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Healy, Molly B. – Journal for Leadership and Instruction, 2023
With a runtime of 47 years, Saturday Night Live has long served as a societal mirror that captures and creates popular culture. In recent years the show has been criticized for its lack of diverse hosts, cast and staff. Out of 930 episodes only seven episodes have been hosted by an Asian host, four of whom identify as Chinese. This research…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Programming (Broadcast), Television, Chinese Americans
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Martin, Alexander P. – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2022
Politics and International Relations (Pol & IR) lecturers can capitalise on the established relationship between comedy and political analysis by using humour techniques to enhance the student learning experience and to develop students' critical analysis skills. Using collected data from focus groups with 21 British and International…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Humor, Political Science, International Relations
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Fatma Alzahraa Abdelsalam Elkhamisy; Asmaa Fady Sharif – Interactive Learning Environments, 2024
Basic medical sciences education is characterized by the provision of large amounts of theoretical information that leaves little opportunity for promoting student creativity or motivation. In response, the authors investigated meme-related project-based learning (PBL). Memes are humorous media that are widely exchanged online. 1477 students were…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Student Projects, Visual Aids, Internet
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Topp, Kieren; Thai, Michael; Hryciw, Deanne H. – Environmental Education Research, 2019
The blending of entertainment and education is often used as a mechanism for communicating science to the general public. Key to dissemination of scientific information is cognitive engagement of the audience with the content. The authors describe a study investigating the relationship between entertaining videos and cognitive engagement of the…
Descriptors: Climate, Video Technology, Films, Popular Culture
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Simmons, Catharine Ann – Ethnography and Education, 2014
This article explores how ethnography allows for an understanding of the way children are empowered through the use of popular culture during sociodramatic play. The study discussed was conducted in an inner-city Primary school in regional New South Wales, Australia. The participants were a composite fifth-to-sixth grade class, and the research…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Drama, Humor, Teaching Methods
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Gillanders, Carol; Franco-Vázquez, Carmen – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2016
Project-based learning and artistic creation provide future secondary teachers with an opportunity to experience and to reflect on the importance of including a gender perspective in education. This article describes a case study where students of the Postgraduate course in Secondary Teacher Training explore the image of the female body in comics,…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Education Programs, Females
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Rust, Julie – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2015
By examining the ways in which high school students in two different English classes take up virtual self-representation tactics in school-based social networking sites, this article explores how young people carefully juggle the digital identities they adopt for the eyes of both peers and teachers. The data reveals that the students'…
Descriptors: High School Students, Social Networks, Identification (Psychology), Self Concept
Ragan, Sandra L. – 1979
Frame analysis of 85 cartoons from "The New Yorker" magazine was used to discover the significant keys, or metacommunicative characterizers, of cartoon humor. It was hypothesized that these keys/characterizers function to cue the readers so that they frame the message of the cartoon in a way that permits a humorous interpretation of the cartoon's…
Descriptors: Caricatures, Cartoons, Communication Research, Content Analysis
Sherzer, Dina, Ed.; Sherzer, Joel, Ed. – 1987
This collection of papers is part of a growing scholarly literature dealing with puppetry and other forms of expressive culture which involve people looking at and reframing themselves and their social lives. The collection is intended to contribute to an understanding of the significance of puppetry as a form of popular culture and an…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Comedy, Creative Expression, Cultural Activities
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Klein, Sheri R. – Visual Arts Research, 1997
Explores how elementary children reflect upon a wide variety of visual humor, and what beliefs and assumptions arise in their responses. Finds that children found amusement in popular art, but not in fine art; have shared assumptions and understandings about humor by grade two; and that visual humor can expand children's concepts of art. (DSK)
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Childhood Attitudes, Childhood Interests
Marshall, Jerilyn – 2002
This paper presents results of a survey that gathered information on the use of popular culture examples in college library instruction sessions, including the types of popular culture materials currently being used as examples, the types of courses in which they are used, the librarians' purposes in using the examples, and the librarians'…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Higher Education, Humor, Instructional Design
Timberg, Bernard – Southern Speech Communication Journal, 1987
Explores how the formal television elements that constitute the ritual space of the talk show establish and contextualize the socio-centrality of the star host--specifically examining the comedy of Johnny Carson and David Letterman, examples of the Yankee character as a champion of common sense and cultural consensus. (NKA)
Descriptors: Comedy, Cultural Context, Humor, Mass Media Effects