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Showing 151 to 165 of 570 results Save | Export
Dragga, Sam – Technical Writing Teacher, 1991
Investigates the responding styles of technical writing teachers and of technical editors and supervisors. Finds that teachers usually ask questions rather than suggest or direct. Asserts that teachers might improve their commentary by adapting the responding techniques of technical editors and supervisors, including explicit and systematic usage…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Higher Education, Reader Response, Teacher Effectiveness
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Danielson, Kathy Everts; Tighe, Patty – Reading Horizons, 1994
Discusses at-risk students' attitudes toward reading and their varying levels of response to literature. Finds that students' attitudes toward reading improved after one semester of discussion groups. Presents excerpts from classroom discussions. Discusses elements to encourage response. (RS)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Grade 3, High Risk Students, Primary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Sheridan, Daniel – English Journal, 1993
Describes a method for teaching students how to write about literature that asks students to produce numerous "parts" in one large project. Provides a basic outline and explanation of the assigned tasks. (HB)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, Literary Criticism, Reader Response
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mitchell, Diana – English Journal, 1998
Offers 50 diverse suggestions intended to offer students new ways to think about a piece of literature, new directions to explore, and ways to respond with greater depth to the books they read. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Class Activities, English Instruction, Language Arts
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Tyler, Lisa – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Discusses Margaret Atwood's "provocative and funny" short story "Rape Fantasies," and describes how, when teaching this story the author encourages students to sympathize with Estelle (the narrator) before they judge her (instead of rushing to achieve closure and begin interpretation). (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation, Rape
Elleman, Barbara – Teaching and Learning Literature with Children and Young Adults, 1997
Notes that an event described in first-person will vary from one told from a third-person point of view or from an omniscient viewpoint. Offers a variety of books written from different viewpoints on the Lewis and Clark expedition (1804-1806). Gives 10 questions for stimulating student response. (PA)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Biographies, Class Activities, Junior High Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Martin, Sarah H.; Martin, Michael A. – Reading Improvement, 2001
Describes two classroom activities that can be implemented in accordance with the best practices revealed by current research on reading instruction with learning disabled students. Describes what research suggests for promoting comprehension for students with reading difficulties. Describes instructional sequences for two literacy activities,…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Elementary Education, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Turner, Christopher – English in Education, 1996
Argues that a fresh look at some aspects of reader response theories could have a revitalizing effect on classroom practices. Suggests that for students to respond to texts, they will have to make more use of what happens while they read. Exemplifies some reader response strategies through the author's own responses to a short story. Suggests…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Reader Response, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Pike, Mark A. – English in Education, 2000
Provides an explicit critique of existing poetry teaching practices which illustrates how adolescents, particularly boys, develop antipathy to this genre. Describes the theory and practice of "responsive teaching." Reports selected findings from a three-year action research investigation examining how keen readers of pre-twentieth-century poetry…
Descriptors: Action Research, Adolescent Literature, Males, Poetry
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Tucker, Lois P. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2000
Discusses how reader-response activities combat lack of interest in introductory literature courses. Considers the value of a reader-response approach, activities which liberate students, a student-driven syllabus, and pragmatic concerns. Notes how employing a reader-response approach in the introductory literature course helps maintain the…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Instructional Innovation, Introductory Courses, Literature
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Probst, Robert – Voices from the Middle, 2000
Describes how a discussion of "The Diary of Anne Frank" moved a class to intense discussion. Discusses how the books, and stories, and poems are invitations to a passionate engagement with human experience. Considers literature as the invitation to a dialogue, to intellectual inquiry, to tell one's own story, to participate in a society and the…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Individual Development, Literature
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bott, C J – ALAN Review, 2001
Discusses how one teacher uses Norma Fox Mazer's "Out of Control" to explore leaders and followers as the main topic of discussion in a sophomore class. Describes how students keep a reader's journal with quotations from the text and personal responses. (SG)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Class Activities, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Grade 10
Fraser, Greg – Teachers & Writers, 2001
Presents diary excerpts that emerged from two separate teaching experiences with fifth and second graders. Reflects on the author's efforts to communicate the wonder of language and imagination to students. Concludes that by taking account of his own lessons as well as the students' responses to the exercises, the author discovered in a new light…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Elementary Education, Imagination, Language Usage
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Monton, Elena Ortells – Academic Exchange Quarterly, 2003
Susan Lanser's poetics of point of view provides sound basis for the unveiling of the deeper layers of significance embedded behind the formal properties of a literary text. By applying her theory to the analysis of Porter's "That Tree," this article aims to yield a practical example of its enlightening use in the classroom. (Contains 18…
Descriptors: Colleges, Cultural Exchange, Higher Education, Instruction
Young, Michael W. – 1992
Courtroom scenes in literature seem to have a special magic with students (probably because of all the trials seen on television, fiction or non-fiction). Students in a composition and literature course at the University of Nebraska, after reading Thomas Hardy's "Tess of the D'Urbervilles," wrote "closing arguments" for either…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation, Persuasive Discourse
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