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Showing 76 to 90 of 342 results Save | Export
Reaves, Shiela – 1986
Photography editors from three major newspapers and three former presidents of the National Press Photographers Association were surveyed to establish a framework for discussion of ethical questions concerning digital retouching of photographs and its impact on the credibility of photojournalism. Although photographs have been repaired, spliced or…
Descriptors: Credibility, Ethics, Journalism, Mass Media Effects
Bohle, Robert H.; Garcia, Mario R. – 1986
In order to discover reader reactions to color on a newspaper page, specifically eye movement and overall opinion of the paper, identical pages were created and printed by the "St. Petersburg Times" (Florida). The content of fifteen front pages, six lifestyles pages, and three sports front pages were nearly identical, differing only in the kind…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Color, Color Planning, Design Preferences
Smith, Eugene – 1989
A teacher of an undergraduate literature course, inspired by the increasing use of collaborative writing in the workplace and by reader-response criticism, required a collaborative writing assignment in the course. A computer laboratory equipped as a local area network (LAN) was instrumental, enabling sustained, serious collaboration. Students…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Collaborative Writing, Computer Uses in Education, Grouping (Instructional Purposes)
Ellis, W. Geiger – 1985
Teachers' dismissal of Robert Cormier's books as "too depressing" suggests a lack of sound critical understanding of his work and a lack of faith in individual young people. The body of adolescent or young adult literature has come a long way in recent years. The writing has shown a much fuller range of literary quality and the content…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, Bibliotherapy, Characterization
Thompson, Nancy S. – 1985
In a collaborative learning experience at the South Carolina Humanities and Writing Institute, writing process teaching methods were used to teach literature. "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was used as a prototype study for the group, while at the same time, each teacher-fellow developed his or her own literature study and teaching…
Descriptors: Cooperative Planning, English Instruction, Inservice Teacher Education, Literature Appreciation
Towers, Wayne M. – 1984
Prompted by the lack of use and gratification studies that have concerned themselves with an examination of newspaper-related behaviors such as subscribing versus not subscribing, buying single copies versus not reading at all, and weekday versus Sunday newspaper readership, a study conducted a telephone survey of 543 persons to determine whether…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Mass Media Effects, Media Research, Newspapers
Weaver, Constance – 1984
For many years, methods of teaching reading have been based upon a mechanistic paradigm that something can be understood by reducing it to its most basic parts. This scientific paradigm has led to several misconceptions about reading: (1) that comprehension can be reduced to separately identifiable parts, (2) that meaning is contained within the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Physics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Fox, Mem – Language Arts, 1988
Discusses why writers write, and cites caring about the response to writing as the key to development. Urges teachers to be sensitive to the social nature of writing and to the vulnerability of writers, and to demonstrate and encourage writing for fun, enjoyment, and power. (MM)
Descriptors: Authors, Foreign Countries, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Zhang, Yuanzhong – 2000
Reading has been perceived as a dynamic transactional process wherein readers negotiate meaning with writers by virtue of their prior knowledge. The act of meaning construction is realized primarily through the exploration of intertextual links that connect various sources of texts the readers have composed or experienced. Readers utilize…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Inquiry
Holt, Mara; Viola, Tony; Pruitt, John; Rankin, Mark – 2001
This paper presents a discussion examining personal revelations discovered through peer critique and teacher response. It begins by discussing the issue of dealing with alien terms and specialized jargon in academic papers, through the example of one instructor's different treatment of two student papers based on the instructor's familiarity with…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cultural Pluralism, Higher Education, Homophobia
Evans, Allen D. – 2003
The "Harry Potter" series has become a phenomenal success with children. "Harry Potter" books in print worldwide is in excess of 116 million, and they have been translated into 47 languages. What might account for this huge popularity? While the characters and events are certainly engaging, funny, original, and creative, they…
Descriptors: Characterization, Childrens Literature, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
Van der Hoeven, Sieta – 1999
Jeffrey Wilhelm extrapolated 10 different dimensions of response to reading, which he grouped under the headings of "evocative,""connective," and "reflective" dimensions. A study used these dimensions of response to measure some of the activities set by a group of teachers and some of the written and oral work…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Critical Theory, Faculty Development, Foreign Countries
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
Koch, Kevin – 1996
At the turn of the century, Gertrude Buck developed a progressive language theory in which writer, reader, and language all participate in the making of meaning. Over the course of her career as a professor, Buck developed a theory of reader empowerment in composition and literature that prefigured some of the main tenets of reader-response theory…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Educational History, Higher Education, Language Role
Goetz, Ernest T.; And Others – 1992
A study extended the investigation of readers' imaginative processes (spontaneous imagery and emotional response) to a new genre of texts: newspaper articles. A sample of 25 articles was randomly selected from a well-defined population of naturally occurring texts (articles with one or more subheadings and three to five paragraphs before the first…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Correlation, Emotional Response, Higher Education
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