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Showing 16 to 30 of 57 results Save | Export
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Harris, Helen J. – English Journal, 1992
Describes how students can help evaluate each other in discussion groups and how this improves their writing. Asserts that students appreciate the scrutiny of the conferences and take their own writing much more seriously as a result. Describes this technique in the context of a high school writing workshop. (PRA)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Group Discussion, Secondary Education, Student Evaluation
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Stassen-McLaughlin, Marilyn – English Journal, 1991
Discusses collaborative learning and group work. Asserts that teachers often put pressure on a group so that students cannot communicate freely. Suggests changing evaluative markers from good and bad to most outrageous, most thought provoking, and most humorous, so that students' creative energy can flow. Includes transcripts of student…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion, Learning Processes
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Malin, Ginger Goldman – English Journal, 2007
Summer book groups enhance and sustain student literacy behaviors over the break, making available an enjoyable social forum for critical-thinking and critical-reading practices to occur naturally. Significantly, the book groups grant faculty and students an informal space to connect meaningfully through reflective discussion of texts. Because…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Summer Programs, Books, Group Discussion
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Perron, John D. – English Journal, 1972
Author describes a series of games that tries to duplicate the natural writing act under group conditions, (which) frees the teacher from the effort of materials' production (and) places the burden of creating raw materials on the student. (Author)
Descriptors: Creativity, Educational Games, English Instruction, Group Activities
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Tsujimoto, Joseph I. – English Journal, 1993
Explores the importance of students' extemporaneous talk about student writing, literature, and personal experiences in various group contexts. Asserts that developing a student's mind is the English teacher's primary goal. Describes how teachers can achieve this by taking a less prominent role in managing class discussion as students gain…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Critical Thinking, Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction
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Ferrara, Charles L. – English Journal, 1981
Analyzes ways to lead group discussions of literature. Offers suggestions on what questions to ask and how to keep the discussion a stimulating experience for the participants. (RL)
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Group Dynamics, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
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Krogness, Mary Mercer – English Journal, 1996
Explores connections to be made between literature and life by using "Cinderella" as an occasion for classroom drama and personal discussion. Explains how the instructor assumes the role of a reporter as students tell their own Cinderella stories. (TB)
Descriptors: Drama, Group Discussion, Literature Appreciation, Middle Schools
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Kahn, Elizabeth – English Journal, 2007
According to a growing body of research, discussion-based instruction, in the context of high academic demands, significantly enhances student achievement in reading. The effects apply to below- as well as above-average-ability students. These findings confirm what secondary English teachers have believed all along about the value of discussion.…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion, English Teachers, Reading Achievement
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Mader, Arti – English Journal, 1996
Talks about how a teacher has changed her ideas over the course of her career and learned to grow with the times. Describes the process of professional growth and what is necessary for it to happen. (TB)
Descriptors: Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Group Discussion, Professional Development
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Chadwick, Dee – English Journal, 1991
Describes a three-week project using cooperative learning groups where students address the question of the future of their Arizona community. Demonstrates how groups discussed, argued, and tried to come to consensus for developing a comprehensive community land-use proposal. (PRA)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Citizenship Responsibility, Cooperative Learning, Futures (of Society)
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Henneberg, Susan – English Journal, 1996
Discusses a teacher's difficulties in using reader response approaches to engage her students at an urban alternative high school. Examines their resistances to discussion and personal response. Offers a few approaches the teacher has been trying, with some success, to overcome these resistances. (TB)
Descriptors: Group Discussion, High Risk Students, High Schools, Reader Response
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Kahn, Elizabeth A.; And Others – English Journal, 1984
Describes the use of value analysis exercises to promote small group and class discussion. (MM)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Evaluation Criteria, Group Discussion, Literary Criticism
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Westcott, Gary – English Journal, 1982
Describes and illustrates a series of discussions and a charting form to help junior high school instructors teach their students self-directed discussion skills. (RL)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Communication Skills, Discussion
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Sio-Castineira, Begona – English Journal, 1997
Suggests that the contrasting cultural and material circumstances of children in the United States and Spain contribute to their relative capacities for critical thinking and discussion. Suggests that Spanish adolescents hesitate to take a stand without openly discussing their feelings, while North American students hate discussion that wanders…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries
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Smagorinski, Peter – English Journal, 1991
Asserts that role-playing peer-response groups provide effective feedback and help students develop a sense of the characteristics of a particular audience. Illustrates with a sample lesson (a college application essay) by outlining five steps of the process. Offers other uses of the role-playing peer-response groups method. (PRA)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Audience Response, Group Discussion, Peer Evaluation
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