Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 52 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 383 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 962 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 2067 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 724 |
| Teachers | 650 |
| Students | 91 |
| Media Staff | 23 |
| Parents | 21 |
| Researchers | 21 |
| Administrators | 12 |
| Policymakers | 6 |
| Community | 5 |
| Counselors | 4 |
Location
| Canada | 123 |
| Australia | 99 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 81 |
| United Kingdom | 72 |
| California | 62 |
| United States | 49 |
| China | 47 |
| Mexico | 46 |
| Japan | 39 |
| South Africa | 39 |
| New Zealand | 35 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Does not meet standards | 1 |
Madden, Lauren; Peel, Anne; Watson, Heather – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2014
As teachers begin to implement the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), they are challenged to focus on informational texts across the disciplines and engage children in critical thinking about complex scientific ideas. In this article, we present an integrated science-language arts lesson that explores…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Science Instruction, Critical Thinking, Scientific Concepts
Tanaka, Michele T. D.; Farish, Maureen; Nicholson, Diana; Tse, Vanessa; Doll, Jenn; Archer, Elizabeth – Journal of Transformative Education, 2014
In Transformative Inquiry (TI), pre-service teachers explore issues about which they are personally passionate in order to enter into the delicate work of transformation. We examine how shared vulnerability within three mentor-mentee pairs leads to new pedagogical possibilities. Michele and Vanessa discuss poetry as a way of entering into TI and…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Preservice Teachers, Mentors, Poetry
Vanover, Charles – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2014
This ethnodrama communicates the lived experience of an outstanding teacher of English who worked in the Chicago Public Schools for more than 20 years. Excerpts from three semi-structured interviews have been constructed into a one-woman show that uses music, dance, and the art of theater to convey the spiritual beauty of ambitious, urban teaching…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Public School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Urban Teaching
McLaren, Mary-Rose; Arnold, Julie – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2016
This paper describes and analyses, through the use of case studies, two experiences of transformative learning in an undergraduate arts education unit. Pre-service teachers designed and engaged with arts-based curriculum activities, created their own artwork, participated in a modified production of The Tempest and kept a reflective journal. These…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Case Studies, Transformative Learning, Art Education
Krantz, Göran – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2016
The act of teaching is constituted by tensions between contradictory influences of national educational systems, teachers' professional/personal identity, cultural and social values. Qualitative research methods can explore this complex situation. Indeed, narrative methods have explored teachers' "life histories". This article provides a…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Comparative Analysis, Professional Identity, Self Concept
Gordon, John – Classroom Discourse, 2012
This article applies conversation analysis to classroom talk-in-interaction where pupils respond to poetry they have heard. The phenomenon of repeating in discussion details from the poem, including patterns of delivery, is considered and named echo to distinguish it from quotation in writing. The phenomenon is significant to the pedagogy of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Classroom Communication, Poetry, Teaching Methods
Ribes, Purificación – International Journal of Higher Education, 2012
The aim of the present article is to help students realize that Petrarchism has been an influential source of inspiration for Early Modern English lyrics. Its topics and conventions have lent themselves to a wide variety of appropriations which the present selection of texts for analysis tries to illustrate. A few telling examples from Spenser,…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Literature, Literary Devices, Teaching Methods
Bramberger, Andrea – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2012
There are indications of a positive trend in education. International comparative investigations on academic achievement and longitudinal studies on life courses prove the need for and the importance of children's high intellectual knowledge. At the same time, new research initiatives and projects comply with the demand that aesthetic/cultural…
Descriptors: Poetry, Children, Aesthetic Education, Teacher Responsibility
Fares, Laila – ProQuest LLC, 2012
The study constituting the object of this research on one of the best French poets of the 17th century, yet one of the least known, Pierre Le Moyne, aims at restoring this great French poet in his right place, preparing and clearing the way in order to allow further research and stimulate future interest in his works. Pierre Le Moyne is not only…
Descriptors: French, Poets, Poetry, Authors
Nelson, Cary – Academe, 2012
The question, "Who will bankroll poetry?", succinctly embodies what is now a widespread recognition that the humanities may have more to lose in the current budget wars than either the sciences or a number of technical fields. The only budget war that can unite individuals, rather than divide them, is one arguing that too much is being…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Governance, Sciences, Humanities
Love, Christine T. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2012
In his 2004 book "A Hidden Wholeness," Parker Palmer makes explicit the unique qualities of the transformational "circle of trust." He describes a group of people embracing the paradox of "being alone together," where the only goal of the group is to invite the emergence of the soul of each individual, through…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Poetry, Questioning Techniques, Transformative Learning
Parr, Michelann; Campbell, Terry A. – International Review of Education, 2012
While universal literacy is one of the most pervasive targets of today's educational systems, it is at the same time perhaps the narrowest of all goals. Standardised testing reduces language and literacy to tasks associated with reading and writing. As learning communities become increasingly diverse, teachers, administrators and policy makers are…
Descriptors: Literacy, Literacy Education, Inclusion, Reflection
Berlin, Gail Ivy – College English, 2012
The encounter with literature of the Holocaust, saturated as it is with unfathomable grief, loss, terror, and death, presents its readers with difficulties rare in literatures not dealing with the extreme. Specifically, usual academic discourse lacks a register for addressing the intense emotions that Holocaust narratives or poetry may generate.…
Descriptors: World History, Altruism, Empathy, Poetry
Lepore, Jill – American Educator, 2011
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow used to be both the best-known poet in the English-speaking world and the most beloved, adored by the learned and the lowly alike, read by everyone from Nathaniel Hawthorne and Abraham Lincoln to John Ruskin and Queen Victoria--and, just as avidly, by the queen's servants. "Paul Revere's Ride" is Longfellow's best-known…
Descriptors: Poetry, Poets, United States History, Slavery
Ware, Tessa – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2015
Starting with the writer's own experience as a reader, this article discusses poetry by Eric Roach, Derek Walcott, Linton Kwesi Johnson, John Agard, Edward Baugh, Michael Smith and Velma Pollard. It explores the sense of place felt by writer and reader, going on to analyse the poets' use of Nation Language, poetic metre and intertextuality in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Poets, Oral Tradition

Peer reviewed
Direct link
