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Spector, Karen; Murray, Elizabeth Anne – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2023
Purpose: Preservice English teachers are expected to use literary theories and criticism to read and respond to literary texts. Over the past century, two of the most common approaches to literary encounters in secondary schools have been New Criticism -- particularly the practice of close reading -- and Rosenblatt's transactional theory, both of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, English Teachers, Inquiry, Caring
Marta da Costa; Chris Hanley; Edda Sant – Curriculum Inquiry, 2024
This article explores possibilities for challenging liberal humanism, often expressed through cosmopolitanism, in global citizenship education (GCE) in European contexts, specifically England. Thinking with Sylvia Wynter's genealogy of the creation and universal imposition of "Man" as the dominant descriptive statement for the human and…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Humanities, Secondary School Teachers, Foreign Countries
Rejan, Andrew – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
In this narrative inquiry, the author dramatises the tensions and discoveries that emerged in a literature course for pre-service and in-service teachers in an English education graduate programme. The students' resistance to the instructor's choice of Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" as a central text led to reflection on responsible and…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, English Teachers
Anderson, Gill; Elms, Benjamin – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
Recent reforms to Initial Teacher Education in England are a continuation of a decades-long political project, aiming to change the whole social complex around teachers' professional education. But the most recent frameworks present some new inflections to the construction of learning, pedagogical relationships and difference. Positivist versions…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Teacher Education Programs, Political Influences, Teaching Methods
Gilbert, Francis – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2021
This article examines the deeper purposes behind the teaching of creative writing. To extend an analogy created by William Blake in his poem 'The Tyger', its furnaces are examined and its 'deadly terrors' clasped. It re-interprets the different views of teaching English, as drawn up in the United Kingdom's Cox Report. It argues that these views…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Creative Writing, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
Kelly Chandler-Olcott; Sarah M. Fleming; Janine L. Nieroda – English Education, 2016
This study takes a fine-grained look at the inaugural implementation of a high-stakes teacher performance assessment (the edTPA) from multiple perspectives and chronicles how participants used the reading, writing, and discussion of poetry to cope with and sometimes critique the edTPA. Teacher researchers sought to understand multiple perspectives…
Descriptors: Poetry, Coping, Criticism, Performance Based Assessment
Sheahan, Annmarie; Dallacqua, Ashley K. – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2020
Despite ongoing and prolific critical scholarship arguing for the widening of the secondary language arts curriculum, many practicing teachers are required or encouraged to teach a curriculum dominated by canonical texts. This is often the case at schools with highly diverse students whose varied cultural and linguistic backgrounds have…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Secondary School Students, Teaching Methods, English Literature
Wendy J. Glenn – English Education, 2014
Ethnically unfamiliar literature can provide opportunities for teacher candidates to expand their repertoire of available texts to better support students in their care. However, ethnically unfamiliar literatures can be difficult for readers to understand and appreciate. This article addresses this disconnect by infusing multicultural literature…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, English Teachers, Literature Appreciation, Literature
Lau, Sunny Man Chu – Australian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2020
Translanguaging theory highlights linguistic and semiotic resources as an integrated communicative repertoire for knowledge construction (Li, 2018). Language is learned and used in conjunction with other modalities through processes of resemiotization (Iedema, 2003) or transmediation (Suhor, 1984) where meaning is made and remade across modes.…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Action Research, College School Cooperation, English
De Barros, Eric L. – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2014
In the early 1990s, a popular American dorm-room poster luminously asserted crass materialism as "JUSTIFICATION FOR HIGHER EDUCATION". Self-consciously premised on the paradoxical success of my failure or failure of my success as a professor of Renaissance literature and culture, this essay draws on Erasmus's educational theory of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, English Teachers, Literature, College Faculty
Holbrook, Peter – English in Australia, 2013
The French philosopher Rene Descartes (1596-1650) wrote that "to read good books is like holding a conversation with the most eminent minds of past centuries and, moreover, a studied conversation in which these authors reveal to us only the best of their thoughts" (translation of the "Discourse on Method" by F. E. Sutcliffe…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Teachers, English Instruction, Literary Criticism
Johnson, Lindy L. – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2014
Drawing on sociocultural perspectives and New Literacies Studies this study uses Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) as a tool to closely analyse one way the Common Core State Standards in the United States are being produced, disseminated and consumed. The analysis focuses on a section of the CCSS, a model lesson given by one of the primary…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Sociocultural Patterns, Core Curriculum, State Standards
Glenn, Wendy J. – English Education, 2012
This qualitative study reveals the ways in which reading and reflecting on two counter-narrative young adult novels fostered opportunities for preservice English teachers to think more acutely about their understandings of race within and beyond the text. Participants expressed feelings of empathy with and connection to characters whose cultural…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Preservice Teachers, Educational Needs, English Teachers
Geller, Anne Ellen – Across the Disciplines, 2011
This article draws on a survey of 64 self-identified multilingual faculty from across the disciplines who currently teach with writing in English at the undergraduate and graduate level. The survey asked faculty about their linguistic experiences from childhood through the present and thus offers insights about the complexity of multilingual…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Standard Spoken Usage, College Faculty, Writing Instruction
Schieble, Melissa B. – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2010
In this article, the author challenges English teachers of literature to examine applications of reader response theory in teaching reading which posit that readers approach a text from two stances: "aesthetic" (emotional) or "efferent" (literal). The essay presents a case study of pre-service English teachers and adolescents'…
Descriptors: Reader Response, English Teachers, English Literature, Reading Instruction
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