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Lai, Emily Rose – ProQuest LLC, 2009
In response to test-based accountability (No Child Left Behind, 2001), schools and districts across the country are adopting a variety of supplemental assessments aimed at improving student performance. These interim assessments are administered more than once during the school year for the following purposes: (1) predicting student performance on…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Elementary Schools, Federal Legislation, Figurative Language
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Prosser, Brenton J. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2009
Research with young people who "do not fit the mould" requires innovative and unconventional methods, but what are the implications of such methods for scholarly representation? This paper reports on the development of such a method with students diagnosed Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and offers one view of the borderland…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Student Attitudes, Figurative Language, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
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Dukes, Charles; Lamar-Dukes, Pamela – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2009
In order to help teachers understand the importance of intentional design for inclusive education, this article describes the design process an engineer might use when designing a new project. If teachers learn to think like engineers, it is possible for them to design inclusive education. This conceptual design can then be combined with…
Descriptors: Inclusive Schools, Figurative Language, Secondary Schools, Teaching Methods
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Carter, Catherine – English Education, 2009
Teachers are never free from metaphor. Whether or not they consciously design and choose their own comparisons, teachers' work is continually constructed in metaphorical terms, perhaps more so than any other profession. Like Kristy, whose course of study was determined by a television ad lasting less than a minute, teachers and potential teachers…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Figurative Language, Clergy, Television Commercials
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Morton, Janne – English for Specific Purposes, 2009
The process of disciplinary socialisation has been linked to a gradual mastery of a discipline's genres. This article takes a view of genre, as indexing a wide range of often implicit understandings about knowledge creation and use within a discipline, and as fully rhetorical. Within such a framework, novice and near-expert examples of one…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Audiences, Academic Discourse, Language Styles
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Gillespie, Treena L.; Parry, Richard O. – Journal of Management Education, 2009
The student-as-employee metaphor emphasizes student accountability and participation in learning and provides instructors with work-oriented methods for creating a productive class environment. The authors propose that the tenets of performance management in work organizations can be applied to the classroom. In particular, they focus on three…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Business Administration Education, Classroom Environment, Work Environment
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Nilsen, Elizabeth S.; Graham, Susan A.; Smith, Shannon; Chambers, Craig G. – Developmental Science, 2008
Four-year-olds were asked to assess an adult listener's knowledge of the location of a hidden sticker after the listener was provided an ambiguous or unambiguous description of the sticker location. When preschoolers possessed private knowledge about the sticker location, the location they chose indicated that they judged a description to be…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Linguistics, Figurative Language, Preschool Children
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Kenner, Charmian; Al-Azami, Salman; Gregory, Eve; Ruby, Mahera – Literacy, 2008
Stories and poetry have long been considered a resource for the language and literacy development of bilingual children, particularly if they can work with texts in both mother tongue and English. This paper demonstrates that bilingual learning is also beneficial for second and third-generation children whose English is often stronger than their…
Descriptors: Action Research, Figurative Language, Multilingualism, Values
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Fleckenstein, Kristie S.; Spinuzzi, Clay; Rickly, Rebecca J.; Papper, Carole Clark – College Composition and Communication, 2008
This essay argues for the value of an ecological metaphor in conceptualizing, designing, and enacting research in writing studies. Such a metaphor conceives of activities, actors, situations, and phenomena as interdependent, diverse, and fused through feedback. This ecological orientation invites composition scholars to research rhetorically: to…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Research, Figurative Language, Rhetoric
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Clark, Carlton – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2008
The mock research paper combines creative writing with academic writing and, in the process, breaks down that binary. This article describes a writing assignment that offers an introduction to the college research paper genre. This assignment helps students focus on crafting an argument and learning genre conventions while postponing until the…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Research Papers (Students), Creative Writing, Classroom Techniques
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Zaino, Jeanne – Journal of Political Science Education, 2008
Studies show that metaphors are a useful way to help people understand new or difficult concepts. The research is largely silent, however, when it comes to the question of whether it is beneficial to ask students to go "beyond transference" by engaging in metaphoric critique and construction. This paper explores how critique and construction…
Descriptors: Political Science, Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, College Instruction
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Gorodetsky, Malka; Barak, Judith – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2008
The paper addresses the failure of the Professional Development Schools movement in bridging the cultural gap, existing between schools and academic institutions. A model, based on the "ecological edge", is suggested. It is believed that this metaphor has a higher potential for constructing collaborative communities because of the unique nature of…
Descriptors: Professional Development Schools, Teacher Education Programs, Figurative Language, College School Cooperation
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Enghag, Margareta; Niedderer, Hans – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2008
The theoretical framework "student ownership of learning" is developed both theoretically and with qualitative research. The metaphor "ownership" is related to the process towards meaning making and understanding and is seen as relevant especially to improve physics instruction. The dimension "group ownership of learning" refers to the groups'…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Qualitative Research, Ownership, Figurative Language
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Reveles, John M.; Brown, Bryan A. – Science Education, 2008
This research presents a case study of two teachers' emphasis on students' academic identity as a means of facilitating their science literacy development. These cases support a theoretical position that deconstructs the notion of normative science literacy into its constitutive components: (a) being scientific and (b) appropriating its literate…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Figurative Language, Scientific Literacy, Classrooms
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Zittoun, Tania – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2008
In this paper two models are proposed for analysing transitions in education. Firstly, transitions are the processes that follow ruptures perceived by people. They include learning, identity change, and meaning making processes. Secondly, processes of change are observed through a semiotic prism, articulating self-other-object-sense of the object…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Vocational Education, Semiotics, Psychology
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