NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 16 to 30 of 153 results Save | Export
O'Donovan, Eamonn – District Administration, 2010
Cell phones are ubiquitous on campus, and the anytime anywhere nature of teenage communications means that students see no separation between life inside and outside of school, at least when it comes to activities such as texting. Allowing cell phones on campus will have students in possession of cell phones with sexually oriented messages,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Telecommunications, Sexuality, Photography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Talner, Lee – Teaching Artist Journal, 2010
Like so many other doctors, the author loves the arts deeply. Playing a musical instrument and making photographs have been joyful pursuits throughout his schooling, training, and subsequent forty-five-year career as a medical school professor and practitioner of diagnostic radiology. Despite stretches when his healing art pushed aside his visual…
Descriptors: Photography, Art Teachers, Artists, Teacher Student Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Yang, Michelle Murray – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
Examining Malcolm Browne's photograph of the burning monk as well as appropriations of it by the Ministers' Vietnam Committee, I argue that self-immolation is a powerful rhetorical act that utilizes self-inflicted violence as a means of performing a visual embodiment of violence done by an "other." I assert that the power and resonance…
Descriptors: Photography, Visual Aids, Rhetoric, Self Destructive Behavior
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Schwartz, Joan M. – Journal of Archival Organization, 2008
This article presents the author's comments on Robin Kelsey's "Archive Style: Photographs and Illustrations for U.S. Surveys, 1850-1890," a book about government documents that happen to be visual materials. The word "archive" now has intellectual cache in the academic world, but its currency has little to do with the…
Descriptors: Archives, Books, Visual Aids, Photography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Ward, Barbara A. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2008
David Wiesner's 2007 Caldecott Medal-winning "Flotsam" blends the events of everyday life with the surreal. As he often does in his picture books, Wiesner plays with size and scale, opening "Flotsam" with a full-page illustration of a sand crab and the enormous eye behind it before pulling back on the second page to reveal the creature's actual…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Picture Books, Illustrations, Childrens Literature
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
De Montigny, Stephanie May – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Ethnologists in the early twentieth century were the first to publish photographs of the Alabama-Coushatta people of Texas and the Coushatta (often written as "Koasati") of Louisiana. Since then, authors have shaped the photographic and textual representations according to their own notions of culture and identity. In this case, Mark…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, American Indians, Photography, Ethnology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Gillespie, Alisdair A. – Journal of Sexual Aggression, 2008
This paper considers the legal consequences of adolescents accessing indecent images of children. It challenges the current default position that such behaviour is illegal and worthy of punishment. The paper seeks to understand the circumstances in which adolescents may seek age-appropriate material and considers whether this is more blameworthy…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Juvenile Justice, Legal Responsibility, Pornography
Sirc, Geoffrey – Composition Studies, 2008
In this article, the author traces the life of Andy Warhol, an American artist. Warhol, who became ill with a nervous condition, had spend most of his childhood in a bed littered with comic books, paper dolls, coloring books, a camera, cap gun, and his Charlie McCarthy doll. Warhol was the only Pop artist who was not a professionally, academically…
Descriptors: Photography, Artists, Profiles, Art Education
Bean, Robert – Canadian Review of Art Education: Research and Issues, 2007
In this research, the author focuses on the contemporary culture of obsolescence. The topic has a specific relevance to recent transformations in photographic education as well as the emerging research environment in art production. Language and technology, cognition and consciousness and the sense of experience that is constituted by subjects and…
Descriptors: Obsolescence, Art, Research, Photography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Sanders, Rickie – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2007
This paper explores how photographs can be used to teach urban social geography to second- and third-year university students. In it the author describes her work acquainting students with the skill of "directed observation". She argues that teaching geography through photography is not merely asking students to take pictures but rather, the…
Descriptors: Photography, Human Geography, Geography Instruction, Comprehension
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Serafini, Frank – Journal of Children's Literature, 2008
In this article, the author relates the creative process involved in the way he writes and illustrate picturebooks. His understanding of the analysis and creative processes focusing on picturebooks is informed from two distinct, yet complementary, perspectives. First, the author is an Associate Professor of Literacy Education and Children's…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Creativity, Literacy Education, Authors
Eisele, Kimi – Teaching Tolerance, 2008
Room M219 of Tucson's Catalina High School feels more like a hip design shop or bustling photography studio than an advanced English as a Second Language (ESL) class. Printouts of photographs lie scattered amidst rows of computers. Fingers dash across keyboards and images flash onto monitors as students review their own work. One would never guess…
Descriptors: Photography, Art Education, Artists, Refugees
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Aslin, Richard N. – Infancy, 2008
Yoshida and Smith (this issue) provide one of the first attempts to overcome the most serious impediment to the use of head-mounted eye trackers with infants: Except in rare cases they are not light enough to be worn on an infant's head, or the infant does not tolerate looking through a half-silvered mirror that is hanging on a rigid stalk…
Descriptors: Photography, Cues, Eye Movements, Attention
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Mishlove, Robert; Strange, Wayne – Teaching Artist Journal, 2008
Wayne Strange is a sixth-grade student and Bob Mishlove is an art teacher at Nathan R. Goldblatt Elementary School. Bob is a participant in the Building Community, Curriculum and Leadership initiative of the Chicago Public School's Fine and Performing Arts Magnet Cluster Program for elementary schools. Collaborating with the Chicago Arts…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Elementary School Students, Teacher Student Relationship, Art Activities
Bullen, Andrew – Computers in Libraries, 2008
The wonderful Web 2.0 is a famously slippery concept to define. The very ambiguity of the term is Escheresque, self-referential to its ever-changing meaning. As Tim O'Reilly, CEO of O'Reilly Media, described it, "Like many important concepts, Web 2.0 doesn't have a hard boundary, but rather, a gravitational core." As Illinois State Library's…
Descriptors: Participation, Government Libraries, Information Technology, Internet
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10  |  11