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Oatman, Eric – School Library Journal, 2008
This article profiles Orson Scott Card, the winner of this year's Margaret A. Edwards Award for his outstanding contributions to teen literature, specifically for Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow (1999, both Tor), a companion tale. Card, the magician behind both of these best sellers, is one of the nation's most prolific--and contentious--authors.…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Science Fiction, Authors, Writing (Composition)
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Cottle, Thomas J. – Schools: Studies in Education, 2008
This article offers yet another look at the challenge of teaching, in this case through the eyes of writers like John Passmore, Michael Novak, and Emmanuel Levinas. It is an attempt to combine the fundamental qualities of good teaching as set forth by Passmore, with the notion of "caritas", literally meaning willing the good of the other, and the…
Descriptors: Democracy, Ideology, Political Issues, Ethics
Bartlett, Thomas – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports on two authors' work that has been recycled by Routledge without giving credit or royalty. When William E. Deal casually flipped through "Theory for Performance Studies: A Student's Guide," published this year by Routledge, he noticed a few familiar sentences. After taking a closer look, Mr. Deal, a professor of religious…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Religious Education, Plagiarism, Intellectual Property
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Peck, Richard – English Journal, 2008
This article comes from a speech that Richard Peck gave at the Colorado Language Arts Society Regional Spring Conference in 2007. At our request, he prepared this excerpt for "English Journal" readers.
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Speeches, Phenomenology, Writing for Publication
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Lang, Harry – Sign Language Studies, 2007
In this presentation, the author shares a few of his personal experiences in narrating Deaf lives. Through these experiences in biographical writing, he has seen how such work can inspire young deaf people, entertain, open minds, educate, and make a difference in the quality of people's lives today. His goals for this presentation will be to show…
Descriptors: Deafness, Biographies, Writing (Composition), Authors
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Heuer, Christopher Jon – Sign Language Studies, 2007
Writers of D/deaf autobiographies or biographies face something of a dilemma when incorporating deafness into the stories they tell. This includes writers of D/deaf fiction because many such works are based on the same personal experiences from which autobiographies and biographies are derived. At heart, autobiographies and biographies are merely…
Descriptors: Conflict, Autobiographies, Deafness, Fiction
Jordan, Sandra – School Library Journal, 2007
Certainly, everyone in children's books knew Madeleine L'Engle's story--early publishing success, then years of polite rejection slips for the quirky manuscript she felt she "had to write." Twenty-six publishers had said no before John Farrar, one of the partners at Farrar, Straus & Giroux (FSG), was approached after church by a woman he knew…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Profiles, Authors, Personal Narratives
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Chatham-Carpenter, April – Journal of Research Practice, 2010
Autoethnographers have grappled with how to represent others in the stories they tell. However, very few have written about the need to protect themselves in the process of doing autoethnographic writing. In this paper, I explore the ethical challenges faced when writing about a potentially-ongoing disorder, such as anorexia, when the research…
Descriptors: Researchers, Ethnography, Autobiographies, Eating Disorders
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Styles, Morag – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
In the last twenty years, the teaching of reading in Britain has moved away from an interest in how children take delight in, and make meaning of, their literature to a preoccupation with a mechanistic approach to literacy which breaks down texts into bite-sized chunks and fragments reading into a series of isolated skills. Although an expensive,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Childrens Literature
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Social Education, 2010
In an effort to promote cultural literacy in children and young adults, the Racism and Social Justice Committee of the National Council for the Social Studies created the Carter G. Woodson Book Award. The purpose of the Woodson Award, given annually since 1974, is to promote the writing, publishing, and dissemination of sensitive and accurate…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Childrens Literature, Curriculum Development, African Americans
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Karpiak, Irene E. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2010
Instructors in academic settings may be naturally inclined to view their students from the outside, their style of communication, their level of competence and engagement, or their punctuality with attendance and assignments. Consequently, they risk missing the rewards afforded by the view from the inside. Autobiography can be an important means…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Story Telling, Time Perspective, Cultural Influences
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Basturkmen, Helen – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2009
This study investigates the ways writers comment on the results of their research. Making claims in the form of Commenting on Results is a key move in discussion of results sections. Using data drawn from published journal articles and master dissertations in Language Teaching, the study investigates how published academics and students writing…
Descriptors: Masters Theses, Journal Articles, Authors, Second Language Instruction
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Yagelski, Robert P. – English Education, 2009
In this frankly utopian essay, Robert Yagelski's theme is the transformative power of writing as an act in and of itself. He makes us reevaluate our motivation and point for teaching writing in schools and asks us to consider an agenda that will quite frankly scare teachers as he explains why we need an ontology of writing. (Contains 6 notes.)
Descriptors: Authors, Writing (Composition), Emotional Experience, Group Activities
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Dobson, Meaghan Hanrahan; Gillespie, Joanne S.; Fogle, Andy – English Journal, 2009
Three English teachers share their ideas on how their work as a writer helped them as a teacher. One teacher has found that the desire for meaningful response to her own writing has led her to evaluate her students similarly. A second teacher discusses how personal experience translates into teaching how to convey rejection in a useful and tactful…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Teacher Effectiveness, Writing (Composition), Authors
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Boyle-Baise, Lynne; Goodman, Jesse – Social Studies, 2009
In this article, the authors consider how the scholarship of a social studies icon, Harold O. Rugg, can influence the work of social studies scholars and teachers today. For the past year, the authors have studied Rugg's work, reading his writings and examining his textbook series. Their inquiries have unsettled their thinking, prompting them to…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Educational Research, Authors, Social Problems
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