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Frymier, Ann Bainbridge; Weser, Benjamin – Communication Education, 2001
Focuses on the relationship of three student predispositions to their expectations for instructor communication behavior. Examines students' communication apprehension, grade and learning orientation, and humor orientation in relation to students' expectations for teachers' use of verbal and nonverbal immediacy behaviors, clarity behaviors, and…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Expectation, Higher Education
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Rieger, Alicja – Mental Retardation: A Journal of Practices, Policy and Perspectives, 2004
Perspectives on humor of families who have a member with a disability were examined using a qualitative methodology. Findings offer complex and challenging lessons for those who work with and for families of children with disabilities. I compared the traditional view that families of children with disabilities go through a constant process of…
Descriptors: Humor, Family (Sociological Unit), Children, Disabilities
Loizou, Eleni – Zero to Three (J), 2004
This article surveys existing research on the role of humor in early childhood. Babies and toddlers use humor to develop, apply, and expand their understanding of existing concepts; define themselves; and establish relationships with peers and caregivers. Humor helps young children view stressful situations in a nonthreatening way. As soon as…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Toddlers, Humor, Infants
Curriculum Review, 2005
This brief article discusses how carefully selected comic strips can become great teaching aids for (English Second Language) ESL instructors. They are beneficial in part because they provide brief conversations in English with pictures that help convey the meaning of the words. ESL teacher Dina Dahbany-Miraglia, author of Speaking American…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Language Teachers, Humor, English (Second Language)
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Hassani, Sadri – Physics Education, 2005
This article examines an amusing application of the concept of kinetic energy. Using some rudimentary physical notions, we have analysed the energetics of the motion of Santa Claus. The results, which are quite surprising, can be of interest to high school and early college physics educators when they teach kinetic energy, and energy conservation…
Descriptors: Science Education, Energy Conservation, Kinetics, Energy
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Stohl, Hollylynne; Harper, Suzanne R. – Mathematics Teacher, 2005
Todd Lee and colleagues share some of the common technology "pranks" and peculiarities from the three most common technology tools used in our classrooms: Microsoft Excel, graphing calculators, and The Geometer's Sketchpad. The "Surfing Note" includes a link to a collection of funny math cartoons from the Carolina Biological Supply Company.
Descriptors: Cartoons, Graphing Calculators, Technology Uses in Education, Spreadsheets
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Garrett, Michael Tlanusta; Garrett, J. T.; Torres-Rivera, Edil; Wilbur, Michael; Roberts-Wilbur, Janice – Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, 2005
Native American humor is explored through a brief discussion of the current literature regarding the use of humor in counseling and descriptions of various forms and communication styles of Native humor as spiritual tradition. Implications for multicultural awareness in the use of humor and possible use of Native humor in counseling with Native…
Descriptors: Humor, Role, Counseling Techniques, American Indians
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Boutte, Gloria Swindler; Hopkins, Ronnie; Waklatsi, Tyrone – Early Education and Development, 2008
Research Findings: This study content analyzed 29 frequently used children's books in pre-kindergarten through 3rd-grade classrooms. Although the books included European and African American literature, none of the 29 books addressed other ethnic groups in the United States, and only two included international perspectives. Male and middle…
Descriptors: African American Children, Early Childhood Education, Fantasy, African American Culture
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Staddon, Sally – Babel, 2007
In 2004, in response to the need to revise oral practice and assessment in the second semester of Beginners French at Monash University, an eight-week group-based theatre project was developed and trialled. A specially adapted version of Tardieu's absurdist play "Le Guichet" was used to give students the opportunity to focus on oral…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Role, Grammar, French
Morlan, Don B. – 1995
This paper traces the interest by academic popular culture scholars in the films of the American slapstick comedy group of the 1930s and 1940s, "The Three Stooges." Noting that between 1990 and 1995 at least 17 scholarly articles have been presented at various popular culture association meetings, the paper touches upon the universal and…
Descriptors: Comedy, Film Study, Higher Education, Humor
Robinson, James W. – 1995
Acknowledging that the fear of public speaking is widespread, this book guides the reader/communicator through 10 steps of writing and presenting a speech. The book is based on the idea that solid preparation and following a few basic rules makes public speaking easier and the finished product more dynamic. The book is divided into the following…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Autoinstructional Aids, Business Education, Communication Apprehension
Sherzer, Dina, Ed.; Sherzer, Joel, Ed. – 1987
This collection of papers is part of a growing scholarly literature dealing with puppetry and other forms of expressive culture which involve people looking at and reframing themselves and their social lives. The collection is intended to contribute to an understanding of the significance of puppetry as a form of popular culture and an…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Comedy, Creative Expression, Cultural Activities
Gruner, Charles R. – 1992
Satire is a genre long extant if not especially beloved in human history. Practitioners of the art claim the intent to persuade and educate through their works. Many quantitative studies have tested the persuasive effects of satire. In research on persuasion, A.D. Annis (1939) compared the effects of editorials and editorial cartoons and concluded…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Critical Reading, Higher Education, Humor
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Osborne, Nancy Seale – 1992
A brief questionnaire was sent to a random selection of 70 librarians in the State University of New York Librarians' Association Directory to determine the frequency of their use of humor at the reference desk and in the library instruction classroom, their perceptions of classroom humor, and their reasons for using humor in these situations.…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Higher Education, Humor, Librarian Attitudes
Blue, Thomas R.; And Others – 1991
Four teachers at Fort Lewis College, Colorado, use humor to send messages which "leap frog" resistance to the new and different, and go directly to the preconscious. The power in these humorous conceptual leaps is that the entering information sticks to the anger and passions of the human psyche, thus fostering retention. Linda Mack, a…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Environment, Higher Education, Humor
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