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Showing 226 to 240 of 342 results Save | Export
Fey, Marion Harris – 1993
Part of a larger ethnographic study, this investigation focused on the literacy development of a college student as he participated in the virtual culture of a computer-networked writing classroom where all instruction and communication occurred through the computer. The student was a member of one of two classes of adult students, ranging in age…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Collaborative Writing, Computer Networks, Electronic Mail
Bush, David F. – 1983
To determine the influence of the health care provider's gender and profession on readers' memory for health information, 48 university students were asked to read a three page article on heart attacks that was attributed to either (1) a female nurse, (2) a male nurse, (3) a female physician, or (4) a male physician. After reading the article, the…
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Research, Cultural Images, Higher Education
Miller, Margaret – 1983
The current literary tradition observes a canon of hierarchies, a ranking of great writers and genres, that tends to exclude or downgrade women and lower caste males. The response of feminist scholars to this state of affairs falls into two general categories: the first is to find great women authors to fit into the canon on its own terms; the…
Descriptors: Authors, Course Content, English Curriculum, Evaluation Criteria
Thornton, Kathleen K. – 1989
Reader-response journals were successfully employed in a "Reading Shakespeare" course for non-majors, making literary tradition accessible to students untrained in classical rhetoric. Students were encouraged to employ any combination of four approaches. First, students were invited to ask questions about the language, sequence of…
Descriptors: Drama, English Literature, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Worley, Demetrice A. – 1990
Elements from literary, composition, and reader-response theory can be successfully combined in teaching an African-American literature class to college students of the dominant culture. Helping students to decode texts is of primary importance, best done by introducing students to the cultural codes used by minority writers to shape their themes.…
Descriptors: Black Literature, College English, Cultural Context, Cultural Traits
Goetz, Ernest T.; And Others – 1990
A study reanalyzed data from two previous studies to investigate (1) validity of imagery ratings and reports as measures of reader response to a story, and (2) similarity of final regression models for recall and imagery reports. Imagery and affect ratings of story paragraphs were found to predict both imagery reports and recall of a second,…
Descriptors: Data Interpretation, Emotional Response, Higher Education, Imagery
Hawk, Jane Ward; Lester, Virda K. – 1985
One of the most effective means of achieving a successful program in reading is the use of the young adult novel to stimulate the adolescent's interest in free reading or even to instill an interest where there is none. A novel which provides pleasurable reading experiences with interesting material at the proper level (such as novels by Judy…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Cognitive Development, Curriculum Enrichment, Literature Appreciation
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
Coles, Nicholas – 1985
There appears to be a problem in the way students in introductory, nonmajor literature courses read poetry that affects the way they write about it. One widely accepted belief among students is that there is a hidden but identifiable meaning in the poem that they are supposed to discover. The problem with this strategy is that most students lack…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
Burton, Dwight L. – 1982
Throughout its history, the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) has addressed the question: How can literature be fully revealed to students at all educational levels? In answering this question, NCTE has (1) clarified the rationale and objectives for teaching literature, with a view to reconciling concepts of literature as both an…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Aesthetic Education, Censorship, Childrens Literature
Enos, Theresa – 1985
Seven people who both write and read various kinds of reports in their professions were asked to read and respond to identical sets of student reports over a four-month period in order to determine whether they responded to personae. Attached to each unevaluated and unidentified student report was a form with 15 different response areas that…
Descriptors: Adults, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Educational Change
Kebbel, Gary – 1984
To develop a model of newspaper readership more closely related to explanation of readership behavior than prediction, a study used a combination of demographic and political participation variables in a multivariate analysis of data obtained in a national survey. Information from interviews of approximately 1,200 adults conducted in 1979 was…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Demography, Information Dissemination
Reiss, Donna – 1996
No instructional technique has brought introductory students in literature at Tidewater Community College (Virginia) closer to the genuine in poetry than writing their way into a work, in particular, writing combined with individual and collaborative activities that engage multiple senses and establish learning communities. Adapting to a computer…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Community Colleges, Computer Uses in Education, Cooperative Learning
Donehower, Kim – 1995
An instructor teaching a 20th-century fiction course was surprised by her students' response to a series of stories she asked them to read about the South. Apparently representing the feelings of many in the class, one student said, "These people are weird. And we don't like them." Though they were used to encountering differences in…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Fiction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McBrien, Philip J. – Religious Education, 1990
Presents a method of teaching liturgical texts, related to the lectionary. Describes Bernard L. Lee's shared homily method based on Hans-Georg Gadamer's hermeneutical movements. Illustrates how Lee's homiletic method can be adapted into a disciplined conversation with the text for use in other religious instruction. (DB)
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Catholic Educators, Hermeneutics, Reader Response
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