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Matthews, Gareth B. – Theory and Research in Education, 2005
In her very influential book, "The Point of Words" (1988), Ellen Winner presents strong evidence that children younger than six can understand and use metaphors, but not irony. Winner, however, fails to consider "philosophical story irony" in her research. This sort of irony is a little like dramatic irony. We have a case of such irony whenever…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Figurative Language, Preschool Children, Emergent Literacy
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Schwartz, Neil H.; Stroud, Michael; Hong, Namsoo S.; Lee, Tiffany; Scott, Brianna; McGee, Steven M. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2006
This investigation was designed to determine the influence of metaphorical priming on students' comprehension of issues and concepts pertaining to the U.S. Constitution when students studied the subject matter in a problem-based hypermedia instructional system. Sixty-five high school seniors studied the system for 5 days after receiving relevant,…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Hypermedia, Instructional Systems, High School Seniors
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Hsieh, Chung-Hsiang; Sun, Chuen-Tsai – International Journal of Instructional Media, 2006
From a constructivist point of view, the importance of MUDs (Multiple User Dungeons) in education is justified based on their community-forming, learning, and role-playing functions. The authors propose a typology for educational MUDs and discuss their individual instructional approaches in order to measure MUD potential in ten-os of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Figurative Language, Classification
Emdin, Christopher – Online Yearbook of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2006
This article articulates the results of an ongoing study in an urban school in New York City in which student and teacher researchers engage in practices that support the science success of the schools' predominantly Latino/a and African American population. By situating the study in the nature of corporate and communal practices, the article…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Academic Achievement, Teacher Researchers, Teaching Methods
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Banaji, Shakuntala – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2006
The media landscape in urban India has changed so rapidly in the past 10 years that it is not easy to consider the ways in which these changes interact with people's lives and beliefs. Apocalyptic pronouncements about the ways in which MTV-style television, films and the Internet are destroying "genuine" Indian culture by promoting…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Indians, Figurative Language, Audiences
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McKeough, Anne; Genereux, Randy; Jeary, Joan – High Ability Studies, 2006
Narrative understanding has been identified as a primary mode of human thought that informs us about the nature, causes and consequences of human actions and interactions and, as such, underlies social knowledge. Although considerable work has focused on exceptional narrative ability in children aged 12 years old or younger, to date there have…
Descriptors: Preadolescents, Adolescents, Language Usage, Linguistics
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Wright, Sheila – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2006
In this article "teacher as public art" is used as a metaphor to describe and explain the all-too-common perceptions and experiences of professors of color, especially women, within the academy. Highlighted throughout this discussion are: (1) the relevance of locating self within the context of people and place; and (2) the importance of bringing…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Females, Teacher Attitudes, History
McCarthy, William Bernard – 1992
The principle of empathic learning (involving activities that help students feel what it is to be like someone else) can be used to teach poetry, a material about which students have strong prejudices, and an activity they cannot imagine themselves ever doing or being interested in. First, students are presented with the conception that people…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Writing, Empathy, Figurative Language
Gough, Noel; Kesson, Kathleen – 1992
As suggested by current work being done in narrative inquiry, modern environmental educators participate in numerous stories by which they construct and reconstruct their personal and professional worlds. Modernist discourses have cultivated stories of the earth in which the earth is depicted as an object of instrumental value, a machine, rather…
Descriptors: American Indians, Cultural Context, Discourse Modes, Ecology
German, Kathleen M. – 1989
The use of figurative language permeates American Indian discourse, across differences in time, geography, and tribal culture. Traditionally, the presence of figurative language has been attributed to a compulsion for decoration and to a need for mnemonic devices. However, neither of these explanations accounts for changes in the rich tapestry of…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Discourse Analysis
Ramsey, Shirley A. – 1987
To investigate the hypothesis that cognitive rules govern writing behavior, Carter's signaled stopping technique was used to study language and cognitive effects in public relations messages. Principles from Grunig, et al (1985) Axiomatic Theory of Cognition and Writing, which proposed premises, axioms and definitions about writing, were applied…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Figurative Language, Higher Education, Language Processing
Fine, Marlene G. – 1986
The mythical community of Lake Wobegon, created by Garrison Keillor and presented each week through the public radio show "A Prairie Home Companion," is the place to which everyone wants to return. A town devoid of newfangled technology, where life goes on pretty much as it always has, Lake Wobegon offers respite to listeners who daily…
Descriptors: Audiences, Broadcast Industry, Creative Writing, Figurative Language
Hirst, Lois A.; Slavik, Christy – 1988
Mass education in the United States from its inception was concerned with inculcating routine abilities, simple computation, reading basal texts, and reciting religious and civic codes. It did not take into consideration interpretation or creativity. Native Americans have had difficulty fitting into this mold of standardization. Traditional Native…
Descriptors: American Indians, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development
Taylor-DeLain, Marsha; And Others – 1983
To determine what positive benefits to school learning might accrue from competence in Black English, a study explored the hypothesis that the rich and varied experience that black youth typically have with figurative language outside of school would enhance their understanding of figurative language in school texts. Subjects included 157 black…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Cultural Background, Elementary Secondary Education, Figurative Language
McKenzie, Hope Bussey – 1978
Intended for college teachers and students of Anglo-Saxon literature, this paper provides an overview of the sophisticated poetic devices used by the "Beowulf" poet. The paper examines how old English words for color range in hues in a way that modern English words do not, and how these words for color are used in "Beowulf."…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, Figurative Language, Folk Culture, Imagery
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