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Natalie Bellis – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
The COVID-19 Pandemic dramatically impacted the classroom experiences of teachers and students across the globe. This reflexive autobiographical article critically examines the ramifications of this extraordinary event on the experiences of teaching and learning for the teacher-writer and her secondary English and literature students. Through a…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Countries, Professional Identity
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Bruce A. Craft – Research Issues in Contemporary Education, 2024
This paper addresses the pedagogical implications of incorporating ChatGPT into the college English classroom specifically and, more broadly, into any college course with a focus on writing and research. Historically, advances in technology in the college classroom have characteristically promoted two juxtaposed reactions: relief and anxiety.…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Natural Language Processing, English Instruction, Writing Instruction
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Alexandra C. Parsons – English in Education, 2024
Despite a reported sociocultural shift in the public perception of rights affecting LGBTQ+ individuals and some changes in governmental policies and laws, there has not yet been a resulting shift in the overall K-12 pedagogical paradigm. Within the classroom, LGBTQ+ individuals and students growing up in LGBTQ+ households are frequently and…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Civil Rights, Elementary Secondary Education, Social Bias
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Mazza, Donna; de Boer, Narrelle; Rhodes, David – English in Australia, 2021
Teaching Australian Gothic as a system of literary analysis can be challenging. Often linked to imprecise concepts that are difficult to identify, Australian Gothic is regularly reduced to 'something weird' or 'just a feeling'. However, the Gothic mode in Australia has established itself as an effective approach and developed some clear strategies…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literary Genres, English Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Phillips, Sandra; McLean Davies, Larissa; Truman, Sarah E. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
As a curriculum area, English has been foundational to empire, invasion, and colonisation of Indigenous peoples the world over. It therefore requires considered scholarship to reimagine how to engage with and teach literature in English. In this article, we explore the enduring problem of English and its inheritances, as well as the ways in which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Fiction, Indigenous Populations, Literature
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Yandell, John – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2023
The 'knowledge turn' in curriculum studies has proved highly influential in the past two decades. But what is meant by knowledge remains both unclear and subject to contestation, particularly in relation to English as a school subject. Two recent books address the knowledge question in very different ways.
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Secondary School Students
Mirra, Nicole; Macaluso, Michael; Morrell, Jodene; Scherff, Lisa – National Council of Teachers of English, 2023
While text selection is indeed a crucial choice that transmits explicit and implicit messages to students about what literature is and why it matters, it remains one element that needs to be put into conversation with a broader set of considerations in order for educators to fully grapple with the nature and purpose of rigorous and transformative…
Descriptors: Literature, Secondary School Students, Teaching Methods, English Instruction
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Tom Liam Lynch – English Education, 2019
In this conceptual essay, the author argues that computational methods and computer science more broadly should be embedded into English education programs. Positing that computational methods can deepen and expand the way literature is already taught in many English education programs and secondary English classrooms, the author first makes a…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Literature, English Instruction, Computation
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Alexander, Joy – English in Education, 2022
While speaking, reading and writing are identified in the Newbolt Report as components of English and are still acknowledged as such one hundred years later, Reading Aloud, which the Report ranks alongside them, is no longer accorded any prominence. The Newbolt Report connects Reading Aloud with literature and announces it as a method of…
Descriptors: Poetry, English Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Aloud to Others
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Truman, Sarah E.; McLean Davies, Larissa; Buzacott, Lucy – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This paper thinks with the concept of intertextuality to consider the multiple intersecting power structures inside and outside of literary education in secondary schools that continue to dominate text selection policies and teaching practices. We draw on our research with in-service teachers to reconsider how intertextual networks circulate on…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Secondary School Students, Literature, Teacher Attitudes
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Rejan, Andrew – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
In this narrative inquiry, the author dramatises the tensions and discoveries that emerged in a literature course for pre-service and in-service teachers in an English education graduate programme. The students' resistance to the instructor's choice of Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" as a central text led to reflection on responsible and…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, English Teachers
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Hodgson, John; Harris, Ann – English in Education, 2021
The teaching of grammar has been strongly debated for decades, often with reference to an alleged decline in the 1960s. This article takes a historical perspective on grammar, or knowledge about language, within English Education. In the eighteenth century, Adam Smith's "Lectures in Rhetoric and Belles-lettres" offered a discernibly…
Descriptors: Grammar, Teaching Methods, English Instruction, Educational History
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Gastreich, Karin R.; Milakovic, Amy E. – Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Complex global challenges and declining scientific literacy demand novel approaches to engaging students with science and the natural world. While evidence supports integrating creative and scientific modes of inquiry, these approaches are often separated in undergraduate education. We designed Ecology Through the Writer's Lens (ETWL) to allow…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Ecology, Undergraduate Study, Field Experience Programs
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Toliver, S. R.; Hadley, Heidi Lyn – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2021
This paper uses an assignment given to the authors' preservice teachers to address and push back against common arguments used to uphold canonical text selection in secondary ELA classrooms. Using the metaphor of canon defense as empire building first made by Toni Morrison in the canon debates of the 1980s, the authors examine the weaknesses in…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, English Teachers, Language Arts
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Hippisley, Sulaxana – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2019
This article explores the ways in which the teaching of canonical texts such as Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" intersects with discourses of race and identity in multicultural classrooms. Informed by Chinua Achebe's post-colonial reading of Conrad and the concept of 'double consciousness' adopted by W. E. B. Du Bois, I examine my…
Descriptors: Literature, Minority Group Teachers, Power Structure, Race
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