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Showing 1 to 15 of 78 results Save | Export
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Knobel, Angela – Journal of Moral Education, 2019
Virtue theorists commonly assert that significant moral change, such as the cultivation of a virtue or the elimination of a vice, can only occur over a prolonged period of time. Many scholars who make this claim also accept the comparison between virtues and skills. In this article I argue that if one accepts the comparison between virtues and…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Change, Ethics, Christianity
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Wu, Zongjie – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2014
This is a response to the commentaries on my essay, "Interpretation, autonomy, and transformation". However, the response is reoriented to further interpretation of Chinese pedagogic discourse in the late-19th century, which is often blamed for hampering China's educational advance. Instead of considering Classical Confucian pedagogy as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Confucianism, Instruction
Clemens, David – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
As documented by multiple NEA studies ("Reading at Risk," 2004; "To Read or Not to Read," 2007), reading has become devalued in American life, on sale in the clearance bin along with notions of greatness, classic works and ideas, and Western civilization itself. Trying to teach fine literature, writes the author, has become the struggle of how to…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Western Civilization, Popular Culture, Literary Criticism
Berube, Michael – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
The author, an English professor, shares his experience in retaking the Graduate Record Examination in English literature, 25 years after he entered graduate school at the University of Virginia. He took the practice test instead of the "real" test, for a number of reasons. He wanted to be able to look over the questions afterward; to…
Descriptors: English Literature, Graduate Study, Higher Education, Classics (Literature)
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McNair, Jonda C. – Reading Teacher, 2010
The purpose of this article is to assert that there are classic African American children's books and to identify a sampling of them. The author presents multiple definitions of the term classic based on the responses of children's literature experts and relevant scholarship. Next, the manner in which data were collected and analyzed in regard to…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Childrens Literature, African American Children, African American Culture
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Mitchell, Philip – Journal of Education & Christian Belief, 2010
Thomas Hebert and Matthew T. McBee's (2007) recent study of gifted university students examines how an honors program can function as a community for social, intellectual, and psychological growth. In particular, they find that honors programs offer advantageous support for gifted students in navigating social isolation, in questioning traditional…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Freedom, Academically Gifted, Social Isolation
Barlow, Dudley – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2009
In this article the author shares his thoughts on how perceptions can be distorted by blinders people impose on themselves which brings him back to one of his literary and intellectual loadstones--"The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." He learned that the English department at the school where he taught has changed the American literature syllabus.…
Descriptors: Race, English Departments, United States Literature, Classics (Literature)
Seney, Bob – Understanding Our Gifted, 2008
The author is an enthusiastic supporter of using young adult literature in the classroom with gifted learners--so much, that he has been accused of being "against" the classics. Not so, but he does ask about and challenges teachers to tell him if their classroom use of the classics is appropriate. Do the classics provide the kind of interaction…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Adolescent Literature, Academically Gifted, Adolescents
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Spangler, Susan – English Journal, 2009
Reading skills are vital to student success, and those skills could be practiced with Shakespeare "if students are taught reading skills in the classroom." The problem is that many teachers of English do not consider themselves reading specialists and do not teach reading skills to their students. Fred L. Hamel notes that teachers in a recent…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Reading Consultants, Reading, Specialists
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Socher, David – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2005
Noting that the "Poetics" is a widely read, accessible classic, the author points to a minor flaw of some interest. In a well-known passage early in the "Poetics," Aristotle is in error about pictures. The matter is significant to both the theory of pictures and to Aristotle scholarship. The author sets out Aristotle's position as follows: (1) It…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Portraiture, Aesthetics
Whitney, Jennifer D. – Online Submission, 2007
Book challenges have become more and more frequent in recent years. In particular, those books that address issues most relevant to preteens and teenagers seem to be the object of many challenges. Many of the hundreds of challenged works represent literary classics and high-quality writing for young audiences. Teachers, administrators and other…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Adolescents, Literacy, Censorship
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Sutcliffe, Mary – Children's Literature in Education, 1998
Interviews William Horwood, a British writer who has undertaken a series of sequels to Kenneth Grahame's "The Wind in the Willows." Recounts the story of how the books came to be and their significance for the author. (PA)
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), Personal Narratives
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Pickens, Cortney – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2008
The way in which foreign languages, including the Classics, are taught is evolving. There are those who teach language for literature-based, instrumental purposes only, and those who want to see foreign language education cross boundaries into literature, culture, history, and geography. Foreign language educators have the opportunity to teach…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Communicative Competence (Languages)
Hurley, John – 1998
When readers encounter Shakespeare's "Sonnet 73," they often fail to realize that it is an excellent model of what a good composition ought to be. The closing couplet functions the same way a thesis would in a prose work. The repetition of wording within the analogies in the three quatrains helps to make the work coherent. In addition,…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Figurative Language, Sonnets, Writing Instruction
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Lorenz, Sarah L. – English Journal, 1998
Argues that the 1996 film of "Romeo and Juliet" (starring Leonardo Di Caprio and Claire Danes, and transposed to inner-city gang culture) is a gripping presentation of Shakespeare's story of star-crossed lovers in an impulsive, hot-headed, violent world. Suggests that the film is practically guaranteed to make students love Shakespeare.…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), English Literature, Films, Literature Appreciation
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