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Baines, AnnMarie – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2020
Author Toni Morrison used fictional narratives to make readers uncomfortably aware of their collective role in perpetuating the culture of poverty and pitying its victims. In her first novel, "The Bluest Eye," she focused on the most vulnerable member of society -- a child -- to depict the consequences of extreme social isolation and…
Descriptors: Authors, Literature, Poverty, Victims
Krista Senatore – Reading Teacher, 2024
The author, a fifth-grade teacher, describes how she reimagined the literary essay curriculum to amplify student identity, agency, and voice by creating a class podcast. Because of their similar structure and organization, teaching students literary analysis and interpretation through podcast writing offered entry into literary essays. The author…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Essays, Self Concept, Personal Autonomy
Hamilton-McKenna, Caroline – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
Where and how do I belong? As Erin Spring (2016a) notes in her examination of space, place, and youth engagement with literature, "young adult fiction is fraught with implications for identity, of which place often takes center stage" (p. 432). Yet despite the ubiquity of adolescent characters' negotiations within and across physical and…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Self Concept, Feminism, Human Geography
Hadley, Heidi Lyn – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2022
Purpose: This paper aims to examine how evangelical teachers' religious identities influence their interpretation and teaching of texts in high school English Language Arts classrooms. Further, this paper examines how evangelical teachers make choices about how to balance the demands of their religious and teacher identities as they interact with…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Religious Factors, Religion, Self Concept
Spence, Lucy K.; Walker, Robert M. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2021
An African American teacher and students engaged in meaningful reading and writing that included African American literature. These literacy experiences allowed the development of cultural models through exploring identity, questioning dominant narratives, and building capacity for literary analysis. This study shows how meaningful literacy…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, African American Students, African American Literature, Adolescent Literature
McKinney, Emry; Hoggan, Chad – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2022
For educators committed to promoting social equity, the question of how to address dialect hegemony is increasingly important. While linguists have long accepted the concept of dialect equality, educators have struggled with the issue, sparking a history of controversy and debate underscoring larger social issues of diversity and equity. For…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Nonstandard Dialects, Standard Spoken Usage, Teaching Methods
Sloane, Heather; Petra, Megan – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
To foster development of cultural humility in social work students, educators must listen carefully to students to uncover and disrupt implicit biases about other groups. This study was a narrative analysis of undergraduate social work student papers about identity and intersectionality where most students wrote about religion/spirituality and how…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Counselor Training, Empathy, Advocacy
Curzon-Hobson, Aidan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
When "The Myth of Sisyphus" describes those who live in the "rarefied air of the absurd" (p. 86), Camus uses the word fidelity. This signals a recognition of both defeat and the demand for struggle. This suggests a humility. Education can be said to have this characteristic; it is constantly in service to the new and yet…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Self Concept, Fidelity, Imagery
Choo, Suzanne S.; Chua, Bee Leng; Yeo, Dennis – Reading Research Quarterly, 2022
Since the late 20th century, scholars have called for a need to broaden the aims of teaching English Literature away from its Eurocentric focus. Much effort has also been invested in making the subject more relevant through diversifying the texts studied and connecting texts to current social and global issues. It is pertinent now to ask what the…
Descriptors: Self Concept, English Literature, National Surveys, Teacher Attitudes
Jamalinesari, Ali – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2015
The word "archetype" is derived from the Greek words "arche" meaning "first" and type meaning "imprint" or "pattern". Actually, the archetypes are like deposits of experiences that have been frequently repeated in the history of human beings. They are present in all humans from birth. They can be…
Descriptors: Authors, Drama, Self Concept, Psychology
Bomford, Kate – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2019
This article takes as its starting-point four moments that occurred in the course of a year of teaching A-level English Literature in an inner-London sixth-form college. It argues that these moments represented forms of learning and experience that were valuable, but that fell outside the prevailing version of what (English) lessons are for. It…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban Schools, English Literature, Secondary School Students
Marlatt, Rick – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2019
Implementation of digital literacies in secondary literature study can result in increased textual engagement and explorations of identity. The author describes the results of practitioner research at a Midwestern U.S. high school in which senior AP students created short films as a way to analyze literature circle texts. The purpose of the study…
Descriptors: Films, Video Technology, Advanced Placement, Self Concept
Jamili, Leila Baradaran; Roshanzamir, Ziba – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2017
The present article sheds new light on trauma as a devastating phenomenon respecting the construction of male and female characters' identities and reveals reconstruction of male and female identities in Virginia Woolf's (1882-1941) "The Waves" (1931). Trauma is defined as an unexpected event that leaves the most terrible marks on the…
Descriptors: Feminism, Females, Trauma, Novels
Marlatt, Rick – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2018
This article describes a recent teacher researcher's investigation of digitized literature study at a Midwestern U.S. high school during the 2015-2016 school year that explored the use of digital literacies to support student-centered literary analysis. Digital literacy practices position literature students to connect with texts in authentic…
Descriptors: High School Students, Asian American Students, Literary Criticism, Student Centered Learning
Okello, Wilson Kwamogi – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
Baby Suggs's sermon in the clearing to formerly enslaved Black folx offers readers an important anecdote about living in the afterlife of white supremacy (Hartman, 2007; Sharpe, 2016). Baby Suggs seemed to understand that the priority for survival and emancipation was loving one's flesh in a world where "yonder they do not love your…
Descriptors: Whites, Power Structure, Self Concept, Authors