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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
Georgina Martin – University of British Columbia Press, 2024
What does it mean to be Secwepemc? And how can an autobiographical journey to recover Secwepemc identity inform teaching and learning? "Drumming Our Way Home" demonstrates how telling, retelling, and re-storying lived experiences not only passes on traditional ways but also opens up a world of culture-based learning. Georgina Martin was…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Personnel
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Boatright, Michael D. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2010
This article explores how immigrant experiences are represented in the narratives of three graphic novels published in the last decade: Tan's (2007) "The Arrival," Kiyama's (1931/1999) "The Four Immigrants Manga: A Japanese Experience in San Francisco, 1904-1924," and Yang's (2006) "American Born Chinese." Through a theoretical lens informed by…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Language Arts, Immigration, Immigrants
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Kahl, David H., Jr. – Communication Teacher, 2010
This article describes a project that encourages the development of a critical-pedagogical perspective in an undergraduate small group communication class. The project provides a transition from ideology to practice by combining activities that have been connected to critical communication pedagogy--service learning and autoethnography. The…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Critical Theory, Higher Education, Undergraduate Study
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Kebede, Alem – Teaching Sociology, 2009
Sociological imagination is a quality of mind that cannot be adopted by simply teaching students its discursive assumptions. Rather, it is a disposition, in competition with other forms of sensibility, which can be acquired only when it is practiced. Adhering to this important pedagogical assumption, students were assigned to write their…
Descriptors: Social History, Imagination, Autobiographies, Sociology
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Dyson, Michael – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2007
This paper highlights a distinctive way to research and present issues within education using metaphor and the qualitative narrative methodology known as auto ethnography. Auto ethnographic writing links the personal to the cultural and is recognised as a methodology that combines the method with the writing of the text, which in turn explicates…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Research Methodology, Figurative Language
Christensen, Linda – Rethinking Schools, Ltd, 2009
"Teaching for Joy and Justice" is the much-anticipated sequel to Linda Christensen's bestselling, "Reading, Writing, and Rising Up." Christensen is recognized as one of the country's finest teachers. Her latest book shows why. Through story upon story, Christensen demonstrates how she draws on students' lives and the world to teach poetry, essay,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Language Arts, Autobiographies, Literacy Education
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Cohen, Michael – Exercise Exchange, 1986
Describes a writing exercise useful for students who have already shown some facility in writing about personal experiences and that emphasizes the narrowing of scope and time in a reminiscence and developing it with detail in order to make it more interesting for others. (HTH)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, High Schools, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Ramondetta, June – Learning, 1991
Describes a project in which elementary school students create a computer-generated time line of milestones in their lives, noting such an activity can give them a good start on writing autobiographies. (SM)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Computer Assisted Instruction, Creative Teaching, Elementary Education
Faughnan, Cynthia; Hemker, Elaine; Rive, Opdyke-Belle – Instructor, 1999
Presents two standards-based language arts activities for middle school students. The first involves collecting family photographs, writing a descriptive essay based on each one, and publishing the final product using Microsoft Publisher. The second involves creating one-page autobiographies, designing a publishable product, and publishing it…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Computer Assisted Instruction, Grade 8, Language Arts
Malden, Cynthia L. – 1993
Through the narratives of North American slaves a vivid picture of their lives, struggles, hopes, and aspirations emerges. The slave narrative arose as a response to, and a refutation of, claims that blacks could not write. Slave writings were often direct extensions of speech. Through a process of imitation and repetition, the black slave's…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Blacks, Higher Education, Individual Development
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Jensen, Marvin D. – Communication Education, 1984
Explores the use of introspective writing by others as a means of understanding two characteristics of intrapersonal communication: the process of selective memory which defines and redefines personal history and the pattern of habitual thinking which confirms self-identity. Recommends the classroom use of memoirs and journals. (PD)
Descriptors: Authors, Autobiographies, Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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Genor, Michele; Goodwin, A. Lin – New Educator, 2005
This paper introduces autobiographical analysis as a "disruptive strategy" that is deliberately structured to enable preservice teachers to develop new ways of thinking about teaching. Specifically, we: 1) describe how we incorporate a process of critical examination of preservice teachers' biases and assumptions throughout their…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Reflective Teaching, Teacher Educators
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Levy, Tedd – Social Education, 1991
Suggests that Benjamin Franklin's autobiography contains many useful messages for today's students. Discusses Franklin's list of virtues that he followed in an attempt at attaining moral perfection. Includes temperance, industry, justice, tranquillity, and humility. Describes the message of Franklin's lesson as one of achieving through effort…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Citizenship Education, History Instruction, Individual Development
McCabe, Don – 1995
This book, part autobiography and part manual for teaching dyslexics to read, argues that dyslexia can be more a gift than a handicap. It recounts the life of a dyslexic reader who became an educator, i.e., how "luck" enabled him to learn to read, and how "ignorance" and "stubbornness" enabled him to teach other…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Dyslexia, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education
Lambert, Robert G., Jr. – 1985
In the summer of 1884, Ulysses S. Grant wrote his "Memoirs," which were published and promoted by the great American writer, Mark Twain, who encouraged and aided Grant in his literary work. Grant was fatally ill with cancer of the throat and raced against time to complete his manuscript. He was motivated by the desire to provide…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Black History, Blacks, Civil Rights
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