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Peer reviewedGoldin, Eugene; Bordan, Terry – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1999
Reviews benefits of humor and the ways it can be used effectively in the counselor-client relationship. Suggests that the value in using humor includes strengthening rapport between the client and counselor, offering clients a less painful perspective of an experience, and providing a method of stress control. Provides counseling vignettes that…
Descriptors: Counseling, Counseling Techniques, Counselor Client Relationship, Humor
Peer reviewedScott, James Calvert; Broussine, Michael P.; Davies, Fred – Delta Pi Epsilon Journal, 2001
Managers in English social services agencies (n=10) identified themes related to their use of humor in social care settings: asserting invulnerability; coping with reality; controlling anxiety; working with ambiguity, paradox, and incongruity; resisting the dominant order; and making sense of organizational absurdities. Implications for business…
Descriptors: Administrators, Anxiety, Community Organizations, Coping
Garrett, Patti; Shade, Rick – Science Scope, 2004
Middle school students can be apprehensive toward the subject of science because, "we give them the message that science is the most important of subjects" (Flannery 1993). Why not consider using humor proactively as an effective teaching resource in the science classroom? The use of appropriate content-related humor can initiate and liberate…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Middle Schools, Science Instruction, Learning Activities
Done, Phillip – Instructor, 2006
Learning and laughter go hand in hand. Teachers certainly do not need to be stand-up comedians and spew out one-liners or dress up like clowns to make their classes fun. A little comedy can bring a lot of joy and learning opportunities to the classroom. In this article, the author shares several strategies on how teachers can put in laughter into…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Humor, Teaching Methods, Classroom Environment
Gartrell, Dan – Young Children, 2006
Friendly humor shows children that adults can be understanding and gracious; that the teacher is working with them and not against them; that the child as well as the teacher has a valued place in the classroom community. In this article, the author cites the benefits of using humor in a classroom environment. The author also provides tips on how…
Descriptors: Humor, Classroom Environment, Teacher Student Relationship, Classroom Techniques
Smierciak, Rich – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2004
A wonderful way to engage science students is to make them think a demonstration is not turning out the way the instructor intended. Basically, throw a little humor into teaching, and they will be hooked. Described in this article is a demonstration that uses Milk of Magnesia (MOM) as a visual and humorous method to review equilibrium chemistry…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Humor, Scientific Concepts
Gordon, Jane Anna – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2007
This essay briefly explores reflections of Anna Julia Cooper concerning the meaning and significance of moments within educational settings when the conditions for laughter and language break down. The author suggests that what she presented as moments of social and political failure have become the aims of contemporary, rigid nonpromotion public…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Humor, Humanism, Educational Philosophy
Aldridge, Arianna A.; Roesch, Scott C. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2008
Using daily diary methodology, 67 Mexican American adolescents completed measures assessing daily stressors experienced, specific coping strategies employed with reference to these stressors, and indices of psychological health over 5 consecutive days. With respect to coping usage, adolescents reported they most often used planning and least often…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Adolescents, Coping, Stress Variables
Copp, Martha; Kleinman, Sherryl – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2008
For decades, feminist teachers have been working in a chilly political climate. Rightwing critics claim that women's studies programs suffer from "insularity and narrowness, ideological bias, and a tendency toward misinformation." In the mainstream media, feminism is both vilified and trivialized. It's no wonder that many students doubt that…
Descriptors: Feminism, Ownership, Gender Bias, Womens Studies
Weitkamp, Emma; Burnet, Frank – International Journal of Science Education, 2007
"The Chemedian and the Crazy Football Match" is a comic strip developed by the authors to bring humor to aspects of the UK primary science curriculum. The comic strip was tested in six English primary school classes (years 3-5; ages 7-10); over 150 children participated in the project, together with six teachers. Children found the comic…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Science Curriculum, Humor, Foreign Countries
Garcia, Michael B.; Geiser, Lynne; McCawley, Corrine; Nilsen, Alleen Pace; Wolterbeek, Elle – English Journal, 2007
Four doctoral students and their professor contemplate the value of play in their high school and college classrooms. They discuss their experiences teaching children's books, student illustrations, and excerpts from magazines and newspapers that convey the intricacies of the English language through homonyms, homophones, homographs, and polysemy.…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Communication (Thought Transfer), Play, Creativity
Vartabedian, Robert A.; Vartabedian, Laurel Klinger – 1993
This paper examines some of the various findings contained in the current literature on humor in the workplace. In recent years, the communicative role of humor in the workplace has received attention--particularly in management-related publications. Consequently, the paper explores the emergence of humor as a management tool and the advantages…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Communication Skills, Humor, Interpersonal Communication
Caesar, Terry – 1998
This book presents a series of personal essays in which the author analyzes and dramatizes the significance of subordination in academic life. Academic life is examined in terms of issues (such as sexual harassment) and structures (such as the figure of the dissertation director) but especially in terms of texts. The book looks at the stream of…
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, College Faculty, Faculty College Relationship, Higher Education
Elementary English, 1975
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Education, Humor, Poetry
Peer reviewedGroch, Alice S. – Child Development, 1974
An assessment of the occurrence of three forms of humor (responsive, productive, and hostile) during the activities of 30 nursery school children. The three humor forms were not significantly correlated. The relation of the ongoing activities and the pattern of humor exhibited, along with the significant sex differences in humor expression are…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Humor, Individual Development, Preschool Children

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