descriptors: Fiction, Nonfiction, Childrens Literature, Poetry
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Kanevski, Tara L. – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
Poetry functions as an instructive tool across the curriculum. To use this extraordinary tool, we must engage in our own creative journey with poetry by reading it, writing poetry, and finding inspiration in a new approach. How do we read a poem? Is there a correct format to explain poetic imagery? Can young children be introduced to poetry and…
Descriptors: Poetry, Young Children, Art Education, Art Activities
Gehring, John – Education Week, 2005
Slam poetry was born in the Green Mill Tavern, a one-time Chicago speakeasy where Al Capone imbibed, when a construction worker and poet named Marc Smith revolutionized poetry readings with an Uptown Poetry Slam in 1986. Slam borrows heavily from the rhythms and wordplay of rap and hip-hop, as well as the stream of consciousness and metaphysical…
Descriptors: Poets, Poetry, Competition, Popular Culture
Harrison, David L. – Teaching Pre K-8, 2006
Writing verse is a learning experience. Arranging words, sounds and syllables can turn everyday language into metered language (language that can be measured), and metered language is the definition of verse. This article discusses the use of meter in helping students establish sets of syllables and lines that can be counted, enabling them to…
Descriptors: Rhyme, Language Patterns, Poetry, Writing (Composition)
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Keil, Katherine – English Journal, 2005
Katherine Keil, a high school English teacher, has developed an approach that goes beyond simply teaching poetry to creating classrooms that celebrate poetry in order to overcome the fear of poetry in students and the teacher. She encourages students to play with language, publishes student's work to a web site and models the writing process…
Descriptors: Poetry, English Teachers, Writing Processes, Teaching Methods
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Lindblom, Kenneth – English Journal, 2005
The advantages of teaching English literature in an arts classroom through performance are described. The innovative assignments including poetry, applying performance techniques to a novel and drama helps students to learn English in a better way.
Descriptors: Poetry, English Instruction, English Literature, English (Second Language)
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Rosenblatt, Louis B. – Science & Education, 2004
We begin with the pendulum and the curious authority of the expression for the period of its swing,T = 2[pi][image omitted]l/g. That this is not an empirical result--[pi]$ is an irrational number--leads to an examination of the nature of physics. In the course of things, we come to Plato's critique of poetry in "The Republic" and the fundamental…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Poetry, Science Instruction, Motion
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Reid, Mark – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2005
This paper is an exploration of the ways in which the concept of montage (a principle of film editing developed first by a group of Russian film makers in the 1920s) might be mobilised in support of the teaching of English, in particular the teaching of poetry. I will argue that montage can be used as the basis of a different kind of pedagogy in…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Films, Poetry, Teaching Methods
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Doughty, Howard A. – College Quarterly, 2005
Phil Ochs was a prominent topical songwriter and singer in the 1960s. He was conventionally considered second only to Bob Dylan in terms of popularity, creativity and influence in the specific genre of contemporary folk music commonly known as "protest music." Whereas Dylan successfully reinvented himself many times in terms of his musical style…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Singing, Poetry, Poets
Thompson, Michael Clay – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
In many classrooms, poetry is shoved to the neglected edge of language arts, out of the bright core of content that may (should) include grammar, vocabulary, and strong literature. If time permits, a class may read a few poems and discuss them from a so-called "interpretive" point of view. All of this takes place in the context of an apparent…
Descriptors: Poets, Art, Prose, Poetry
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Frank, Thomas E. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
How can poetry be a resource for effective teaching of congregational life and leadership? Drawing on poetry from an array of sources, the author weaves a narrative to discuss specific strategies employed for using poetry in the classroom. Recognizing the capacity of poems to awaken latent imaginations and evoke new insights about church…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Leadership, Poetry, Teaching Methods
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