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Showing 106 to 120 of 342 results Save | Export
Xu, Wenying – 1996
The act of reading is always interpretation through the lens of an individual's own culture and value system. In a World Literature class the encounter between American readers and a text from a different culture can produce 3 results: reading into it the individual's own world; translating the alien into the familiar; and appreciating its…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Empathy, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Weinbaum, Batya – 1997
Great theoretical debate has occurred in whether a teacher not of the same biological origin of the author of a text can do justice to the literature of another ethnic or racial group in the class. However, mainstream public university students of largely white populations feel themselves "indoctrinated" in classrooms which have the aim…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Educational Environment, Ethnicity, Higher Education
Young, Michael W. – 1993
Debates as to the critical element in the writing process have usually taken sides as to either the preeminence of the writer or the essential nature of the text. Throughout two separate studies into the instruction of creative writing genres, the key element in every teaching situation is, instead of writer or text, the creation of a tangible…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cooperation, Creative Writing, Higher Education
Karolides, Nicholas J. – 1991
Differences in readers' interpretations of a given text illustrate premises of the transactional or reader response theory of literature. The theory holds that: (1) meaning resides in the coming together of reader and text; (2) the reader affects the reading of the text and is affected by the text; and (3) there are potentially as many meanings to…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Epistemology, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
Hynds, Susan – 1990
A study compared the literary response and character attribution processes of 40 undergraduate students on the basis of differences in their interpersonal construct repertoire, or "interpersonal cognitive complexity." No studies to date have explored the ways in which cognitive complexity influences readers' overall responses to…
Descriptors: Characterization, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, Cognitive Style
Armstrong, Karen – 1992
In what appear to be grand saccadic leaps, research on reader response has turned first, at the beginning of the century, to the external reality of the text; then to the internal reality of the reader; and finally to the movement of the response process itself. Three metaphors derive from the three successive research orientations: from the…
Descriptors: Educational Trends, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
Gamber, Cayo – 1992
Two exercises were developed to demonstrate how Mikhail Bakhtin's conception of novelistic language and creative interpretation are instrumental in teaching students to read creatively. The text chosen for these exercises was "Crime Against Nature" by Minnie Bruce Pratt. According to Bakhtin's scheme, a fiction can be read most…
Descriptors: College English, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education
Chappell, Virginia A. – 1994
"Farewll to Manzanar" (Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston and James Houston), autobiographical account of the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, might be used in a writing class to help students think deliberately about race and ethnicity. Writing about the book and researching the history surrounding it could serve to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Japanese Americans, Multicultural Education, Personal Narratives
Young, Dennis – 1994
To ask students to write and respond to each other's papers is one means of confronting the difficulties posed by radical texts such as Adrienne Rich's "When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Revision," an essay from her collection "On Lies, Secrets, and Silence." When an instructor assigns such a work, he or she places him- or…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Females, Feminism, Higher Education
Lehman, Barbara A.; Scharer, Patricia L. – 1993
A study examined similarities and differences between adults' and children's responses to the same children's book, and the role of discussion in shaping adults' perceptions about the book and their understanding of children's responses. Subjects, 129 students in five university children's literature classes, read and responded in writing to…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Childrens Literature, Comparative Analysis, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Johannessen, Larry R. – 1992
This paper presents four introductory activities designed to help students with their reading problems, motivate them to read, and help them turn their interpretations of literature into effective compositions. The paper presents samples for each of the four activities ("Opinionnaires," Scenarios, Simulations, and Role Playing),…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Learning Activities, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
Schiller, Susan – 1991
Empirical research into reading theory suggests people begin a reading transaction with an affective response and then primarily rely on memory. They may elect to use imagination as an option to influence the process, but when the affective response is overwhelming, the imagination lies dormant while memory dominates the transaction. A research…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Case Studies, Emotional Response, Films
Struck, Larry – 1983
Text headings can be used to structural and expressive advantage in technical material, increasing textual coherence and encouraging reader/text correspondence. The five general types of headings are differentiated by their functions: (1) descriptive headings refer to the most prominent feature of a text section; (2) reflective headings provide…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Editing, Mass Media, Organization
Newsome, George L., III – 1984
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of reader perspective on encoding, storage, and retrieval processes and how this effect differs as a function of cognitive style. In both experiments, subjects read a passage from one of two assigned perspectives (a burglar or a prospective home buyer) or from no assigned perspective. In the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Memory
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
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