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Rozema, Robert – 2002
The Internet may be the ultimate immersive and participatory medium, opening doors as it does to countless story worlds. As such, it has much to offer reading instruction in both elementary and secondary classrooms. This paper explores how a teacher used one web application--a text-based virtual environment called a MOO--to encourage his high…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Computer Mediated Communication, English Literature, High Schools
Smith, Kenneth M. – 1992
Through personal investigative reporting and compelling writing, H. G. Bissinger in "Friday Night Lights" (1991) explores the culture of high school football from a variety of perspectives including: students, parents, coaches, teachers, school boards, local politicians, community values regarding race, gender and education, regional…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Cultural Interrelationships, High School Students, High Schools
Johannessen, Larry R. – 1992
To help improve students' ability to interpret and write about literature, teachers should get rid of old habits. The old habits include giving quizzes to make sure students read assignments, and assigning readings just because particular works are part the literary canon. Once a teacher assigns a novel and gives a quiz, everything the teacher and…
Descriptors: High Schools, Literature Appreciation, Novels, Reader Response
Kletzien, Sharon B.; Taylor, Sharon J. – 1992
A study determined what comprehension strategies either contributed to literary engagement or inhibited engagement among adolescents. Subjects, 25 eleventh-grade students chosen at random from two heterogeneous English classes in a suburban school, read two short stories and reported their thinking and understanding as they were reading.…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grade 11, High School Students, High Schools
Groth, Nancy; And Others – 1986
On the basis of a National Humanities project proposed by the English department of a St. Louis, Missouri high school, many different approaches to drawing students into writing about and understanding literature were developed. One of three such techniques is a sequence of writing-reading-writing that offers the possibility of both enhancing the…
Descriptors: High Schools, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response, Reading Comprehension
Hamel, Fred L. – 2001
In separate interviews, Andrew, Ellen, and Caroline, English teachers from the same high school, each pause thoughtfully when asked about how their students respond to literature. Each day, they work carefully with scores of students--organizing lessons, reading together, observing and assessing student work. A study sought to place teachers'…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Teachers, High School Students, High Schools
Sawyer, Mary H. – 1994
A year-long ethnographic case study examined two public city high school English teachers' efforts to reform their literature instruction and evaluation practices through the use of portfolios. One case study teacher ("William") has 30 years of teaching experience and was heavily influenced by New Criticism. The other teacher…
Descriptors: Case Studies, English Instruction, Ethnography, Evaluation Problems
Henning, John – 1998
A study aimed to discover a correspondence between the thinking processes and textual structures of six eleventh graders. In a predominantly White, middle class rural high school, six students were selected to think aloud as they read two essays written as part of two assignments for their advanced English classes. The six were selected based on…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, English Instruction, Grade 11
Carroll, Pamela S.; Rosenblum, L. Penny – 2000
A study that joined the fields of young adult literature and vision impairment explored the questions: How are characters who have visual impairment presented by young adult books?; and How do readers respond to those characters? Only a few books were found (13) that feature characters with visual impairments, and the portrayal of characters…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescent Literature, Characterization, Content Analysis
Newell, George E.; And Others – 1986
A study investigated the effects of writing in a personal and a formal mode on students' understanding of literary text. Formal text-based and personal reader-based writing samples produced by 65 tenth grade students in response to two stories from D. Sohn's "Ten Modern American Short Stories" were analyzed for quality of response,…
Descriptors: Discourse Modes, High Schools, Literary Criticism, Reader Response
Blake, Robert W.; Lunn, Anna – 1984
An alternative approach to the teaching of literature views the reading of a poem, short story, novel, or other literary work as an opportunity for a person to create his or her own immediate response. The approach suggests that there is no constant, objective meaning for a piece of literature, only individual responses reflecting the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Research, English Instruction, High School Students
Bean, Thomas W.; Valerio, Paul Cantu; Senior, Helen Money; White, Fern – 1997
This study explored 22 ninth-grade English students' reading engagement and interpretation of a young adult multicultural novel dealing with biethnic identity development. The descriptive multicase study charted students' literary engagement in an urban technology magnet school and a rural Hawaii high school. The research question was: What are…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Case Studies, Content Analysis, Ethnicity
Johnson, Jeannine – 1994
Yale's Cooke Teaching Program is designed to diminish the sense of imperviousness and immobility that the university often conveys to its surrounding community. During the academic year, one Yale graduate student attended a high school senior honors English class twice weekly. It was an advanced class (mostly minorities), many were college-bound,…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Cultural Context, English Instruction, Graduate Students
Sperling, Melanie – 1991
When students are learning to write, one-to-one teacher-student conversations taking place around the students' writing and writing processes are especially important. Two examples illustrate the multiple and connected processes of reading and writing that are associated with composing in a high school English class. The first conversation, in a…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Research, Communication Research, High Schools
Johnston, Ingrid; Mangat, Jyoti – 2000
A study explored whether high school readers respond significantly differently to African novels in which unfamiliar cultural elements are presented "aggressively" than to those with an "assimilative" presentation of unfamiliar cultural elements. The three novels are set in Africa: Nancy Farmer's "A Girl Named…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, African Literature, Attitude Measures, Audience Awareness
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