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Showing 91 to 105 of 342 results Save | Export
Lauritzen, Carol; Jaeger, Michael – 1992
Jill Paton Walsh's "The Green Book," the story of a group of humans and their life on a new planet, captures the imagination of learners and provides a compelling context for learning. Several groups of learners including fifth graders and adult teacher practitioners responded to the book in unique and interesting ways. As the setting,…
Descriptors: Adults, Class Activities, Intermediate Grades, Novels
Swanson, Ann – 1993
A study explored what an outside-the-classroom, authentic literature discussion involved. Three book club discussions (involving a leaderless group consisting of members of varying professions meeting monthly to discuss fiction and nonfiction reading selections) were audiotaped, transcribed and coded. Results indicated that: (1) when allowed to…
Descriptors: Adults, Discourse Communities, Discussion, Group Behavior
Winter, Kathleen R. – 1994
Teaching "some" literature in a college composition course is important because it offers variety, enlivens classroom discussion, introduces different writing styles, and helps students to understand and study life. The debate over the appropriateness of literature in the composition classroom has been ongoing. Erika Lindemann believes…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
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
Ramsey, Richard David – 1983
One hundred undergraduate business students completed a questionnaire designed to determine their reactions to a traditional and a "flashier" textbook format. Before completing the questionnaire, subjects spent several minutes examining two business textbooks--one an older textbook with black ink on white paper, narrow margins, and few…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Higher Education, Layout (Publications), Reader Response
Thompson, Timothy N. – 1987
By applying Kenneth Burke's concepts of Order, the Secret, and the Kill to the newspaper-audience-advertiser relationship, the narrow imagery that depicts that relationship only in economic terms can be counteracted. Burke's maps of hierarchy, mystery, and transcendence in human action allow the depiction of a complex meshing of patterns,…
Descriptors: Advertising, Audience Analysis, Mass Media Effects, Newspapers
Lain, Laurence B. – 1986
A study investigated whether newspaper mug shots are perceived by readers as being positive or negative in tone and whether the mug shots that are selected match the roles of their subjects in accompanying stories. Twenty-three news and feature stories with associated mug shots were clipped from seven daily newspapers. Pictures and stories were…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Bias, Editing, Higher Education
Wyatt, Robert O.; Badger, David P. – 1988
Persuasion theories typically attempt to account for attitude change, but mass media reviews influence more ephemeral variables, the chief of which is "interest" in attending or otherwise consuming a cultural event or object. Reviewing and other forms of "evaluative journalism"--including much sports, consumer, and political…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Evaluative Thinking, Film Criticism, Higher Education
Goetz, Ernest T.; And Others – 1987
To explore imagery and emotional involvement in reading, a study examined readers' imagery and emotional responses through the use of ratings for each paragraph in a story. Subjects, 40 undergraduate volunteers recruited from education classes, read a 2100-word excerpt from the novel "Buffalo Chief" by Jean and Paul Annixter. Students…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Emotional Response, Higher Education, Imagery
Keroes, Jo – 1989
Despite their impact on literary criticism, contemporary theories of reader response and deconstruction seem to have had little effect on the practice of teaching literature, and most teachers of introductory literature courses remain vague about what these "new" theories are and how they can be used. Proponents of some of these theories…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Fiction, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
Smith, David L. – 1985
Because public schools are designed to serve the widest range of interests and are committed to the ideal of democracy, teachers cannot afford to avoid teaching works or presenting ideas that offend some members of communities. Students need to learn the value of controversy and of the challenges posed by a text. Richard Wright's "Native Son" and…
Descriptors: Censorship, Freedom of Speech, Intellectual Freedom, Literary Criticism
Lang, Frederick K. – 1983
The reader response criticism that has arisen in direct response to the New Criticism can be adapted to the needs of the developing writer through its emphasis upon the experience of the reader engaged with the text. The reader response approach generates content--helps the developing writer find something to say--and facilitates the process…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Reader Response
Siegel, Gerald – 2003
This paper describes how two "American Dream" courses were created--one was a senior seminar in Fall 2001 that developed after the tragic events of that September and the other, its offspring, was a Fall 2002 class in the American Novel, which was planned deliberately. The paper first looks at how 9/11 changed the senior seminar by…
Descriptors: American Dream, Course Descriptions, Cultural Context, Curriculum Development
Brown, Joanne – 2003
An instructor of an adolescent literature course wanted to give the students an opportunity to study some novels not specifically written for an adolescent audience. Examples of such novels were: Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird," J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye," and Jamaica Kincaid's "Annie John." Including…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Annotated Bibliographies, Course Descriptions, Fiction
Ratliff, Gerald Lee – 2000
One of the primary principles of Readers Theater is to "dramatize" literature in classroom performance and to provide a visual and oral stimulus to students who are unaccustomed to using imagination to appreciate literary texts. Readers Theater may be used to enhance the critical study of language; to explore author meaning or point of view; to…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Introductory Courses
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