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Shaffer, Pamela K. – 1993
In a composition classroom with a multicultural emphasis, reader response techniques can give students the chance to consider their own positions in the dominant culture, to confront racist attitudes within themselves, and to try to empathize with minority views. These techniques lead to a more student-centered classroom where students not only…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cultural Awareness, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Copenhaver, Jeane F. – 1999
This paper describes a study in which a group of young African-American children responded to literature in a multiage primary classroom setting. This naturalistic study sought to: identify the modes of response preferred by the African-American children in this class, examine the content of those responses for evidence of links to ethnicity, and…
Descriptors: Black Students, Childrens Literature, Classroom Research, Ethnicity
Harker, W. John – 1984
During the past 15 years, a fundamental change has taken place in literary criticism, with a decline in New Criticism (literature viewed as a public object) and an increase in reader response criticism (literature viewed as a private experience). New Critics considered the meaning of a literary text to exist within the text as an independent and…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
Harrington, David V. – 1983
One approach to teaching organization to a writing class is to subdivide the organizational processes. One subdivision recognizes that certain compositions have a predictable format--they put expected parts in predictable places. Following a format at appropriate times is a skill that should be taught, or at least insisted upon, at the beginning…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Higher Education, Organization
Lloyd-Jones, Richard – 1991
Writing is at the heart of education. The business of English teachers is to make people more comfortable in using language, particularly written language. Language serves two broad functions: (1) representing elements of external reality; and (2) defining relationships among the people who use the language. The writer's first need is to use the…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Reader Response
Mayo, Wendell – 1992
The point of view that teachers use in responding to students' writing affects the kinds of dramatized presences that teacher responses create. Such presences make available a range of reading and writing roles that students may adopt or reject. For a dramatic presence to be felt by a reader, a writer must select and sustain a clear means of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Perspective Taking, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Jolly, Peggy B. – 1985
Crucial to the success of a writing program are the writing instructor's perception of and response to the quality of student writing. There are three areas to be considered: students' grades, students' writing, and the instructor's comments. Unfortunately, disparity in these areas often gives contradictory indications about the instructor's…
Descriptors: English Teacher Education, Evaluation Criteria, Higher Education, Holistic Evaluation
Johannessen, Larry R. – 2002
One key issue at the heart of conducting classroom discussions is why teachers are attempting to initiate a discussion and what they can do to initiate effective classroom discussions. This paper considers this issue. The paper first considers two classroom discussions which revolve around a short story, "Only Clowns Passing Through" (Jeanne A.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Communication Strategies, Critical Thinking, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Swan, Karen; Meskill, Carla – 1995
A response-based pedagogy encourages the exploration of multiple perspectives regarding literary works and student construction of defensible interpretations of the same, with the quality of students' critical and creative thinking being the focus of assessment. The National Center for Research on Literature Teaching and Learning's ongoing…
Descriptors: Computer Software Evaluation, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education
Benesch, Sarah – 1984
As an alternative to using written guidelines to direct peer feedback on student writing, teachers can allow students to use their own language and conversational habits in peer group conversations and then monitor peer feedback while modeling the type that is most conducive to true exchange. To create a collaboratively run writing workshop,…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Cooperation, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Feedback
Farest, Cynthia A.; Miller, Carolyn J. – 1994
Response journals seem to be promising vehicles for inviting children's written comments because they allow children to reflect on their experiences with books and provide them with opportunities to raise questions and formulate ideas. While both teachers and researchers have indicated the benefits of written responses to books, less is known…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Childrens Writing, Classroom Research, Dialog Journals
Gross, Patricia A. – 1991
A study of two teachers and four secondary level English classes examined how traditional methods of teaching literature were replaced by more interactive and integrated approaches to text, based primarily upon a whole language philosophy. Intervention aspects purposely remained open-ended to accommodate each teacher's understandings and…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, English Instruction, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
Richard, Blakeney J. – 1987
Because students often come to a literary text without the prerequisite knowledge to understand or explicate it fully, they can be thought of as outsiders, needing the help of insiders, or experts in literature, to "learn the text's secrets." Moreover, students often do not fully comprehend how much of literature rests on symbolism that demands…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Content Analysis, English Instruction, Fiction
McClure, Amy A. – 1986
In an effort to understand the effect of a nurturing, supportive environment on children's understanding of poetry, a study was conducted involving the observation of 42 rural fifth and sixth grade students and their two teachers over a school year. During the course of the year the children were invited to respond to published, professional…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Creative Writing, Intermediate Grades, Peer Evaluation
Carico, Kathleen M. – 1996
A study examined the effects of a reader response approach to literature in which literature is viewed as a medium for exploration and the effects of such an approach on a group of young women. Subjects of the study were four female middle school students, with the adult female researcher as participant observer. Books chosen for…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Discourse Communities, Ethnography, Females
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