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Van Buskirk, William; London, Michael – Journal of Management Education, 2012
In this article, the authors argue that poetry provides a valuable if overlooked resource to the organizational behavior professor. The authors describe a workshop designed to evoke students' innate poetic metaphors to enable a more lively engagement with course material. Because many of students' personal, private, and emotionally charged…
Descriptors: Poetry, Workshops, Figurative Language, Student Attitudes
Moult, Annette – English in Australia, 2012
Rudyard Kipling wrote "The Road to Mandalay" in 1892 when Burma was a British colony and Queen Victoria was the Empress of India. In the poem, Mandalay is a city some 500 miles along the Irrawaddy River from the capital, Rangoon. British troops stationed in Burma were transported on the river by paddle steamers. The picture painted of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, Cultural Awareness, Asian History
Morgan, Anne-Marie – Babel, 2011
Stories and storytelling have been used for millennia to entertain, challenge and educate. As a shared form of language interaction, storytelling has engaged communities in developing and perpetuating common understandings of both language and culture, as critical foundations to harmonious societies. Stories and storytelling provide a rich source…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Story Telling, Second Language Instruction, Poets
Leigh, S. Rebecca; Cramer, Ron – English Journal, 2011
Writers know writing. They have acquired knowledge that enables them to successfully practice the art and craft of writing. The authors believe that writers can provide guidance that will help teachers and students learn writer's craft. In a unique format, the authors reference more than 30 well-known writers to raise issues about composition and…
Descriptors: Teachers, Writing Instruction, Poetry, Authors
Smith, Martha Nell – Liberal Education, 2011
The humanities are at the heart of knowing about the human condition; they are not a luxury. The erosion of support for the humanities and the perennial anxiety about the state of the humanities are systemic. The author contends that until people acknowledge this fact, they will keep lurching from one point to another, unable to recognize the…
Descriptors: Humanities, Poetry, Figurative Language, Citizenship
Burdick, Melanie – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2011
Different ways of writing and seeing can jointly provide a more multidimensional discussion of inquiry in education. This paper, which reports on findings of a qualitative study focused on action research with practicing teachers, describes and analyzes the ways poetic transcription of interview texts by both researcher and participant can provide…
Descriptors: Action Research, Researchers, Poetry, Cooperation
McDougall, Brandy Nalani; Nordstrom, Georganne – College Composition and Communication, 2011
Malea Powell's description of composition and rhetoric's scholarship on American Indian texts echoes assertions made by Scott Richard Lyons, who writes that while the literature of the past decade demonstrates the discipline's efforts at including Native ways of knowing in scholarly discussions and classroom curricula, representations of Native…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Foreign Policy, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Poetry
Garvin, Rebecca Todd – L2 Journal, 2013
This article describes a pedagogical project designed to optimize opportunities for individual, creative expression in L2 academic writing. Conducted in four EFL Composition classes in a university in mainland China, a writing project using poetry as a research methodology, first introduced by Hanauer (2010), was implemented and assessed for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Projects, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language)
Kelly, Lois; Brade, Alison – Primary Science, 2013
In this article, the authors describe a cross-curricular project designed to enhance learning about micro-organisms. This project includes studies in art and poetry, not subjects that teachers would think of linking with science, however research notes that scientists and poets share the ability to pay close attention to things, a key skill also…
Descriptors: Process Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Science Education, Poetry
Herrick, Richard S.; Cording, Robert K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Poetry reading is identified as a fun way to review chemistry topics and spark
student interest in the beauty and mystery of chemistry. A reading of the poem "Jerry-Built Forever" (on various aspects of hemoglobin) is used as an example; the poem is included in the article. Details of how the reading was performed and reactions of the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Poetry, Chemistry, Student Motivation
Oda Nuske, Tomoko – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Study abroad is an under-researched domain of language learning. Moreover, most investigations of this phenomenon adopt traditional structuralist approaches, wherein outcomes of study abroad are assessed solely in terms of proficiency gains as measured through conventional exams. The present study builds upon an emerging body of poststructuralist…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, College Students, Self Concept, English (Second Language)
Radford, Luis – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2010
In this article, I focus on what can be termed "the domestication of the eye"--that is to say, the lengthy process during which we come to see and recognize things according to "efficient" cultural means. This is the process that converts the eye into a sophisticated intellectual organ--a "theoretician" as Marx put it. In particular, I focus on…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Perception, Culture, Individual Development
Kizel, Arie – Policy Futures in Education, 2010
Can poetry be Diasporic? Can poetry free itself from the shackles of conformism? Can it be independent and divergent, and not seek a home? Is it capable of mustering its inner strengths and living without being enlisted by a collective that accords it power? This article argues that poetry is essentially dialectic. It has little vitality without…
Descriptors: Homeless People, Philosophy, Poetry, Alienation
Broad, Bob; Theune, Michael – College English, 2010
Although evaluation is at the core of many of the practices associated with poetry--including teaching, editing, selecting, judging, and even writing--and although there have been involved discussions of the assessment of verse, there has been no empirical investigation of the specific values which, one supposes, lie at the heart of such…
Descriptors: Poets, Poetry, Evaluation Criteria, Value Judgment
Mashhady, Habibollah; Noura, Mahbube – English Language Teaching, 2012
Throughout the history, translation has played an important role in conveying thoughts and knowledge from one nation to other nations. Apart from this importance, the act of translating is not simply changing a message from the source language into the target one; translation is an act of problem-solving. Sometimes it is difficult to solve…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Translation, Problem Solving, Second Languages

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