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Poliakoff, Michael – American Council of Trustees and Alumni, 2015
Read and admired throughout the world, Shakespeare's plays and poetry have been the guiding light of statesmen, of authors, and of artists. His writings are the indispensable foundation for understanding English literature, language, and rhetoric. Yet less than 8% of the nation's top universities require English majors to take even a single course…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Majors (Students), English Instruction, Required Courses
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Taylor, Thomas J. – College English, 1981
Advocates teaching lesser known plays from different historical periods and teaching popular contemporary plays in addition to the plays traditionally included in drama anthologies. (MKM)
Descriptors: Authors, College English, Drama, English Curriculum
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Swortzell, Lowell – English Journal, 1987
Discusses the quality and value to students of recent Broadway plays. Noting that dramatic output is limited in size and content, recommends the use of an international English-language repertory for the education of young students. Cites British, Australian, Canadian, Caribbean, African and South African authors. (JG)
Descriptors: Drama, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Higher Education
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McEvoy, Sean – English in Education, 1991
Considers the literary achievement of William Shakespeare and specifically why he continues to hold such an honored and sanctified position in the literary canon. Proposes a theoretically informed, politically aware pedagogy by which Shakespeare might be more usefully taught. (HB)
Descriptors: Drama, Educational History, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Mathias, Michael Theodore – 1973
This investigation examines the historical influences on the New Theatre in terms of a figural tradition and suggests that the New English may also be analyzed in terms of a figural tradition. In part 1, a new theory of the "historical figura" is proposed. The first chapter describes the origins of the "human figura" in…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Doctoral Dissertations, Drama, Educational Theories
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Blinderman, Abraham – College English, 1975
Archaic literature, no matter how great, should not be imposed on secondary students who are not equipped to comprehend it. (JH)
Descriptors: Drama, English Curriculum, High School Students, Higher Education
Rowland, J. Carter; And Others – 1968
A bibliography of 241 items compiled by the Committee on a Bibliography of College Teaching is arranged according to the following categories: (1) The English Program, (2) Freshman English, (3) The English Language, (4) Literature, (5) Drama, (6) Speech, (7) Journalism, and (8) The Preparation of English Teachers. The Freshman English category…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Drama, English, English Curriculum
TUTTLE, DONALD R.; NEUDLING, CHESTER L. – 1965
A STUDY OF UNDERGRADUATE CURRICULUM PATTERNS IN THE HUMANITIES WAS CONDUCTED TO DETERMINE WHAT PERCENTAGE OF THE TOTAL CREDITS NECESSARY FOR GRADUATION MUST BE IN THE AREA IN WHICH THE STUDENT MAJORS. THE STUDY IS CONCERNED NOT WITH DETAILS OF SPECIFIC COURSE REQUIREMENTS, BUT WITH BROAD REQUIREMENTS FOR THE BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE AND THE…
Descriptors: Bachelors Degrees, College Curriculum, Curriculum Research, Degree Requirements
Svobodny, Dolly D., Comp. – 1969
There are 62 abstracts in this compilation describing research and experimental teaching using television and film methods in college English instruction. The studies, most of them conducted since 1950, cover: (1) a comparison of televised instruction with face-to-face presentation, (2) a comparison of filmed or kinescoped courses with direct…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, College English, Drama, Educational Television