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Showing 1 to 15 of 86 results Save | Export
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Kate O'Brien Collins – English Journal, 2021
In this article, Kate Collins begins by explaining how she discovered that "Hamilton: An American Musical," a Broadway show that incorporates a mix of musical genres: hip-hop, jazz, classic show tunes, and show-stopper numbers based on the life of Alexander Hamilton, could be brought into her teaching as a rich resource for her high…
Descriptors: Music, Popular Culture, Teaching Methods, High School Students
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Melissa Vosen Callens – English Journal, 2017
The author describes how the production and reception of popular culture can be studied in secondary classrooms using Wendy Griswold's cultural diamond to better understand the homogenizing of content and the limiting of alternative viewpoints.
Descriptors: English Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Popular Culture, Assignments
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William Visco – English Journal, 2019
In this article, the author describes three strategies they have used to bolster interest and make use of popular culture to enhance readers' interactions with texts: pop culture pairings, musical connections, and multimodal projects. The author addresses the cultivation of pop culture awareness, the importance of multimodal pedagogy, the…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Learner Engagement, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Comprehension
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David E. Low – English Journal, 2017
In an era of "colorblind racism," in which race and racism are often suppressed as topics of discussion in classrooms, this article explores how students used comics to invent workarounds for "colormuteness" in their school. Knowing comics are not generally taken seriously, students employed the medium to subversive ends.
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Cartoons, Role Models, Racism
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Ashley K. Dallacqua; David E. Low – English Journal, 2019
Located in the suburbs of a large midwestern city, Trail Middle School serves a predominantly middle-class population. The data the authors feature in this article include group discussions and interviews with students, as well as recordings of in-class lessons, student work, and fieldnotes. The authors focus on the theme of gender as it emerged…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Gender Issues, Gender Bias, Student Attitudes
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Luke Rodesiler – English Journal, 2014
Inspired by Leslie David Burns and Stergios G. Botzakis's efforts to demonstrate how texts recognized as exemplars by the Common Core State Standards could be used to address national standards and meet the needs of contemporary students, the author aims to illustrate how alternative nonfiction, nonprint texts--sports-based documentary…
Descriptors: Documentaries, Films, Common Core State Standards, Popular Culture
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Alison G. Dover; Tony Pozdol – English Journal, 2016
In this article, the authors examine how one of the authors used Kendrick Lamar's autobiographical hip-hop to provoke mandate-compliant analyses of complex social, racial, and political realities. This unit also offers a compelling example of "critical compliance" (Gorlewski, "Accountable") as a strategy for resisting dominant…
Descriptors: Teachers, English Instruction, Popular Culture, Popular Education
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Lyschel Shipp – English Journal, 2017
The author argues that, by revolutionizing the literary canon, we are revolutionizing the English classroom, and urges us to shift from focusing exclusively on required texts to equally acknowledging the urgent need for consciousness and activism from our students.
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Culturally Relevant Education, Learner Engagement, Popular Culture
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Jeffrey D. Wilhelm; Michael W. Smith – English Journal, 2016
The authors share findings from a recent study of teens who freely select to read texts typically marginalized by schools (dystopia, vampire, romance, horror, fantasy), revealing the distinct functional and psychological benefits of pleasure reading. The students who participated in the study that the authors report on were eighth graders who…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Attitudes, Recreational Reading
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Michael Macaluso; Anne Russo – English Journal, 2016
This article respectfully challenges the metaphor of "open doors as resistance" by reconceptualizing power in the English classroom. It also offers an alternative metaphor -- open doors as acts of love and possibility -- through different theoretical and practical underpinnings. When we, according to the authors, conceive of teaching…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Language Arts, English Teachers, Teacher Empowerment
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Dana Huff – English Journal, 2017
According to the author, as our abilities to combine image and text become more sophisticated and ubiquitous, digital storytelling is a powerful means for sharing those stories. Digital storytelling is a perfect way to remix stories. To present American literature as relevant to students' lives, the author rewrote their curriculum using backwards…
Descriptors: United States Literature, Curriculum Development, Relevance (Education), Story Telling
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Jaclyn Christine Burr – English Journal, 2017
This article explores using spoken word poetry and song analysis in the classroom to inspire students to analyze their identities and strive for social justice in their research efforts. Poetry is empowering. It can show students how people express themselves, push them to consider their own identities, and inspire them to seek social change.…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Music, Singing
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Garland, Kathy – English Journal, 2012
Ms. Mayer, a recently retired English language arts teacher, frequently used strategies described in John Golden's book "Reading in the Dark: Using Film as a Tool in the English Classroom." In this book, Golden suggests that ELA teachers "reverse the order: use a film clip to practice the reading and analytical skills that we want our students to…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Popular Culture, Speech Communication, Language Arts
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Kelly, Lauren Leigh – English Journal, 2013
There is an educational disconnect between students' individual backgrounds and the instruction that they traditionally receive in school (Darling-Hammond 3). This division is even more severe for black, Latino/Latina, and economically underprivileged students, who often lack the support, experience, or resources to fully engage in…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Music Activities, English Instruction, Language Arts
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Page, Melissa A. – English Journal, 2012
The classroom dynamic has become a competition of whose information is more important: the quickly accessed and popular digital texts or the perhaps less popular print texts. Whether or not teachers or school systems sanction the reading or teaching of popular culture texts in the classroom, students are reading--are even bombarded with--messages…
Descriptors: Literacy, Reading Skills, Popular Culture, Layout (Publications)
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