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Omer Sekerci – Novitas-ROYAL (Research on Youth and Language), 2024
"Waiting for Waiting for Godot" (2016) is a biographical and award-winning two-act play, a parody of Beckett's seminal work "Waiting for Godot" (1953). It is one of the most renowned works of the newgeneration American playwrights by actor and comedian Dave C. Hanson, who is relatively unknown to scholars. Having used the text…
Descriptors: Drama, Parody, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
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Naomi Nkealah; Maria Prozesky – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
As university teachers of literature, we tend to accept the rhetoric that students lack the capacity to interpret texts meaningfully, without questioning our own biases about the kinds of meaning we expect them to elicit from texts. Often, these are meanings that have little relevance to students' own social or professional lives. In this article,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
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Alqaryouti, Marwan Harb; Ismail, Hanita Hanim – English Language Teaching, 2018
Shakespeare's "The Tempest" (1610-1611) is one of the controversial plays regarding whether to be placed in the purview of colonialism or anti-colonialism. The bard sketches two antithetical characters in the course of the play, Prospero and Caliban, who form the two extremes of the self against the other dichotomy. This study aims at…
Descriptors: Drama, English Literature, Foreign Policy, Literary Devices
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Muñoz-Valdivieso, Sofía – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2017
The article reviews the evolution of Shakespeare studies over the last 50 years and proposes a narrative to trace its development since the commemoration of Shakespeare's birth in 1964 in three phases: first, the unfolding from the 1970s to the 1990s of what I have called the postmodern paradigm in Shakespeare studies, which I argue breaks with…
Descriptors: Authors, English Literature, Trend Analysis, Drama
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Gray, Christina; Lambert, Kirsten – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2020
The Australian Professional Standards for teachers attempts to regulate the profession and improve teacher quality. Yet the standardisation of teachers' work has attracted criticism from researchers who assert that a "one size fits all" model for judging teacher quality fails to recognise the affective, enactive and relational aspects of…
Descriptors: Standards, Drama, Extracurricular Activities, Professionalism
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Dobson, Tom; Stephenson, Lisa; De Arede, Ana – English in Education, 2021
Literary criticism of children's literature asserts a one-directional view of power with the adult writer constructing the child reader. Using "aetonormativity"-- adult perceptions of normality -- this paper explores what happens when children co-construct publishable fiction. Our analysis of drama and creative writing workshops shows…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Childrens Literature, Writing for Publication, Creative Writing
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Sultanova, Zhanagul S.; Yeshmuratova, Anar K.; Nursultan, Yelik; Kabdiyeva, Saniya D.; Zhuasbek, Yerkin T. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
The research work deals with the practices and specific features of Kazakh theater, especially with the specifics of the director's decisions on performances based on European and Russian classical drama. The authors determine that the experienced directors from Russia were invited in order to influence the professional development of Kazakh…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Faculty Development, Films, Professional Development
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Matthews, Jolie Christine – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2016
This article examines an informal online community dedicated to "The Tudors," a historical television show, and the ways in which its members engaged with a variety of sources in their discussions of the drama's real-life past. Data were collected over a 5-month period. The analysis included the types of sources used in conversation;…
Descriptors: Television, Programming (Broadcast), Computer Mediated Communication, History
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Kienstra, Natascha; van Dijk-Groeneboer, Monique; Boelens, Olav – Religious Education, 2018
Searching for new methods to start a genuine dialogue in secondary school classrooms, bibliodrama as an active form of putting religious stories in action was used. The research focused on examining relationships between student learning activities and teacher behavior; six lessons were analyzed in a qualitative cross-case analysis. A dialogue in…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Teaching Methods, Thinking Skills
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Junmei, Jiang – Journal on English Language Teaching, 2017
Oscar Wilde is one of the most hilarious playwrights in the history of English literature. And 'The Importance of Being Earnest' is his masterpiece. With Wilde's humorous and witty language as the starting point and aided by the concordancing software WORDSMITH TOOLS, a detailed analysis was carried out on this comedy from lexical level and…
Descriptors: Drama, Computational Linguistics, English Literature, Teaching Methods
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Fixsen, Alison – Work Based Learning e-Journal International, 2017
Soft skills programs (SSPs) for staff are now an established part of staff learning and development in organisations. The lived experience of university staff attending these types of programmes has until now remained largely unexplored. As part of a professional doctorate in education, I used autoethnography to investigate the 'social world' of…
Descriptors: Soft Skills, Therapy, Ethnography, Staff Development
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Cantwell, Joanna – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2014
This study focuses on a secondary English classroom in an East London school, and the multimodal nature of the students' construction of the literary heritage text Macbeth, specifically in their dramatic reinterpretation of Act 1, Scene 7, where Lady Macbeth persuades "Macbeth" to pursue his ambitions and kill the current king, Duncan.…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, Urban Schools, English Literature, Classroom Techniques
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Fedorenko, Marina V.; Bykova, Svetlana S. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
The relevance of the topic is due to the need of self-correction of senior preschoolers. Adequate self-esteem of preschoolers will give us an opportunity to prepare them for school more effectively, as well as to create some positive character traits. The preschool age is the initial period of development of a child's self-esteem. This is the most…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Self Esteem, Personality Traits, Art Therapy
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Shoemaker, Brandon – English Journal, 2013
How teachers can use such materials as parallel-text editions, graphic novels, and film adaptations to increase students' understanding of and interest in Shakespeare was the impetus for a classroom action research project that examined the effects of teaching methods on student comprehension and engagement. The author of this article…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Cartoons, Films, Teaching Methods
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Hooti, Noorbakhsh; Jeihouni, Mojtaba – International Education Studies, 2012
This study makes an attempt to analyze the manifold aspects of Shaw's "Androcles and the Lion" on a postmodernist standpoint, meanwhile, demonstrates the dominion of modernism, which is portrayed through the vehicle of comedy with a bitter ironic language through the play. Regardless of the historical period in which the play occurs, the…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Drama, Comedy, Figurative Language
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