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Showing 241 to 255 of 286 results Save | Export
Schulten, Katherine – 1999
This guide contains a detailed, six-section curriculum that frames the debate over Mark Twain's novel "Huck Finn," asks students to think critically about it, and helps them to see the novel in a richer historical and literary context. The first section introduces students to the history of the controversy surrounding "Huck…
Descriptors: Characterization, Critical Reading, Irony, Listening Skills
Fahey, Ruth Ann – Independ Sch Bull, 1969
A satirical attack on traditional methods of instruction which have little meaning for the students. Essay presented in the form of a game in which the teachers oppose the students. (AP)
Descriptors: Conventional Instruction, Instructional Materials, Relevance (Education), Satire
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Rowley, Glenn L. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1982
Survey research establishes that beardedness correlates with many desired outcomes and supports that a minimal level of beardedness be set as a prerequisite for high school graduation. Research problems of concept clarification, domain-definition, instrument development, and standard setting methods are discussed. The political considerations of…
Descriptors: Administrative Principles, Criterion Referenced Tests, Cutting Scores, Dress Codes
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Browne, Stephen H. – Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 1992
Examines the 18th-century rhetorical convention of misogynist satire and how it shaped attitudes toward women speakers. Focuses not so much on the formal properties of the satire but on its convention and content as modes of insinuation. Surveys prominent journals, newspapers, magazines, and reviews of the period. (TB)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Content Analysis, Eighteenth Century Literature, Females
Fine, Marlene G. – 1986
The mythical community of Lake Wobegon, created by Garrison Keillor and presented each week through the public radio show "A Prairie Home Companion," is the place to which everyone wants to return. A town devoid of newfangled technology, where life goes on pretty much as it always has, Lake Wobegon offers respite to listeners who daily…
Descriptors: Audiences, Broadcast Industry, Creative Writing, Figurative Language
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Ortego, Felipe, Comp.; Conde, David, Comp. – 1975
Over 200 participants from 10 states and 17 universities attended "The First National Symposium on Chicano Literature and Critical Analysis." Five of the papers presented at the symposium are given in this publication. The papers cover Chicano poetry, novel, drama, and popular folklore humor. "National Character vs Universality in…
Descriptors: Analytical Criticism, Characterization, Conferences, Drama
Bauer, Joy S.; VanZandt, Priscilla – 1971
The purpose of the course on satire in the Quinmester Program is to make the student more aware of satire in literature and the other media, in order to add to his enjoyment of literature and add to his perception of human nature. The course includes the study of art, cartoons, movies, television, and editorials in addition to literature.…
Descriptors: Caricatures, Course Content, Course Objectives, Curriculum Guides
Riga, Frank P. – 1995
Instructors and students of literature should look to George McDonald Fraser's "Flashman: From the Flashman Papers, 1839-1842" for a clever critique of 19th-century notions of character, virtue, and moral teleology. Written to criticize Thomas Hughes's famous 19th-century novel, "Tom Brown's School Days," Fraser's 20th-century…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Educational History, English Literature, Ethical Instruction
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Wallace, Danny P.; Van Fleet, Connie – Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 1997
Presents a humorous treatment of the "sessio taurino" (or humanistic inquiry) technique for describing changes in technological models. The fundamental tool of "sessio taurino" is a loosely-structured event known as the session, which is of indeterminate length, involves a flexible number of participants, and utilizes a…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Group Discussion, Humor, Information Science
Lucas, Robert A. – 1992
This book presents a lighthearted examination of the trials and tribulations of university research development and grant acquisition. Fun is poked at the grant acquisition process through a series of characters and their advice: Ann Granters (advice column format) gives directions on how to "wire" a proposal; Bogie tells how to squeeze the most…
Descriptors: Budgeting, Grants, Grantsmanship, Higher Education
ARMOUR, RICHARD – 1958
VARIOUS ASPECTS OF WRITING LIGHT VERSE, EITHER FOR FUN OR FOR PUBLICATION, ARE DISCUSSED IN THIS BOOK--(1) THE NATURE AND APPEAL OF LIGHT VERSE AND ITS MANY VARIETIES, (2) SUBJECTS WHICH LEND THEMSELVES BEST TO THE LIGHT-VERSE TREATMENT, (3) THE APPLICATION OF WHAT ONE HAS LEARNED FROM READING, THINKING, AND CLOSELY OBSERVING HUMAN FOIBLES, (4)…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Creative Expression, Creative Writing, English Instruction
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Fletcher, J. B. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1987
Details (facetiously) a study that examines why English students do not turn their work in on time. Concludes that numerous distractions, such as "Dear Abby," are responsible for sidetracking students doing research. (NKA)
Descriptors: Assignments, Behavior Patterns, English Instruction, Humor
Snider, Robert C. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1983
Satirical projection of the future of education up to 1994 when, says the author, public school enrollment will have dropped to only 13.2 percent of all school children and tuition tax credits will have led to a greatly expanded enrollment in private schools and increasing computer sales. (JBM)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computers, Futures (of Society), Private School Aid
Gruner, Charles R. – 1995
Literati differ markedly on whether satire is persuasive. Accordingly, a study tested whether partisans of a political candidate would fail to perceive the thesis of satire ridiculing their candidate; further, it tested whether they would perceive the thesis of satire ridiculing an opposing candidate. Subjects, students at the University of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Political Attitudes, Political Candidates
Elkins, Robert J.; Bruggemann, Christian – 1971
American comic strips and cartoons can be useful in English-as-a-second-language classes. They introduce variety and provide an inside look into American life and thought. Many current popular comic strips have cultural, social, and political significance and discuss the American way of life, society, and the individual. The…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Cultural Context, Cultural Education, English (Second Language)
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