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Witte, Arnd, Ed.; Harden, Theo, Ed. – Peter Lang Oxford, 2011
This book explores the idea of "intercultural competence", which, despite its current popularity across various discourses, has remained a vague and oscillating concept. Interculture lacks a universal definition and "competence" is not only a cognitive construct but also includes psychological traits such as attitudes,…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Interpersonal Competence, Second Language Learning, Research
Raina, Seemin A. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This study is based on 72 children's and young adult books that met the criteria of being about Muslims and published and circulated here in the U.S. They can be divided into the varied genres as 49 contemporary realistic fiction, 6 historical fiction, and 17 autobiographies, biographies, and memoirs. In-depth reading and coding were used to…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Muslims, Popular Culture, Content Analysis
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Gill, Sharon Ruth – Reading Teacher, 2007
The author argues that 20th-century children's poetry is often ignored and that the emphasis on teaching the adult poetry canon can give children mistaken ideas about what poetry is. Poetry is not a collection of "classics" whose meanings must be explained but something written to capture thoughts, feelings, and experiences. Ideas for teaching…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Children, Poetry, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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Bowey, Judith A.; Miller, Robyn – Journal of Research in Reading, 2007
This study examined word identification, phonological recoding efficiency, familiar word reading efficiency, orthographic choice for familiar words and serial naming speed as potential correlates of orthographic learning following silent reading in third-grade children. Children silently read a series of short stories, each containing six…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Story Reading, Silent Reading, Spelling
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Trifonas, Peter Pericles – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2007
In "The Name of the Rose," Umberto Eco essentially presents an educative vision of some basic semiotic principles that infuse the textual form of a popular fictional genre--the detective story. In effect, it characterizes the postmodernization of the traditional "whodunnit" moving the genre from the realm of "the real" or the plausible into the…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Linguistic Theory, Aesthetics, Authors
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Luce-Kapler, Rebecca – E-Learning, 2007
This article chronicles the experience of two writers working in digital technologies to write fiction. One writer, the author of the article, describes how her experience writing with the software "Storyspace" influenced her writing of print fiction, changing her processes and challenging her notions of genre. The other writer, a 16-year-old…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Fiction, Authors, Computer Software
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Beliavsky, Ninah – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2007
The author, an English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) teacher, believes that for stories to be a successful tool in classroom instruction, they need to have universal themes, and they must deal with situations that the students could readily identify with regardless of their language, culture, or religion. In this article, she introduces the unknown…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, English (Second Language), Teaching Methods, Relevance (Education)
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Milkovic, Marina; Bradaric-Joncic, Sandra; Wilbur, Ronnie B. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2007
This paper presents the results of research on information structure and word order in narrative sentences taken from signed short stories in Croatian Sign Language (HZJ). The basic word order in HZJ is SVO. Factors that result in other word orders include: reversible arguments, verb categories, locative constructions, contrastive focus, and prior…
Descriptors: Sentences, Nouns, Sign Language, Oral Language
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Savishinsky, Joel S. – Gerontology & Geriatrics Education, 2007
The purpose of this article is to describe an innovative teaching method in which American undergraduate students were asked to write haiku-a Japanese poetry form-about the lives of nursing home residents. Drawing on both their own experiences and May Sarton's novel "As We Are Now", class members created poems about institutionalization that…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Teaching Methods, Poetry, Nursing Homes
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Kirwan, Padraig – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
David Treuer's 1997 novel, "The Hiawatha," engages the traditional literary strategies employed by Native American writing, compares those strategies to earlier narratives (Native American and canonically American), offers a reassessment of indigenous novelistic structures, engages critical responses to tribal fiction, and does so in response to…
Descriptors: United States Literature, American Indian Literature, Novels, Comparative Analysis
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Castellano, Ursula; DeAngelis, Joseph; Clark-Ibanez, Marisol – Teaching Sociology, 2008
In this paper, we argue that novels, mysteries and nonfiction books can provide undergraduate students with an accessible and exciting place to explore sociological concepts. Using storytelling as a pedagogical tool, we teach students key theoretical ideas by analyzing the books in their specific sociocultural contexts. First, we put forward three…
Descriptors: Sociology, College Instruction, Introductory Courses, Undergraduate Students
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Dressen-Hammouda, Dacia – English for Specific Purposes, 2008
A student's emerging genre mastery is a complex process which involves learning not only relevant discoursal forms, but also a wide range of specialist knowledge frames. Recent research suggests that these knowledge frames are acquired during the development of a student's disciplinary identity. Although disciplinary identity clearly contributes…
Descriptors: Cues, Intellectual Disciplines, Geology, Specialists
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Hill, Dominique C. – Democracy & Education, 2008
This essay explores research and the representation of research as forms of advocacy. The "Mystory" format is particularly useful because it acknowledges the self as central to the interpretive process. Further, it implies a level of introspection and participation, both of which the author considers necessary in liberatory writing. Ultimately,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, African Americans, Qualitative Research, Music
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Norris, Stephen P.; Phillips, Linda M.; Smith, Martha L.; Guilbert, Sandra M.; Stange, Donita M.; Baker, Jeff J.; Weber, Andrea C. – Science Education, 2008
This paper describes a comprehensive set of studies designed to assess the potential for commercial reading programs to teach reading in science. Specific questions focus on the proportion of selections in the programs that contain science and the amount of science that is in those selections, on the genres in which the science is portrayed, on…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Reading Programs, Program Effectiveness, Literary Genres
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Rypson, Piotr – Visible Language, 1986
Traces the history of the labyrinth poem from the time of Augustus Caesar. (FL)
Descriptors: Design, Literary Genres, Literary History, Medieval Literature
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