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Showing 91 to 105 of 350 results Save | Export
Hlinak, Matt – Liberal Education, 2015
A key element of a liberal education is engagement with "classic" texts, texts that often present views in conflict with our commitment to diversity and inclusion. This article will ask, although not necessarily answer, a number of important questions: Do classic texts perpetuate long-refuted and harmful ideas? Can a racist, sexist,…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Social Attitudes, Social Bias, Literature
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Kloepper, Kathryn D. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
Scenes from the works of William Shakespeare were incorporated into individual and group projects for an upper-level chemistry class, instrumental analysis. Students read excerpts from different plays and then viewed a corresponding video clip from a stage or movie production. Guided-research assignments were developed based on these scenes. These…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Classics (Literature), Teaching Methods, Class Activities
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Gill, R. B. – Children's Literature in Education, 2012
The style of Kenneth Grahame's "The Wind in the Willows" arises from an alternative vision and choice of values characteristic of romance. Romance seeks fulfillment beyond the consequences of everyday relationships and the constrictions of ordinary life. Causal relationships give way to lists of independent items, unmotivated outcomes, and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), Literary Styles, Romanticism
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Parsaiyan, Seyyeded Fahimeh; Ghajar, Sue-San Ghahremani; Salahimoghaddam, Soheila; Janahmadi, Fatemeh – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2014
The recent decades of English Language Teaching (ELT) appear to be particularly concerned with the marginalisation caused by English linguistic, cultural, and academic colonisation and imperialism. Bold footprints of this academic monopoly can be seen in the wide incorporation of abridged or unabridged British and American literary works in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Translation, English (Second Language), Females
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Ostenson, Jonathan; Wadham, Rachel – American Secondary Education, 2012
Advocates have long argued that an increased role for young adult literature in the classroom would help students' reading development. At first glance, the widely adopted Common Core State Standards might seem in opposition to an increased role for such literature. A closer examination of the common core documents suggests, however, that young…
Descriptors: State Standards, Adolescent Literature, Classics (Literature), Role
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Evain, Christine; De Marco, Chris – English Language Teaching, 2016
What collaborative process can teachers offer in order to stimulate their students' reading of and writing on Shakespeare's plays? How can new technologies contribute to facilitating the classroom experience? The eZoomBook (eZB) template was designed for teachers to create and share multi-level digital books called "eZoomBooks" that…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Classics (Literature), Technology Uses in Education, Shared Resources and Services
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Gibbons, Andrew – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
This is the second of two articles that are connected in a reading of "The plague" by Albert Camus. The other article is a determined narration of the events of a tragedy that befalls a city on the coast of Algeria. That article resists analysis beyond the decisions that are made regarding text to use, and of course interpretations to…
Descriptors: Tragedy, Classics (Literature), Novels, Philosophy
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Goedde, Brian – Thought & Action, 2014
When you think of global, online education, the first thing that may jump to mind these days are MOOCs, the "massive open online classes" that are widely publicized (and criticized). The author states that his classes were not these, but rather, closer to what are now being called SPOCs--small private online classes. Enrollment is…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Educational Technology, Distance Education, English Language Learners
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Gilmore, Barry – English Journal, 2012
In her book "Why Do We Care about Literary Characters?" Blakely Vermeule addresses the tendency of the academic establishment to dismiss affection for literary characters in favor of objective analysis, describing teachers with "the furrowed brow, the worried expression: responsible teachers [who] wean their students off their passion for literary…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Reading Instruction, English Instruction, Classics (Literature)
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Kandiko, Camille; Hay, David; Weller, Saranne – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2013
This article discusses how mapping techniques were used in university teaching in a humanities subject. The use of concept mapping was expanded as a pedagogical tool, with a focus on reflective learning processes. Data were collected through a longitudinal study of concept mapping in a university-level Classics course. This was used to explore how…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Reflection, Concept Mapping, Humanities
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Bemmett, Stephanie M. – Middle Grades Review, 2016
In this study, I examined integrating place-based education pedagogy and multimodal literacies into a graduate level children's literature class. The findings suggest including place-based education pedagogy allows middle level graduate students to connect to geographically-based children's literature. The findings also propose that incorporating…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Place Based Education, Grade 4, Grade 5
Stanistreet, Paul – Adults Learning, 2012
Dismissed as "brainless" at school, Alan Markland's one saving grace was his ability to read. It grew into a passion for books and reading which survived years of alcoholism and eventual homelessness. He was in his sixties when he began to realise his true vocation as a writer. Markland describes his early education as "perfunctory." An early…
Descriptors: Reading Programs, Novels, English Literature, Reading Ability
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Ribes, Purificación – International Education Studies, 2011
Shakespeare's hypotext has invited so many hypertextual transformations over the last four hundred years that twenty-first century students deserve the chance of digging into this rich mine of information and dramatic possibilities. The practical approach of a competency-based teaching method offers great advantages over traditional practices in…
Descriptors: English Literature, Drama, Competency Based Education, Teaching Methods
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Tian, Huifang – English Language Teaching, 2013
English-Chinese (E-C) translation is part of tertiary curriculum and is generally text- or reading-based, and any course in relation to it is meant to develop the competence of reading, on a higher level, from a language comparative perspective. Chinese-English (C-E) translation is deemed by many as a productive skill, possible when the overall…
Descriptors: Translation, Poetry, Chinese, Classics (Literature)
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Aloni, Nimrod – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
In this article I propose a conception of empowering educational dialogue within the framework of humanistic education. It is based on the notions of Humanistic Education and Empowerment, and draws on a large and diverse repertoire of dialogues--from the classical Socratic, Confucian and Talmudic dialogues, to the modern ones associated with the…
Descriptors: Humanistic Education, Educational Philosophy, Dialogs (Language), Empowerment
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