Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 94 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 580 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 1623 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 3725 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Ortony, Andrew | 10 |
| Mashal, Nira | 9 |
| Pexman, Penny M. | 9 |
| Boers, Frank | 8 |
| Pramling, Niklas | 8 |
| Haglund, Jesper | 7 |
| Joseph Gagen Stockdale III | 7 |
| Al-Jarf, Reima | 6 |
| Amin, Tamer G. | 6 |
| Cacciari, Cristina | 6 |
| Craig, Cheryl J. | 6 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Teachers | 152 |
| Practitioners | 86 |
| Researchers | 40 |
| Students | 23 |
| Counselors | 12 |
| Administrators | 5 |
| Parents | 4 |
| Policymakers | 2 |
| Community | 1 |
Location
| Turkey | 394 |
| Australia | 137 |
| United Kingdom | 103 |
| Canada | 92 |
| China | 86 |
| United States | 77 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 54 |
| New Zealand | 44 |
| Germany | 42 |
| Sweden | 39 |
| Israel | 38 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Thulin, Susanne; Pramling, Niklas – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2009
In this study a particular kind of figurative language, so-called anthropomorphic speech, is analysed in the context of science activities in a preschool setting. Anthropomorphism means speaking about something non-human in human terms. Can any systematic pattern be seen with regard to when such speech is used? Do children and/or teachers…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Speech Communication, Figurative Language, Preschool Children
Davis, Kenneth W.; Weeden, Scott R. – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2009
For tens of thousands of years, teachers have used stories to promote learning. Today's teachers can do the same. In particular, we can employ Joseph Campbell's "monomyth"--with its stages of separation, initiation, and return--as a model for structuring learning experiences. Within the monomyth, one tempting role for teachers is the sage, but we…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Curriculum Design, Figurative Language, Story Telling
Patson, Nikole D.; Darowski, Emily S.; Moon, Nicole; Ferreira, Fernanda – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009
Using a forced-choice question-answering paradigm, K. Christianson, A. Hollingworth, J. F. Halliwell, and F. Ferreira (2001) showed that the original misinterpretation built during the analysis of a garden-path sentence lingers even after reanalysis has occurred. However, their methodology has been questioned (R. P. G. van Gompel, M. J. Pickering,…
Descriptors: Sentences, Sentence Structure, Methods, Verbs
Boyd, Fenice B.; Bailey, Nancy M. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2009
Censorship is about restriction and control of intellectual development, and the danger when educators fail to investigate what censorship truly means--for example, by attaching it to metaphors with abundant entailments--is that people will merely "shrug off" the removal of books from libraries and classrooms and fail to see challenges…
Descriptors: Censorship, Figurative Language, Books, Novels
Fulford, Amanda – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
In this paper I consider one aspect of how student writing is supported in the university. I focus on the use of the "writing frame", questioning its status as a vehicle for facilitating student voice, and in the process questioning how that notion is itself understood. I illustrate this by using examples from the story of the 1944 Hollywood film…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing Instruction, Films, Criticism
Wallace, Susan – Educational Action Research, 2010
This paper explores ways in which student-teachers in the Lifelong Learning sector are able to draw on fictionalised accounts of their own teaching practice experiences in order to gain a clearer understanding of their models and expectations of professionalism, and of how they, as individuals, locate their current position within the profession…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Action Research, Adult Education, Lifelong Learning
McDaniel, Kathryn N. – History Teacher, 2010
A significant image of classroom lectures is the one presented in J. K. Rowling's "Harry Potter" series. At Harry's Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, the most torturous class is easily History of Magic, which is, incidentally, the only class in the school taught by a ghost. Being taught by a ghost could be quite exciting: not so in…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Lecture Method, Figurative Language
Filippova, Eva; Astington, Janet Wilde – Child Development, 2010
To bridge the social-reasoning focus of developmental research on irony understanding and the pragmatic focus of research with adult populations, this cross-sectional study examines 5-, 7-, and 9-year-olds' (n = 72) developing understanding of both social-cognitive and social-communicative aspects of discourse irony, when compared with adults (n =…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Theory Practice Relationship, Social Cognition, Interpersonal Competence
McLoughlin, Claudia – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2010
This article aims to reflect on the lessons learnt from using a psychodynamic approach to offering onsite therapeutic child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) in four pupil referral units (henceforth referred to as PRUs). The PRUs cater for six- to 16-year-old children and adolescents permanently excluded from mainstream schools. The…
Descriptors: Health Services, Mental Health Programs, Discussion Groups, Mental Health
Gallagher, Chris W. – College English, 2010
In this essay, the author explores the curious irony that a discipline and a profession organized around the study and teaching of language and literacy have had so little influence on the discursive constructions (policies) that govern the teaching of language and literacy. Part of the problem, as the author sees it, is simply that so little…
Descriptors: Educational History, Figurative Language, Literacy, Interpersonal Communication
Yasuda, Sachiko – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2010
Recent research in cognitive linguistics has shown that idiomatic phrases are decomposable and analyzable and that the individual words in idiomatic phrases systematically contribute to the overall figurative interpretations. This cognitive linguistic view suggests that enhancing awareness of conceptual metaphors embedded in the individual words…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Verbs, Japanese
Nygreen, Kysa – Ethnography and Education, 2010
This article examines the work of three urban youths as they designed and taught a social justice class at an urban continuation high school in California, USA. Drawing from a two-year ethnographic study of the project, it shows that youth participants constructed a set of imagined binaries to frame teachers, schoolwork and coercion "in…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Figurative Language, Ethnography, Social Change
Pierce, Joana; Robisco, Maria del Mar – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2010
Higher education institutions across Europe are currently involved in a major process of reforming and restructuring as part of the Bologna process which stresses the role of competences and outcomes in curriculum design. This paper reports on the findings of a research project whose purpose was to assess the clarity and the appropriate…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Curriculum Design, Outcomes of Education, Engineering
Beauchamp, Gary; Kennewell, Steve; Tanner, Howard; Jones, Sonia – Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 2010
The teacher's role has often been described as one of "orchestration", and this musical analogy is a powerful one in characterising the manipulation of features in the classroom setting in order to generate activity or "performance" which leads to learning. However, a classical view of orchestration would fail to recognise the extent to which…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Role, Music, Figurative Language
Rothman, Jason; Judy, Tiffany; Guijarro-Fuentes, Pedro; Pires, Acrisio – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2010
This study contributes to a central debate within contemporary generative second language (L2) theorizing: the extent to which adult learners are (un)able to acquire new functional features that result in a L2 grammar that is mentally structured like the native target (see White, 2003). The adult acquisition of L2 nominal phi-features is explored,…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Semantics, Form Classes (Languages)

Peer reviewed
Direct link
