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Truman, Sarah E. – Research in Education, 2023
This paper argues that the contemporary climate crises we see around our planet correlate with a colonial crisis of (literary) imagination. The author engages with Caribbean literary scholar Sylvia Wynter and other anti-colonial scholars to trace how the colonial literary imagination is rooted in the euro-western humanism and racial capitalism…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Literature Appreciation, English Literature, Climate
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Britten, Adrielle – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
War, like other stressful situations and experiences, entails a threat to one's subjective well-being, and war fiction for children represents this threat in different ways: some narratives minimise it, and others do not. War fiction, then, provides material for a case study of war and its impact on representations of subjective well-being (SWB),…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Well Being, War
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Biama, Teresia Muthoni; Oketch, Selline A.; Kimathi, Caroline Kinuu – African Educational Research Journal, 2022
This article focused on the voice of resistance and activism in Imbolo Mbue's "How Beautiful We Were" (2021). The novel voices the environmental injustices and the disastrous consequences of oil corporations. The people of Kosawa know that something is wrong with the land they're living on. They receive acid rain, rivers have grown…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Activism, Fiction, Justice
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Cremin, Teresa; Hendry, Helen – English in Education, 2022
This paper, drawing on Margaret Meek Spencer's work, considers the value of reflecting on literacy histories, whether of children, teachers, authors or academics. Margaret argued that teachers need to be open to literacy as lived, and to look, listen and learn about literacies that develop "without" direct instruction and stretch beyond…
Descriptors: Literacy, Literacy Education, Story Telling, Play
Vasilije Ivanovic – ProQuest LLC, 2024
We are becoming more and more aware of the marks our human existence is leaving on our global environment: the Anthropocene as discourse of that awareness is turning into a living and lived-in reality. I argue that such discourse cannot remain the purview of the natural and social sciences alone: culture must be recognized in its pivotal role of…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Science Fiction, Teaching Methods, Ecology
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Patricia Donner; Siv Lundström; Mia Heikkilä – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2024
This study seeks to understand how children express themselves socially and emotionally in play negotiations in early childhood education and care (ECEC) settings. It addresses the following research questions: What strategies do children employ in play negotiations? How do these strategies manifest themselves socially and emotionally? The study…
Descriptors: Young Children, Play, Early Childhood Education, Peer Relationship
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Steven A. Stolz; Maurizio Toscano – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
This essay uses a fictional narrative to explore the phenomenon of Pretendians in the contemporary university. Summer, who is one of the protagonists in the fictional dialogue, self-identifies as Indigenous, and is hired as an academic based on this identity, and according to affirmative action policies. Whilst working as an Indigenous academic…
Descriptors: Universities, Self Concept, Self Esteem, Professional Identity
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Dwyer, Meredyth; Martin-Chang, Sandra – Reading Teacher, 2023
Immersion into fiction is associated with many educational and social benefits. The current study compared read-alouds of a historical fiction novel and a nonfiction textbook to determine whether differences were observed in student's transportation, content learning, and socio-emotional development. In all, 41 students between the ages of 9 and…
Descriptors: Fiction, Reading Aloud to Others, Textbooks, Elementary School Students
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Mahmoud O. Jalambo; Nazmi A. Al-Masri; Refaat R. Alareer – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2023
This study reflects on an intensive fiction-writing training course conducted at the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG) in Palestine. The trainees were divided into two language-specific groups. The immediate outcome of this training course was 87 short stories. The study assessed the participants' satisfaction levels regarding the quality and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Skills, Social Values, Case Studies
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Nancy Taber – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2023
In this field note article, I discuss my in-progress historical novel about privateering in the 17th century to demonstrate how adult education feminist theories of situated learning have influenced my fiction-based research. I introduce situated learning in gendered communities of practice, explain women's experiences in (para)military…
Descriptors: Novels, History, Adult Education, Feminism
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Richter-Kovarik, Katharina – Journal of Museum Education, 2023
The Volkskundemuseum (Austrian Museum of Folklife and Folk Art) in Vienna considers itself to be a thoroughly democratic, polyphonic museum in which not only cooperation partners but also the interested public have their say. But what role does academically researched information play? In the project "Speaking of Objects" participants…
Descriptors: Museums, Artists, Foreign Countries, Audio Equipment
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Suk Meng Goh – InSight: A Journal of Scholarly Teaching, 2023
Superhero themes have been increasingly used in the teaching of a range of topics including business, humanities and science in recent years. Typically, characters from existing popular media are adopted for the teaching activities. On the other hand, customised characters that are developed from scratch allow the educator to have more control of…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Fantasy, Fiction, Teaching Methods
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Mino, Jack J.; Trobaugh, Elizabeth; Winters, Steven; Dutcher, James – Learning Communities: Research & Practice, 2019
An integrative tool that we have piloted in two LCs, the interdisciplinary index, is an integrative template that students use to make connections between disciplines. In the learning community, "Cli-Fi: Stories and Science of the Coming Climate Apocalypse," faculty developed the Climate-Change Stress Index (CCSI) that students used to…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Climate, Conservation (Environment), Ecology
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Shlomit Aharoni Lir; Liat Ayalon – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2024
This qualitative study explored the relationship between creativity, time, age, and the literary world among 16 award-winning Israeli writers in the second half of their lives. Based on data collected through in-depth interviews with the participants, the findings indicate that the writers' creativity in the second half of life was linked to…
Descriptors: Authors, Hebrew, Creativity, Time
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Laura Scholes – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2024
International studies have established that reading for enjoyment is linked to higher reading outcomes however there are local variations of the relationship and nuances associated with gender and economic contours. The aim of this study was to examine 318 Australian Year 3 (7 to 8-year-olds) boys' and girls' self-reported enjoyment for reading,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Literature Appreciation, Reading Attitudes
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