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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Mackey, Margaret – Journal of Literacy Research, 2022
This article draws on Philip Barnard's model of the interactions between theory and practice, between basic and applied research, to investigate the paradox of reading as an experience both private and public. It uses internal reader experience as a starting point for exploration, evoking the concept of a readerly sense of presence as a selection…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Reader Response, Cognitive Processes, Childrens Literature
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Tandoi, Eve – Children's Literature in Education, 2019
This article reflects on insights gained from a larger study that explored how a class of ten- and eleven-year-olds read and responded to David Almond's hybrid novel, "My Name is Mina." Through focusing on the children's performances of the poems contained within the text, the discussion examines embodied aspects of the children's…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Novels, Reader Response, Performance
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Senderska, Joanna; Mityk, Iwona; Piotrowska-Oberda, Ewa – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
The article discusses the image of the family and the family home in a series of novels for young people by the popular Polish writer Malgorzata Musierowicz in the context of literary conventions and stereotypes about the family in contemporary Polish society. The novels, which cover a period of over 40 years, generally fit contemporary Polish…
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Family Environment, Imagery, Novels
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Palo, Annbritt; Manderstedt, Lena – Children's Literature in Education, 2019
This article presents an analysis of a recent, award-winning Swedish novel for children and young adults, "The Murderer's Ape" by Jakob Wegelius, and digitally published reviews of the novel. In the first part of the paper, we provide an intersectional analysis of the novel, focusing on gender, profession, species and class. The…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature, Novels, Animals
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Beach, Richard – Dialogic Pedagogy, 2017
This article describes high school students' responses to events in the novel, "The Things They Carried," leading to their collaborative rewriting to create their own narrative versions of these events. It draws on "enactivist" theory of languaging, an approach to language that focuses on its use as social actions to enact and…
Descriptors: Revision (Written Composition), Personal Narratives, High School Students, Reader Response
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Lewkowich, David – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2019
With the increasing educational and institutional legitimacy afforded to multimodal texts, there is a need to further explore the use of the visual and its place in reader response, not only as a textual means to prompt interpretation but also as a form of interpretation itself. In this paper, I look at the multimodal interpretive practices of one…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Psychiatry, Multiple Literacies, Reader Response
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Heinecken, Dawn – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This essay follows the insights of reader response theory to examine how readers of Phyllis Reynolds Naylor's Alice McKinley series negotiate textual meaning and construct particular identities in relation to the series' controversial content. Ranking second on the American Library Association's top one hundred list of banned and challenged books…
Descriptors: Novels, Fiction, Reader Response, Females
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Kokkola, Lydia – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2013
The ability to shift reading position has long been recognised as a means for politically minded readers--particularly those motivated by Marxist, feminist and/or race-related agendas--to read against the grain and uncover the implicit ideologies in the text. Little research has been conducted on how inexperienced and thus less sophisticated…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Reading Processes, Novels, Interpretive Skills
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Castleman, Michele D. – Children's Literature in Education, 2011
As a narrative series, Brandon Sanderson's humorous, middle grade, Alcatraz Smedry novels display some of the arguably vague concepts of Reader Response theorist Wolfgang Iser as accessible themes that encourage a critical understanding of the stories. "Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians" (2007), "Alcatraz Versus the Scrivener's Bones" (2008) and…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Novels, Childrens Literature, Fantasy
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Pantaleo, Sylvia; Bomphray, Alexandra – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2011
During two multifaceted, classroom-based research projects, Grade 7 students had opportunities to develop their understanding of metafictive devices and art and design elements by reading a selection of picturebooks and graphic novels. The students also had the opportunity to apply their knowledge and create their own multimodal print texts. This…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Picture Books, Cartoons, Novels
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Park, Jie Y. – Children's Literature in Education, 2012
Reader-response has become one of the most influential literary theories to inform the pedagogies of middle and secondary English classrooms. However, many English and literacy educators have begun to advocate for more critical and culturally responsive versions of reader-response pedagogies, arguing that teachers move beyond valuing students'…
Descriptors: Females, Early Adolescents, Novels, Literacy Education
Patterson, Thomas H.; Crumpler, Thomas P. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2009
As a teacher with more than 30 years experience at the middle school, secondary, and college level, primarily in English studies, Patterson (the first author) decided a few years ago to reexamine his practices and instructional methods. He wondered what would be the effects on him and his students when he would begin to utilize ideas emanating…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Models, Reader Response, Intention
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Inson, Peter – Children's Literature in Education, 2005
This article, written in response to an invitation from "CLE," describes the origins and controversial content of "dunno," a first novel, self-published by Peter Inson, a former teacher and headmaster. Inson considers influences upon his writing, the thinking which led him towards self-publication and the process of personally launching and…
Descriptors: Novels, Authors, Influences, Marketing
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Charles, Jim – ALAN Review, 1998
Explores adolescent literature author Michael Dorris's depiction of the American-Indian adolescent experience. Suggests that Dorris writes in a way that challenges readers, eliciting responses from them that help them better understand American Indians and themselves. (RS)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Adolescents, American Indian Culture, American Indians
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Mackey, Margaret – Language Arts, 1990
Explores the enormous attraction for young readers of series books (such as Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys, and currently "The Baby-Sitters Club"). Discusses what children might learn from such reading, often thought of as pap literature by adults. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Books, Children, Novels
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