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Duke, Charles R. – 1982
Teachers need not drop entirely the nonliterary aspects of classroom talk and response to put students back in touch with the aesthetic role of classroom reading. Affect is the "gut reaction" a reader experiences when his or her raw emotions are touched. This first level of response must be acknowledged, even encouraged, before moving on…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Literature
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Wentworth, Michael – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1987
Notes that when assigned writing topics requiring sophisticated reading students circumvent interpretation by rewriting the text in their personal idiom. Suggests that since meaning is discovered through process, students should be given numerous opportunities to respond to the same text. Offers several kinds of response activities. (JG)
Descriptors: Assignments, Class Activities, Higher Education, Literature
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Hoover, Dwight W. – History Teacher, 1992
Questions assumptions of the New Historicism, a recent development in literary criticism. Suggests some problems that such an essentially political approach engenders. Includes lack of a common bond between author and reader, a universal model of historical change based upon the ideas of Marx and others, and contextualism. Argues that historians…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Hermeneutics, Historiography, Literary Criticism
Dean, Ruth B. – 1988
According to Wolfgang Iser's "The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response," the meaning of a literary text is created by each individual reader in response to gaps, or indeterminacies, in the text. With the application of this theory to the two-year college classroom, teachers can show inexperienced readers how to discover the meaning of…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Literature, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
Chiteman, Michael D. – 1984
Freshman and sophomore composition students who are required to write in response to literature frequently find that they are not yet secure enough in their basic writing skills to discuss a literary work. In order to help these students, writing center tutors must be familiar with the assigned writing tasks and what instructors expect from an…
Descriptors: Course Content, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature
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Swaffar, Janet K. – Journal of General Education, 1986
Criticizes contemporary approaches to literature instruction that inculcate passivity. Proposes a system of teaching literature that promotes cultural literacy and active, rather than passive, reading by encouraging students to discover cultural messages and make their own interpretations of the cultural infrastructure and culture-specific values…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Cultural Context, Cultural Education, Instructional Innovation
Brown, Byron K. – 1988
To help students develop a broadly generative approach to reading and writing about literature, teachers of literature should employ not only systematic procedures, but also the eclectic and utilitarian spirit of rhetorical invention. A semiotic perspective offers the most solid theoretical foundation for establishing a genuinely heuristic…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Critical Thinking, Cultural Context, Heuristics
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Mandel, Barrett J. – College Teaching, 1987
Three elements of the reading process--presence, mediation, and ego response--help students discover their own ontological, intellectual, and psychological role in bringing forth literature's meanings. Students experience a dramatic shift in their ability to make sense of literature as they become increasingly conscious of these three elements.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Instruction, College Students, Emotional Response
Phelan, Patricia, Ed. – 1990
This book presents findings of a cross-section of teachers, elementary through college, who have developed ways to enable students to make connections between their lives and the literature they read. The 28 articles are grouped into: (1) a section on the collaborating and creating connection with literature; and (2) a section on the reading and…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Dickerson, Mary Jane – 1988
The ability to infuse language with qualities of the human voice in the act of speaking is what distinguishes autobiography as a genre and makes it most suited to teaching students subtle features inherent in the complex act of writing. When students write from personal experience, they consciously begin to shape their identities in one direction…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Creative Writing, Higher Education, Literature
Coryell, Joellen; Gonzales, Edna; Claudia, Cary; Cisneros, Joe – 2001
Los Compadres is a program that pairs advanced high school Spanish students with elementary English-as-a-Second-Language native Spanish speakers. Teachers prepare lessons based upon authentic literature, written in English and Spanish, which include vocabulary review and literature response activities. The high school students prepare for the…
Descriptors: Bilingual Instructional Materials, Elementary Secondary Education, English (Second Language), High School Students
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Schechter, Sara P. – Community Review, 1991
Describes New York City Technical College's "Law through Literature" course, an English elective especially for Legal Assistant Studies students. Quotes from students' essays about personal experiences related to characters/events from Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird." Recounts class discussions about influences on…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Elective Courses, Legal Assistants, Legal Education (Professions)