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Macken-Horarik, Mary; Small, Ann; Dixon, Mel; Gold, Eva – English in Australia, 2019
Subject English is a knowledge structure that is hard to discern for many students and even teachers. The abstractions that underpin analysis and interpretation of texts can be fuzzy, even invisible. Furthermore, traditional knowledge is inadequate when it comes to websites, graphic novels and films. What guiding abstractions are relevant in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Instruction, Secondary School Teachers, English Teachers
Duck, Paul – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2019
This essay draws on the work of Raymond Williams in identifying a shift from the attempt to have students engage with literary texts in personal terms to a concern, founded on theoretical innovation, that they should read at a more sophisticated level in order to discern the ideology of a given text. It argues that what Williams calls an…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English Instruction, Literature, Innovation
Truman, Sarah E. – English in Australia, 2019
This paper is prompted by the author's experience as a researcher of English literary education in three different geographies over the past three years: Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia. Affect theory, as discussed in this paper, concerns atmospheres, surfaces, bodies, emotions, moods, vicinities and capacities. Drawing on affect theory,…
Descriptors: English Literature, Educational Researchers, Critical Theory, Race
Macken-Horarik, Mary – English in Australia, 2016
English is an already crowded curriculum and the incursion of multimodal literature puts it under increased pressure. How do teachers and students learn to understand and deploy tools of analysis that shed light on verbiage and images without becoming entangled in a complex and crowded analytical language? Is it possible to develop a metalanguage…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, English Curriculum, Literary Criticism, Semiotics
Ravelli, Louise – English in Australia, 2016
Multimodal texts are now part of the curriculum for school English, but they are by their nature inherently complex, and pose many challenges for the classroom. Not least is finding a way to manage the technical complexity of accounting for these texts, as well as finding a way to move students beyond simple observation and description to critical…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, English Curriculum, Visual Literacy, Learning Modalities
Al-Momani, Hassan Ali Abdullah – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2016
The main goal of this paper is to depict the struggle for cultural existence in "Rabbit Proof Fence." It also reflects the cultural conflict represented in the three aboriginal girls' characters which is due to their rejection and resistance for the colonialists' culture. Besides, the paper presents the cognitive analysis of the cultural…
Descriptors: Cultural Maintenance, Culture Conflict, Resistance (Psychology), Foreign Culture
Douglas, Kate; Barnett, Tully; Poletti, Anna; Seaboyer, Judith; Kennedy, Rosanne – Higher Education Research and Development, 2016
This paper introduces the concept of "reading resilience": students' ability to read and interpret complex and demanding literary texts by drawing on advanced, engaged, critical reading skills. Reading resilience is a means for rethinking the place and pedagogies of close reading in the contemporary literary studies classroom. Our…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Resilience (Psychology), Reading, Literary Criticism
Holbrook, Peter – English in Australia, 2013
The French philosopher Rene Descartes (1596-1650) wrote that "to read good books is like holding a conversation with the most eminent minds of past centuries and, moreover, a studied conversation in which these authors reveal to us only the best of their thoughts" (translation of the "Discourse on Method" by F. E. Sutcliffe…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Teachers, English Instruction, Literary Criticism
Hateley, Erica – English in Australia, 2013
Young adult literature is a tool of socialisation and acculturation for young readers. This extends to endowing "reading" with particular significance in terms of what literature should be read and why. This paper considers some recent young adult fiction with an eye to its engagement with canonical literature and its representations of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Secondary School Teachers, English Instruction
Davies, Larissa McLean; Doecke, Brenton; Mead, Philip – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2013
Recently Australia has witnessed a revival of concern about the place of Australian literature within the school curriculum. This has occurred within a policy environment where there is increasing emphasis on Australia's place in a world economy, and on the need to encourage young people to think of themselves in a global context. These dimensions…
Descriptors: Literature, English Instruction, National Curriculum, Teaching Methods
Harris, Pauline; McKenzie, Barbra; Chen, Honglin; Kervin, Lisa; Fitzsimmons, Phil – English in Australia, 2008
This paper interrogates relationships among literacy research, policy development and classroom practice. It does so with concern that the fields of literacy research, policy and practice do not interact with one another in ways that are congruent or productive, as evidenced in recent government literacy reports in Australia and overseas. With a…
Descriptors: Criticism, Foreign Countries, Literacy, Literary Criticism
Penn-Edwards, Sorrel – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2011
This paper explores beginning pre-service teaching students' common perceptions of the meaning of the term literacy. The methodology used is described in terms of phenomenographic analyses and the outcome, an array presentation of concepts in diagrammatic form. It establishes that students' conceptions of literacy are embedded predominantly in the…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Educational Practices, Teaching Methods, Literacy
Doecke, Brenton; Breen, Lisa – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2013
Genre theory has been around for a long time now. The exchange between Michael Rosen and Frances Christie recently featured in "Changing English" is the latest in a series of exchanges between advocates of genre and their critics over the past three decades or so. Our aim in this response-essay is not to weigh up the merits of the cases…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, English Instruction, Literary Criticism, Secondary School Teachers
Beavis, Catherine – English in Australia, 2008
In his paper in "English in Australia" in 2002, Bill Green called for a literacy project of our own, and for the need to think again, and think newly about the place of literary literacy within contemporary curriculum. But what does literary literacy mean in curriculum that recognises a wide diversity of texts and literacies? If…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy, English Instruction, Aesthetics
Howie, Mark – English in Australia, 2008
In this article I use the occasion of farewelling my Year 12 students at the end of their schooling, some intertextual references to "Hamlet", and some conceptual frames of Derrida, to reflect dialogically on the role of critical literacy in Australian English curricula in the past, the present and into the future. (Contains 11 notes.)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, English Literature, Reflection