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Findora, Jessie; Hammond, Thomas C. – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2021
When schools present texts through their explicit curricula, they infuse those stories with a certain perceived value (Eisner, 2002). When those accounts all ring with the same voice, they promote the merit of those people represented over those excluded (Haslem, 1998). In this study, we explored how White high school students responded to…
Descriptors: White Students, High School Students, Student Attitudes, Multicultural Education
Shin, Jaran – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2019
This study examines the reader-response journals of an English learner (EL) who read two works of historical fiction in his English Language Development class at a public high school in California. Locating this study within the tradition of research on reader response, it investigates how the EL constructs his own individualized meaning by…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Reader Response
Hope, Julia – Trentham Books, 2017
"It could happen to anybody", observed one nine-year-old child when her teacher read a book in class about refugees. Fiction provides the perfect conduit for the experiences of refugees so that young refugee students feel their experiences are validated, and their peers come to understand their situation. In this book, Julia Hope…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Refugees, Fiction, Cultural Awareness
McTigue, Erin; Thornton, Elaine; Wiese, Patricia – Reading Teacher, 2013
Authentication projects, particularly for historical fiction, provide a means for students to explore literature and history while practicing critical literacy skills. The authors 1) present benefits and cautions for historical fiction use in elementary classrooms, 2) introduce authentication projects as a means to mitigate risks and enhance…
Descriptors: Fiction, History, Critical Literacy, Reading Instruction
Sciurba, Katie – Journal of Literacy Research, 2017
This article combines interview data from a group of boys of color at an urban single-sex school and content analysis of "The Autobiography of Malcolm X" and "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" to demonstrate the complexities of readers' responses to literature. Textual relevance, or the ability to construct personal…
Descriptors: Males, Minority Group Students, Single Sex Schools, Autobiographies

Spink, J. Kevin – New Advocate, 1996
Explains how a teacher comes to learn that primary and intermediate grade students are engaged by fiction and nonfiction both, that they do not associate one with pleasure and the other with learning. Argues that readers of all ages find meaning in a work, fictional or nonfictional, to the extent that it relates to their own lives and experiences.…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Fiction, Nonfiction, Reader Response
Flood, James; And Others – 1994
Over a 2-year period, several teacher book clubs were studied. Teachers' and preservice teachers' responses to a series of texts that focused on multiculturalism in American society were examined. Twelve elementary school teachers, representing four ethnic groups (European American, Asian American, African American, and Hispanic), volunteered to…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discourse Communities, Discussion Groups, Fiction

Kaiser, Marjorie – ALAN Review, 1995
Discusses the problems inherent in the teaching of young adult literature courses. Describes a collaborative project designed to allow preservice English teachers access to younger students to get a better idea of student reading interests. (HB)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Adolescents, English Curriculum, English Instruction

Avi – Voices from the Middle, 2003
Outlines a successful children's literature author's struggle with writing in high school and college. Contends that stories are vital because they are experienced. Notes that children's literature is about the possibilities of childhood. (PM)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Diaries, Fiction, Higher Education
Donehower, Kim – 1995
An instructor teaching a 20th-century fiction course was surprised by her students' response to a series of stories she asked them to read about the South. Apparently representing the feelings of many in the class, one student said, "These people are weird. And we don't like them." Though they were used to encountering differences in…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Fiction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism

Trimmer, Joseph F. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1990
Describes class discussions in an undergraduate English fiction class. Draws a parallel between students' reactions to reading material and the instructor's own responses to fiction as an undergraduate. Suggests that a literature teacher can depart from the usual role of telling students how they must read a given story. (SG)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Fiction, Literary Criticism
Richard, Blakeney J. – 1987
Because students often come to a literary text without the prerequisite knowledge to understand or explicate it fully, they can be thought of as outsiders, needing the help of insiders, or experts in literature, to "learn the text's secrets." Moreover, students often do not fully comprehend how much of literature rests on symbolism that demands…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Content Analysis, English Instruction, Fiction