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Showing 121 to 135 of 256 results Save | Export
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Geyer, Jan – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2008
Using images in the classroom to help students find meaning in literature is not new. Although composition teachers have long used the visual arts as a source for stimulating student engagement, sometimes the subject matter can fail to achieve the desired result. Too often, students lack the vocabulary or frame of reference to be engaged in a work…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Visual Arts, Critical Thinking, Student Experience
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Golden, John – English Journal, 2009
The author does not really like "Hamlet." He loves the play, the language, and the characters, but always finds it difficult to teach. Part of this is because he prefers to assign students scenes to perform as they read a Shakespeare text, but Hamlet does not divide nicely into manageable scenes, and he usually does not have enough teenage Ken…
Descriptors: Drama, Play, English Literature, English Instruction
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article reports that "The Norton Anthology of English Literature" has new competition in a genre with an uncertain future. The first edition of the Norton appeared in 1962. Since then, the mighty tome has gone through eight editions and introduced generations of undergraduates to the joys (or sorrows) of Chaucer, Milton, and Keats. For many,…
Descriptors: English Literature, Competition, Anthologies, Literary Genres
Robins, Gill; Evans-Jones, Laura-Jane – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2012
Charles Dickens is arguably the greatest storyteller in English Literature and his novels have been loved and respected for nearly two hundred years. As accurate reflections of Victorian society they are unparalleled. Vivid characters and realistic settings are created in the mind of the reader, all laced with Dickens inimitable humour, wit and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Literature, Classics (Literature), Web Sites
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Porter, Christina – English Journal, 2009
In 2006, the author returned to school after completing the Teaching Shakespeare Institute at the Folger Library inspired with new performance-based ideas for teaching the plays. The author began to wonder about using Shakespeare as a vehicle for investigating "rich and strange" language with English Language Learners (ELLs). The author began by…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Limited English Speaking, Teaching Methods
Woolf, Michael – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2011
Western Europe has been constructed in the field of education abroad as a "traditional" location: in some sense or another that label is used to suggest that it has a kind of static or dormant significance. In reality, Western Europe is an enormously rich location for study abroad precisely because it is a fluid learning environment that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Study Abroad, Culture, Educational Environment
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Monahan, Kathleen N. – CEA Forum, 2007
For eight years, Kathleen Monahan taught English literature and composition at Saint Peter's College satellite campus at Newark Airport. Her students were Port Authority employees--police officers, mechanics, bridge painters--trying to wedge an education into lives criss-crossed by split shifts, swing shifts, and double overtime. On the first…
Descriptors: Poetry, Student Experience, College Students, English Literature
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Gao, Yonghong – English Language Teaching, 2009
The main task of practice teaching of English Reading is to train students' independent reading ability and good reading habits. Extra-curricular reading of English literature and English newspapers and magazines plays an active role in improving English reading ability. The principle of selecting reading materials, the scope of selection and the…
Descriptors: Reading Ability, Reading Habits, Student Teaching, Independent Reading
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Renino, Christopher – English Journal, 2009
Dan recently turned 13; Nick will soon be 12. Both boys are smart and fun; both are loving, write like angels, like to learn, and want friends; both are autistic and hope to learn to speak. They find it challenging to relate to and function in this world, and they work hard to improve their abilities to do so. Last fall, Nick and Dan became…
Descriptors: Drama, Writing Skills, Autism, Home Instruction
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Dredger, Katie – English Journal, 2008
Katie Dredger was a successful AP English Literature and Composition teacher when she began questioning the exclusivity her course represented. Here she shares how she was able to open her course to all students willing to attempt the challenge, while maintaining and even raising her intellectual standards. (Contains 5 figures.)
Descriptors: English Literature, Reflective Teaching, Advanced Placement Programs, Reading Strategies
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Ratner, Andrew R. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
There is a transcendent force at work in the world, and its design for learning and life is far too complex to be executed through lesson plans and textbooks. In this article, the author describes a phone call from a student he taught in a high school English class 16 years earlier and has not seen since. After the student reveals how his life was…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, English Teachers, Grade 10, English Literature
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Ratz, Matthew – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2008
In the author's memories of high school, no unit was more frustrating for him as a student than the yearly Shakespearean text. From his own experience on the students' side of the desk, the author knows that no unit is as strenuous or exhausting as one involving Shakespeare's works. Despite his own negative experiences with Shakespeare's works,…
Descriptors: Drama, Teaching Styles, Creative Teaching, Teaching Methods
Webb, Allen – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2011
Providing a gateway into the real literature emerging from the Middle East, this book shows teachers how to make the topic authentic, powerful, and relevant. "Teaching the Literature of Today's Middle East": (1) Introduces teachers to this literature and how to teach it; (2) Brings to the reader a tremendous diversity of teachable texts…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literature, Educational Technology, Web Sites
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Did he or didn't he? The question is vexing Coleridge scholars. Did the author of "Christabel," "Kubla Khan," and "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" compose a blank-verse translation of Goethe's "Faust" that was published anonymously in London in 1821? Two prominent Romanticists, Frederick Burwick and James C. McKusick, both Americans, believe they…
Descriptors: Romanticism, English Literature, Scholarship, Conflict
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Howie, Mark – English in Australia, 2008
In this article I use the occasion of farewelling my Year 12 students at the end of their schooling, some intertextual references to "Hamlet", and some conceptual frames of Derrida, to reflect dialogically on the role of critical literacy in Australian English curricula in the past, the present and into the future. (Contains 11 notes.)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, English Literature, Reflection
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