NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1,591 to 1,605 of 3,125 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Straits, William – Science Scope, 2007
The reading of science-related, historical nonfiction alone does not necessarily lead students to make personal connections to science or understand science as a human endeavor interdependent with culture, society, and history. Teachers must structure students' reading to ensure that they consider specific aspects of science while reading and…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Discussion Groups, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Harlin, Rebecca; Murray, Rosemary; Shea, Mary – Childhood Education, 2007
It is essential to develop future teachers' views of diversity, as contemporary teachers teach large numbers of students who are not like them linguistically or culturally. Teacher educators are responsible for preparing preservice and inservice literacy teachers to be effective in these increasingly diverse classrooms. They should continue to…
Descriptors: Novels, Teacher Educators, Literature Appreciation, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Standish, Paul – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2006
Thoreau's "Walden" is a text that has been misinterpreted in various ways, one consequence of which is a failure to appreciate its significance as a perfectionist and visionary text for education. This paper explores aspects of what might be called its teaching, especially via the kind of teaching that is offered by Stanley Cavell's commentary,…
Descriptors: United States Literature, Books, Reputation, Content Analysis
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Dunlop, Rishma – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2006
"Following the Curve of the Sentence: Notes From a Reader's Diary" is comprised of excerpts from the author's Reader's Diary, using experimental writing practices that can be modeled and used by English teachers in classrooms. The Reader's Diary is a subgenre of autobiography, memoir and poetic prose essay, a flexible, hybrid form of inquiry. The…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Autobiographies, Gender Issues, Sentences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Lesnick, Alice – Ethics and Education, 2006
This interpretive study proposes a framework with which to explore the ethical significance of classroom-based literacy practices. Overly narrow views of literature as a source of role models or moral precepts take insufficient account of the complexity of text and experience. Through analyses of telling examples from student writing and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Literacy Education, Ethical Instruction, Multicultural Education
Thompsen, Philip A. – 1992
In this paper, a creative narrative is used to illustrate an episode of flaming (defined as the fervent exchange of messages personally attacking or expressing defensiveness on computer-mediated communication networks) in an electronic mail exchange among a small group of communication scholars. The narrative allows for the presentation of an…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Creative Writing, Electronic Mail, Higher Education
Worden, Elizabeth – 1991
Ergonomics, or human factors, is the study of the relationship between people as functioning physical beings and the world in which they exist and this includes the textual material that they read. The presentation of textual material can be considered from two points of view: (1) the qualities of the text as impacted by the author; and (2) the…
Descriptors: Human Factors Engineering, Individual Development, Layout (Publications), Literacy
Pace, Ann Jaffe – 1992
The Jewish tradition of text study and commentary may convey important messages to educators because of its probable inherent interest and for possible recommendations for pedagogical practice that might be suggested by it. Beyond seeking guidance in religious and everyday affairs, the last 2000 years of Torah study reveals a passionate commitment…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Discourse Communities, Judaism, Reader Text Relationship
Peck, Jackie – 1992
A recurring theme within the prolific body of research on reader response is that of reader stance. Although several prominent theories of reader response spring from different perspectives, they share one common property: each describes reader response in terms of two opposed domains with particular responses falling somewhere on a continuum…
Descriptors: Models, Questioning Techniques, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Ratcliffe, Kris – 1994
Drawing on the work of Virginia Woolf, feminist instructors of college composition can help their students to develop their own voices by encouraging innovation and revision of mainstream discourses and ways of expression. If Woolf believed that women cannot escape the language of men, which not only constitutes the symbolic realm of phallocentric…
Descriptors: Females, Feminism, Higher Education, Language Role
Sullivan, Emilie P.; Yandell, Carol – 1990
A study investigated the religious and spiritual values in selected children's books. A second study investigated children's comprehension of the values messages. Thirty realistic fiction books which won, or were honor books for, the John Newbery Medals for 1974-1988 were selected. A modified version of the Values Category Scale was developed and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Content Analysis, Elementary Education, Fiction
Rabin, Annette T. – 1990
The history of the evaluation of non-English written materials through the use of various mathematical formulae is reviewed. This process began in 1939 with Tharp's work in French, and has continued until the present. Formulas have been developed for Spanish, Russian, German, Hebrew, Chinese, and Vietnamese. In Europe, modifications of the Flesch…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Foreign Countries, Readability, Readability Formulas
Roth, Robert G. – 1987
In order for students to write for a general audience, they must be able to address unknown readers. Research into how successful writers perceive their audience suggests that they write to an audience who is an idealized version of themselves. Writing for an unknown audience can be a writer's search for common ground, for a set of beliefs and…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audiences, Higher Education, Reader Text Relationship
McCombs, Maxwell E.; And Others – 1988
A study investigated whether three types of journalistic material--news stories, news articles, and news reports--could be reliably distinguished from one another, and whether these genres had differential appeal to audiences. News reports are defined as succinct reports of facts, while news articles represent a more analytic form of reporting,…
Descriptors: Media Research, Newspapers, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Iran-Nejad, Asghar – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1987
Two experiments investigated some of the cognitive and affective causes of interest and liking. Results did not support the hypothesis that degree of surprise per se causes interest. The hypothesis that interest and liking arise from different causes was supported. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Higher Education
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  103  |  104  |  105  |  106  |  107  |  108  |  109  |  110  |  111  |  ...  |  209