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"Based on a True-Story": Using "The Ballad of Frankie Silver" To Teach the Conventions of Narrative.
Whited, Lana – 2000
The distinction between fiction and nonfiction focuses on the aspect of literature teachers usually emphasize when teaching it to students: content. It is equally important, however, for students to understand the "mechanics" of literature, including how a writer crafts his or her material and how the text establishes expectations in a…
Descriptors: Fiction, Historical Interpretation, Literary Devices, Literature Appreciation
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
Heber, Janice Stewart – 1992
Thomas Hardy has received great acclaim as a poet and novelist, but his short stories have remained largely ignored with regard to the usual short story "canon." Early reviews of Hardy's stories were mixed, but after his death the tide of critical opinion tended to turn against Hardy's stories. A significant historical factor was the…
Descriptors: English Literature, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
Kooy, Mary – 1992
A study explored the developing literacy response of adolescents through writing by investigating three characteristics: patterns, individual variations, and the effects of genre on response. Subjects, 7 grade nine students from a small private secondary school on the west coast of Canada, were selected for their wide reading experiences. Subjects…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Adolescents, English Instruction, Foreign Countries
Barkley, Mary – 1994
Literature can bring meaning to student research. When students read they develop connections to characters. They care; they empathize; they recognize the issues that face characters' lives, and they develop beliefs about those issues. Students' new feelings and beliefs motivate them to conduct research related to those issues and sustain them…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Interests
Heusel, Barbara Stevens – 1994
Athol Fugard's "Master Harold...and the boys" and Toni Morrison's "Bluest Eye" underscore the necessity of encouraging and providing opportunities for African American students to explore their own constructions of self. In the former work, "It's not fair, is it Hally?" becomes a universal human refrain at the same…
Descriptors: Black Students, Cultural Pluralism, Higher Education, Ideology
Ruddell, Martha Rapp-Haggard – 1990
Reading response groups are an outgrowth of theories which suggest that: (1) meaning derived from text is highly individualized and personal, and (2) reader understanding is deepened through interactions among peers. A study examined the non-participation in one reading response group composed of four high-achieving adult readers who were…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Case Studies, Group Dynamics, Higher Education
Dodson, Charles B. – 1992
A sophomore-level course surveying world literature through the seventeenth century emphasizes the theme of heroes and heroic codes using western classics and the "Tale of Genji," a fictional account of an idealized Japanese courtier and gentleman written in the tenth century AD by the court lady Murasaki Shikubu, and often considered to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres, Literary Styles
Bristow, M. B. Smith – 1992
Black feminist novelists continue to take issue with males who try to theorize about their artistic creations. Male attitudes toward black women's novels have been characterized as either apathetic, chauvinistic, or paternalistic. Black feminist writers should heed the call for collective racial progress and collective theoretical progress. The…
Descriptors: Black Literature, Black Studies, Feminism, Hermeneutics
Caverzasi, Peter L. – 1992
Teaching a world literature class at a public college presented an opportunity to test Allan Bloom's and E. D. Hirsch, Jr.'s charges that today's college students are not only ignorant of great literature, but also ill-equipped to seriously consider such works. Beginning with a class survey of reading tastes and experiences, it was discovered that…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, English Curriculum, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
McLaughlin, Margaret A. – 1994
Educators at Georgia Southern University began using a whole language approach to developmental literacy instruction by adapting the model David Bartholomae and Anthony Petrosky provide in "Facts, Artifacts, and Counterfacts." Rather than a focus on information retrieval and transfer, whole language curricula encourage students to engage…
Descriptors: Black Literature, Blacks, Higher Education, Reader Response
Hamilton, Virginia – 1976
The fiction writer uses language to create the illusion of reality. A work of fiction is an illusion of life in which characters attempt to transform basic reality by casting their desires and views upon it, thus creating internal conflict between elements of the real and the unreal. Characters must sort out through experiences that enable them to…
Descriptors: Authors, Biographies, Characterization, Childrens Literature
Wesson, David A. – 1987
A study investigated the relationship between readability of advertising copy and conventional measures of ad readership. It was hypothesized that readership scores would be higher for advertisements containing copy with the highest and lowest computed readership grade levels. Fifty-five full-page advertisements that met arbitrary minimal copy…
Descriptors: Advertising, Language Styles, Language Usage, Mass Media
Cole, SuzAnne C. – 1990
After students' interest in literature has been stirred by journal writing, it is time for them to turn their private journal writing into writing for an audience. Instead of having students write the usual responses to literature, vary their assignments by offering them creative responses, either occasionally or as an individual alternative to…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Creative Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Stewig, John Warren – 1985
Noting that too many children leave elementary school without developing the ability to use words imaginatively, this paper presents a teaching approach that uses literature to foster invention in children's writing. The approach described is part of a total composition program that structures writing experiences in which children observe…
Descriptors: Child Language, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Expressive Language