Publication Date
In 2025 | 1 |
Since 2024 | 35 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 177 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Buzacott, Lucy | 3 |
McLean Davies, Larissa | 3 |
Abdul Samat, Norhanim | 2 |
Abdullah, Tina | 2 |
Chapman, Susan | 2 |
Elliott, Victoria | 2 |
Foley, Joan | 2 |
Kelly, Lucy | 2 |
Kneen, Judith | 2 |
Maria Prozesky | 2 |
Naomi Nkealah | 2 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Higher Education | 86 |
Postsecondary Education | 86 |
Secondary Education | 67 |
High Schools | 20 |
Elementary Education | 6 |
Junior High Schools | 6 |
Middle Schools | 6 |
Grade 10 | 2 |
Grade 7 | 2 |
Grade 8 | 2 |
Grade 9 | 2 |
More ▼ |
Audience
Teachers | 1 |
Location
United Kingdom (England) | 18 |
Australia | 10 |
Indonesia | 9 |
United Kingdom | 8 |
Iran | 6 |
South Africa | 6 |
Algeria | 5 |
China | 5 |
Hong Kong | 5 |
Turkey | 5 |
Saudi Arabia | 4 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
Test of English for… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Rhiannon Julia O'Grady; Daniel Cassany; Janine Knight – English in Education, 2024
This qualitative Action Research study explores a group of lower secondary pupils' use of social semiotic resources and traditional and digital tools to develop an understanding of "Romeo and Juliet" at a private trilingual school in Barcelona. Forming part of a wider study undertaken by an English language and literature teacher, it…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Literature, Teaching Methods, Private Schools
Naomi Nkealah; Maria Prozesky – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
As university teachers of literature, we tend to accept the rhetoric that students lack the capacity to interpret texts meaningfully, without questioning our own biases about the kinds of meaning we expect them to elicit from texts. Often, these are meanings that have little relevance to students' own social or professional lives. In this article,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
Ullah, Safi; Moniruzzaman; Hossain, Md. Mahroof – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2022
During the COVID-19 pandemic situation, the English literature learning and assessment have moved from classroom form to online form. This study emphasizes on the challenges of online English literature learning and students' experience and expectation regarding online English literature course assessment in private universities of Bangladesh.…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Electronic Learning, English Literature, Private Colleges
Baah, Eric Adjei – Waikato Journal of Education, 2022
In this article, I present how I navigated unexpected apprehension that I faced while communicating with teacher participants during my PhD data collection (via interviews, observations and document study). I mediated the apprehension by strategies such as disclosing my teacher identity, expressing an interest in their practice and assuring them…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Research Problems, Interpersonal Relationship, Foreign Countries
John K. Simango – Perspectives in Education, 2023
In South African secondary schools, critical reading is encouraged by the CAPS policy document, but still some learners, even at university level, find it difficult to utilise critical reading, a skill that is believed by scholars to promote critical thinking skills. This alternative, valuable kind of text study called critical reading escalates…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Foreign Countries, English Literature, Learner Engagement
Elliott, Victoria; Olive, Sarah – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2023
In this paper, we report data from the first national survey of secondary Shakespeare teaching in the UK, conducted online in 2017-18 with a sample of 211 teachers distributed throughout Wales, England, Northern Ireland, and Scotland. In this article, we outline the pedagogical practices which are dominant. Specifically, we examine the group of…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Literature, Foreign Countries, National Surveys
Riddell, Allen; Bassett, Troy J. – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2021
Library digitization has made more than 100,000 nineteenth-century English-language books available to the public. Do the books that have been digitized reflect the population of published books? An affirmative answer would allow book and literary historians to use holdings of major digital libraries as proxies for the population of published…
Descriptors: English Literature, Nineteenth Century Literature, Electronic Libraries, Novels
Mackey, Margaret – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
This article presents a small case study of two childhood readers of Enid Blyton's Famous Five series, who meet in a research project devoted to a different but related topic. One is Indian by birth and background, the other, Canadian. Their experience of this series is separated by distance (many thousands of miles), time of reading (nearly fifty…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Reader Response, Fiction, Memory
Daniel Dougherty – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
In the era of remote learning courses, the humanities instructor struggled more than most to translate the many familiar techniques of close reading to the unfamiliar realm of technology. Oftentimes instructors have depended on facsimiles of traditional methods: a shared passage annotated by the class digitally, or small groups sent to individual…
Descriptors: Documentation, Humanities, Critical Reading, Distance Education
Georgette Humbert – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
This essay considers what happens in the English classroom when teaching the same lesson to two classes considered to be of different levels of 'ability'. It explores what happens during a discussion about the fate of Eva Smith in "An Inspector Calls" when students' reading of a text diverges. I consider what teachers do when students'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Secondary School Students, English Literature
Islam, Robiul; Das, Happy Kumar – Journal of Educational Technology, 2023
This study explored the views of teachers' and English graduates' on the reflection of soft skills for employability in English literature. Also, the study discovers how soft skills can be embedded within classroom practice among English graduates. A qualitative study methodology and interpretive paradigm were used to make sense of the complicated…
Descriptors: Soft Skills, Teaching Methods, College Students, College Faculty
Translanguaging in English-Medium Instruction (EMI): Examining English Literature Content Classrooms
Atas, Ufuk – Turkish Journal of Education, 2023
Recently, translanguaging has begun challenging and replacing English-only policies in English-medium instruction (EMI) contexts, advocating that bi/multilingual learners may better internalise information in two or more languages. Within this perspective and using linguistic ethnography as the framework, this case study examines the…
Descriptors: Language Usage, English Literature, Language of Instruction, English (Second Language)
Jasmin Jusufi; Esad Kurejsepi; Bajram Cupi – Pegem Journal of Education and Instruction, 2023
This paper explores the effectiveness of online teaching methods during COVID-19 pandemic due to the closure of educational institutions. Online classes were introduced as a strategy of bridging the learning gap created by the pandemic, with the goal of maximizing learning opportunities and reaching remote areas. The University of Prizren…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Online Courses, Program Effectiveness, Student Attitudes
Rejan, Andrew – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2023
This narrative inquiry explores the author's attempt to teach Henry James's novella "The Turn of the Screw" in a high school English class, making the celebration of confusion -- in the tradition of John Dewey -- the cornerstone of the experience. The students' interpretive discourse is analysed, prompting reflection on promising…
Descriptors: High School Students, English Literature, English Teachers, Critical Reading
Wenxia Liu; Yunsong Wang – European Journal of Education, 2024
Artificial intelligence (AI)-driven learning has become an irreversible trend in foreign language education. Scholars are increasingly focusing on this field, yet few have examined its impact within English literature classes. To fill this gap, we designed an 8-week intervention study with mixed methods and recruited 90 students, with 42 in the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Critical Thinking, English Literature