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White, John Wesley; Ali-Khan, Carolyne – English Education, 2020
Contemporary research in critical multicultural education and cultural studies has demonstrated how race, class, gender, and sexual orientation affect students' educational experiences, their academic success, and the formation of their identities inside and outside of school. These studies show that youth identity--especially race, class, gender,…
Descriptors: Sex, Sexuality, Language Arts, English Curriculum
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Dyches, Jeanne; Thomas, Deani – English Education, 2020
This case study, which investigates twenty-four 11th-grade students of American literature, asks: What successes and challenges did students experience when reading "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" through a critical race theory (CRT)/critical Whiteness studies (CWS) lens? Findings reveal that applying a CRT/CWS lens helped students…
Descriptors: Whites, Classics (Literature), Critical Theory, Race
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Ryan Schey – English Education, 2019
Recent decades show increased scholarship in literacy education considering LGBTQ-themed texts and LGBTQ people in English language arts classrooms. Building on studies exploring choice in school-based reading, I focus on the experiences of youth navigating their visibility when they interacted with other people about their queer reading choices…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Instruction, Reading Material Selection, LGBTQ People
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David Nurenberg – English Education, 2016
Tracking and other practices of homogeneously grouping students by so-called ability level remain a norm in American classrooms, despite decades of research highlighting how they disserve and even harm student learning. Heterogeneous grouping, by contrast, benefits struggling learners, a conclusion supported by a substantial body of research. Some…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Honors Curriculum, Heterogeneous Grouping, Individualized Instruction
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Ross Collin; Clay Aschliman – English Education, 2017
This exploratory study investigates English education professors' beliefs about the economic value of studying English language arts (ELA). In response to a 44-item, cross-sectional survey, 140 professors clarified their beliefs about which economic benefits are and should be offered in high school ELA classes; how ELA classes are and should be…
Descriptors: Educational Benefits, English Instruction, Language Arts, High Schools
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Howe, Emily; Correnti, Richard – English Education, 2020
An increased emphasis on writing standards has recently led many U.S. states to incorporate text-based writing assessments into their test-based accountability system. This creates political and pedagogical tensions that teachers must navigate in their classroom use of writing rubrics. While prior research has focused on rubric design and/or the…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Scoring Rubrics, Writing Evaluation, Teaching Methods
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Rainey, Emily; Moje, Elizabeth Birr – English Education, 2012
We offer this article to support ELA and other subject-area teachers as they think about why disciplinary literacy teaching is important and how to enact it in robust ways. We argue that it is critical for the improvement of students' academic literacy development and overall learning that all teachers and literacy researchers attend to the…
Descriptors: Literacy, Language Arts, Reading Skills, Content Area Reading
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DiPardo, Anne; Staley, Sara; Selland, Makenzie; Martin, Adam; Gniewek, Olivia – English Education, 2012
This article describes a writing partnership that involved university preservice teachers and ninth grade students enrolled in an integrated social studies/language arts class. While the high school students found the experience exciting and satisfying, the preservice teachers expressed anxieties and concerns as they endeavored to foster academic…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Preservice Teachers, Writing (Composition), Cooperative Learning
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Fecho, Bob; Graham, Peg; Hudson-Ross, Sally – English Education, 2005
In this article, the authors--the teacher educators who obtained a grant from the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations (AVD)--explore what it meant for teachers and teacher educators involved in the PorTRAIT (Practitioner or Teacher Researchers As Inquiring Travelers) program to enlarge their views of teacher research and their own classrooms by being…
Descriptors: Researchers, Teacher Educators, Teacher Researchers, Context Effect
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Cook, Leslie Susan; Amatucci, Kristi Bruce – English Education, 2006
In the last ten years, colleges of education have pledged written support to addressing issues of diversity. Mission statements and revised syllabi have been common elements in this movement for inclusiveness, and teacher candidates in English language arts are part of the transformation. Literature often has been considered a quick and easy way…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Teaching Methods, Secondary School Teachers, Literature
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Albers, Peggy – English Education, 2006
Evolution of the "old page", or written hardcopy texts, to the "new" (Kress, 2003), or electronic page, means that today's learners have experience with reading a variety of texts. Image, music, and electronic inscription (font, style, flash, and so on) are features of multimodal texts that many learners prefer to read and create. With the screen…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Design, English Instruction