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Graves, Julie – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2010
Ressler's "Dramatic Changes" is a powerful guide for anyone brave enough to create a space for young people to discuss sexual orientation and gender identity. Her accessible style and tangible suggestions describe a creative and educationally sound approach to supporting youth in thoughtfully wrestling with one of the most controversial social…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity, Youth
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Allern, Tor-Helge – Research in Drama Education, 2008
Dramaturgy is an expression of how a drama or performance is composed, staged, and how it might involve the audience, or the class, as participators. The idea behind coupling dramaturgy and epistemology is that dramaturgy also expresses a view of knowledge, and that different dramaturgies therefore can be tied to different views of knowledge and…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Comparative Analysis, Epistemology, Drama
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Hanley, Mary Stone – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2011
Social justice is a complex theory and practice that includes the equitable redistribution of resources and the recognition of culture. This is a report about the Tubman Theater Project, a culturally relevant drama program in which African American middle and high school students confronted racism and classism, as well as their unexamined…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Drama, African American Students, Racial Identification
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O'Toole, John – Research in Drama Education, 2009
The centre of this article is a critical description of the development and production of "Everyday Theatre's" performed pretext, called "replay@timeout", including a detailed account of the devising process and the programme's content. The programme is located within the history and traditions both of theatre in education…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Drama, Dramatics, Art Activities
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Almansouri, Orubba; Balian, Aram S.; Sawdy, Jessica – English Journal, 2009
In this article, three students share how performing in Shakespearean plays have helped them appreciate his work. Orubba Almansouri describes how acting out the play "Romeo and Juliet" allowed him to understand the whole story better. While rehearsing and performing "A Midsummer Night's Dream," Aram S. Balian became a true Shakespeare fan,…
Descriptors: Drama, Acting, Literature Appreciation, Literary Criticism
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Wooster, Roger – Research in Drama Education, 2009
What does "inclusion" mean in practice? This article considers the work of Odyssey Theatre, a group of learning-disabled and non-learning-disabled performers as they put together a production with the support of professional theatre workers. Working processes are examined and the balance of empowerment and professional leadership…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Disabilities, Special Needs Students, Drama
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Ives, Denise – Research in the Teaching of English, 2012
Despite a growing awareness among teachers of the importance of recognizing and valuing a broader range of students' literate resources and experiences, including those that are culturally and linguistically linked, in many language arts classrooms students' literacy practices continue to be marginalized--remaining peripheral to, if not at odds…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Language Arts, African American Students, Literacy
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Öz, Hüseyin; Efecioglu, Emine – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2015
This article reports the findings of a study that investigated the role of graphic novels in teaching English as a foreign language (EFL) to International Baccalaureate students (aged 15-16) in TED Ankara College Foundation Private High School. Two intact 10th grade classes were randomly assigned to the control and experimental groups who studied…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Novels, Teaching Methods, English (Second Language)
O'Sullivan, Emer – Scarecrow Press, 2010
Children's literature comes from a number of different sources--folklore (folk- and fairy tales), books originally for adults and subsequently adapted for children, and material authored specifically for them--and its audience ranges from infants through middle graders to young adults (readers from about 12 to 18 years old). Its forms include…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Young Adults, Fairy Tales, Anthologies
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Warner, Lionel – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2011
In attempting to answer the question "How is disability represented in plays?" two approaches are considered, one semiotic and literary and the other concerned with notions of stereotyping drawn from disability studies. The five plays on which the discussion is based are school examination set texts, raising questions about classroom…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Drama, Literary Devices, Semiotics
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Akçadag, Tuncay – Eurasian Journal of Educational Research, 2012
Problem Statement: Training qualified teachers is possible through pre-service and in-service training programs. The in-service training of teachers in Turkey is primarily planned and delivered by the Directorate of In-Service Office at the Ministry of National Education (MoNE). In addition to this, some Non Governmental Organizations (NGO)…
Descriptors: Inservice Teacher Education, Classroom Techniques, Foreign Countries, Communication Skills
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Jeffers, Alison – Research in Drama Education, 2008
An emphasis on personal narratives characterises a great deal of participatory theatre practice with refugee groups. It is important to understand how these narratives are conditioned by bureaucratic performance if practitioners are to avoid re-enactments of victimhood in participatory projects. Bureaucratic performance concerns the legal and…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Refugees, Theater Arts, Victims of Crime
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Wake, Caroline – Research in Drama Education, 2008
This essay analyses "Through the Wire", an Australian verbatim play by and about asylum seekers, in order to investigate both the figure of the performing witness and the function of performing witness in and through theatre. It suggests that while the characters, actors and spectators involved in the play are all "performing…
Descriptors: Drama, Foreign Countries, Refugees, Audiences
Tolbert, Scott M. – Online Submission, 2009
This mildly academic tome consists mainly of a full length play that reports the findings of the case study research. The play is surrounded by some academic gobbledygook that should best be ignored. The play explores an older nontraditional student's foray into the academic world of a combined Masters of Education and Teacher Education program.…
Descriptors: Drama, Case Studies, Nontraditional Students, Constructivism (Learning)
Bernstein, Alan; Alan, Michael – Principal Leadership, 2009
A good high school cultural arts program puts students' creative talents on display, allows them to demonstrate innovative thinking, and gives them direct and indirect exposure to careers in the cultural arts. A truly outstanding program goes even further to emulate real-world authentic artistic experiences and to create multidisciplinary artistic…
Descriptors: Photography, High Schools, Creativity, Films
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