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Showing 16 to 30 of 86 results Save | Export
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Burns, Leslie David; Botzakis, Stergios G. – English Journal, 2012
In this article the authors illustrate an instructional unit based on a Common Core grades 9-10 illustrative text--Amy Tan's "Two Kinds" from "The Joy Luck Club." They demonstrate how teachers can meet the new standards "and" respond to students' 21st-century needs by using this modern classic along with other traditional and new media resources.…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Popular Culture, Grade 9, Academic Standards
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Falkner, Shannon – English Journal, 2011
In this article, the author offers a user-friendly approach to semiotics that engages students in critical examination of the popular culture they are already immersed in. She defines semiotics as "the study of signs" and explains how asking students to analyze cultural objects and practices from ordinary life and popular culture can engage their…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Semiotics, High Schools, Educational Environment
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Gainer, Jesse S.; Lapp, Diane – English Journal, 2010
Although not a new concept, remix has recently gained popularity in mainstream sources ranging from video games to newspaper columns and television commercials for airline tickets, fried chicken, and soft drinks. All these examples draw on a concept that originates from hip-hop culture and refers to the creative blending of materials from…
Descriptors: Creativity, Television Commercials, Popular Culture, Video Games
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Nail, Allan – English Journal, 2009
One reason zombie films are so frightening, and perhaps so popular, is because zombies represent a unique type of monster. Rather than frightening people because they are so alien to the world as people understand it, zombies are horrifying in how closely they resemble people. Zombies are people and represent the potential of zombie…
Descriptors: Films, Human Body, Death, Mobility
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Hill, Marc Lamont; Perez, Biany; Irby, Decoteau J. – English Journal, 2008
Street fiction is a popular new genre of novels that focus on contemporary urban life. Marc Lamont Hill, Biany Perez, and Decoteau J. Irby introduce this genre, describing what it is, who writes it, and who reads it. They also offer critiques of the genre and strategies for linking street fiction to the English classroom. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Urban Culture, Novels, English Instruction, Literary Genres
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Ruble, Julie; Lysne, Kim – English Journal, 2010
Each year, seventh graders at Woodlawn School in Davidson, North Carolina, learn about Japan through a compilation of literature, history, and art. They are introduced to a wide range of ideas and materials: they study the Heian and Tokugawa Periods as well as modern Japan, the code of the samurai warriors, haiku and its components, and Japanese…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Foreign Countries, Grade 7, Student Motivation
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Berger, Molly – English Journal, 2008
The first day of school used to be exhausting for the author. To change this, the author needed to capitalize on the enthusiasm of the first day, so now she shortens the time devoted to rules so she can begin to build on real learning right away. In this article, the author shares three of her favorite opening activities. Using popular culture and…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, English Instruction, Class Activities, Multimedia Materials
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Adams, Megan Glover – English Journal, 2009
Cross-age tutoring, in which older and younger students work together to improve their ELA skills, is not a new concept; Linda D. Labbo and William H. Teale explored it as a tool for poor readers as early as 1990. The author has found that using tutoring with video games also works well. Students have the opportunity to read aloud collaboratively…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Video Games, Adolescents, Cross Age Teaching
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Martinez, Louis – English Journal, 2010
The nation's focus on the literacy skills of students--especially boys--has produced many notions of reform. School districts reorganized and changed curricula to meet the needs of struggling readers and writers. In New York City, where this author was teaching, "Balanced Literacy" (a reading and writing workshop) had been implemented in…
Descriptors: High School Students, Program Effectiveness, Surveys, Questionnaires
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Eikmeier, Ginger M. – English Journal, 2008
Students in Ginger M. Eikmeier's high school classes link themes and terms from their readings to episodes of "The Simpsons." Because students are already familiar with "The Simpsons," Eikmeier believes that using the show supports students' comprehension and retention by activating prior knowledge. Additionally, it shows students that she cares…
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Reaction, Reader Response, Prior Learning
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Desmet, Christy – English Journal, 2009
YouTube, the video sharing website that allows viewers to upload video content ranging from cute dog tricks to rare rock videos, also supports a lively community devoted to the performance of Shakespeare and Shakespearean adaptations. YouTube is also a popular site for student producers of Shakespeare performances, parodies, and other artistic…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Computer Uses in Education, Teaching Methods, Video Technology
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English Journal, 1980
Five teachers respond to the title question, providing literary analysis of the cult film and explanations for its appeal. (RL)
Descriptors: Films, Popular Culture, Student Interests, Teacher Attitudes
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Allender, Dale – English Journal, 2004
Traditional and innovative elements such as bells and music with quick pacing accented by a voice that students could recognize is used to effortlessly bring students to the classroom. Popular culture is shown to work well using classroom examples.
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Classroom Techniques, Music, Student Attitudes
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Gardner, Robert – English Journal, 2004
The use of popular culture to bring about an advanced learning in the students as they try to find appropriate literary allusions and further their own learning in the process is discussed.
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Discovery Learning, Teaching Methods, English Curriculum
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Kirkland, David E. – English Journal, 2008
For David E. Kirkland, the New English Education locates English language arts in the realities of youth, where texts emerge from students' lives, and the notions of reading and writing in English classrooms are open to revision. Kirkland reflects on how "postmodern Black experience, especially as seen in hip-hop, gives English teachers one way of…
Descriptors: English Teachers, English Instruction, African American Students, Popular Culture
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