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Showing 1 to 15 of 40 results Save | Export
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Rhiannon Julia O'Grady; Daniel Cassany; Janine Knight – English in Education, 2024
This qualitative Action Research study explores a group of lower secondary pupils' use of social semiotic resources and traditional and digital tools to develop an understanding of "Romeo and Juliet" at a private trilingual school in Barcelona. Forming part of a wider study undertaken by an English language and literature teacher, it…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Literature, Teaching Methods, Private Schools
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Naomi Nkealah; Maria Prozesky – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
As university teachers of literature, we tend to accept the rhetoric that students lack the capacity to interpret texts meaningfully, without questioning our own biases about the kinds of meaning we expect them to elicit from texts. Often, these are meanings that have little relevance to students' own social or professional lives. In this article,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
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Elliott, Victoria; Olive, Sarah – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2023
In this paper, we report data from the first national survey of secondary Shakespeare teaching in the UK, conducted online in 2017-18 with a sample of 211 teachers distributed throughout Wales, England, Northern Ireland, and Scotland. In this article, we outline the pedagogical practices which are dominant. Specifically, we examine the group of…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Literature, Foreign Countries, National Surveys
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Riddell, Jessica; Murray, Shannon; Dickson, Lisa – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2021
Attempting to teach theater in an English Literature course is a daunting prospect. A far cry from the highly individual experience of reading a novel or poem, theater is both a visual and communal kind of engagement. It is a challenge to capture this medium in a traditional lecture-based classroom and harder still to convey its…
Descriptors: Team Teaching, Experiential Learning, Drama, Undergraduate Students
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Hannes Rall; Emma Harper – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2024
Our paper seeks to investigate how mediation using emerging technologies can increase student engagement within the context of teaching English Literature in Singapore. Through a discussion of our ongoing project to create an adaptation of Shakespeare's "Pericles, Prince of Tyre" as an animated game in virtual reality, we focus upon the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Game Based Learning, English Literature, Computer Games
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Cyrine Kortas – Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL, 2023
This exploratory practice study examined the effectiveness of film adaptation in teaching a Shakespearean play, "The Merchant of Venice," during the fall semester of 2022 at the Higher Institute of Languages, Gabès. Qualitative and quantitative data from third-year students majoring in English language, literature, and civilization, as…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Films, English Literature, Anxiety
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Elliott, Victoria; Olive, Sarah – English in Education, 2021
In this paper, we report data from the first national survey of secondary Shakespeare teaching in the UK, conducted online in 2017-18 with a sample of 211 teachers distributed through England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. We report on what is taught and why. Our survey shows that the most popular play in the UK is "Macbeth,"…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Literature, National Surveys, English Instruction
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Bruce, David L.; Sullivan, Sunshine R.; Tetta, Olivia; Schilke, Tess – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2023
This article presents the work of two female students in a rural school who were assigned to respond to a Shakespearean text with a Digital Video (DV) project. The study shows how the teacher provided students appropriate time, mediation, and space in allowing them to bring their out-of-school literacies and interests within an academic context.…
Descriptors: English Literature, Reader Response, High School Students, Females
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Kadhim, Hanan Abdul-kareem; Mohammed, Wafaa Sahib Mehdi – Arab World English Journal, 2021
Aggression is a negative form of an anti-social behavior. It is produced because of a particular reason, desire, want, need, or due to the psychological state of the aggressor. It injures others physically or psychologically. Aggressive behaviors in human interactions cause discomfort and disharmony among interlocutors. The paper aims to identify…
Descriptors: Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Pragmatics, Psychological Patterns
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Kuleli, Mesut – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2020
The aim of this study is to make a semiotic analysis of William Shakespeare's play titled Othello in the light of Jean-Claude Coquet's "Theory of Instances of Enunciation" and compare Turkish translations of the contexts analyzed in the original play from semiotics of translation point of view with a view to determining the meaning…
Descriptors: Translation, Semiotics, Classification, Linguistic Theory
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Mohammed Hamdan – Education as Change, 2024
This article explores the use of artificial stuttering as a powerful practice and therapy in higher education in Palestine where the need for applied drama is increasing. It specifically focuses on the artistic and/or performative reemployment of Charles Dickens's "Nicholas Nickleby" to enhance the academic achievement and social…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Speech Therapy, Students with Disabilities, Speech Communication
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Alqaryouti, Marwan Harb; Ismail, Hanita Hanim – English Language Teaching, 2018
Shakespeare's "The Tempest" (1610-1611) is one of the controversial plays regarding whether to be placed in the purview of colonialism or anti-colonialism. The bard sketches two antithetical characters in the course of the play, Prospero and Caliban, who form the two extremes of the self against the other dichotomy. This study aims at…
Descriptors: Drama, English Literature, Foreign Policy, Literary Devices
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Dreier, Jenna – Research in Drama Education, 2021
Shakespeare's elite cultural status bolsters the sense of achievement and empowerment experienced by participants in prison performance programmes; and yet, such engagements paradoxically risk further marginalising participants by reinforcing a colonial mentality in which Shakespeare represents an offering from a morally superior white culture.…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Drama, Females
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Boiko, Yana; Nikonova, Vira – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
The problem of reconstructing the conceptual content of Shakespeare's tragedies in chronologically distant Ukrainian translations is solved in the article by applying the method of complex poetical and cognitive analysis, which provides for research in two directions: genre -- text -- language (from the general characteristics of Shakespeare's…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Translation, Ukrainian, English Literature
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Muñoz-Valdivieso, Sofía – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2017
The article reviews the evolution of Shakespeare studies over the last 50 years and proposes a narrative to trace its development since the commemoration of Shakespeare's birth in 1964 in three phases: first, the unfolding from the 1970s to the 1990s of what I have called the postmodern paradigm in Shakespeare studies, which I argue breaks with…
Descriptors: Authors, English Literature, Trend Analysis, Drama
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