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Islam, Robiul; Das, Happy Kumar – Journal of Educational Technology, 2023
This study explored the views of teachers' and English graduates' on the reflection of soft skills for employability in English literature. Also, the study discovers how soft skills can be embedded within classroom practice among English graduates. A qualitative study methodology and interpretive paradigm were used to make sense of the complicated…
Descriptors: Soft Skills, Teaching Methods, College Students, College Faculty
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Sam Holdstock – Literacy, 2024
Interactive Fiction (IF)--a digital form of non-linear narrative writing--requires readers to respond, to make choices that shape their reading experience. I argue that such choices can be put to use in the classroom, helping teachers to facilitate metalinguistic talk. In this article, I offer a clear conceptualisation of metalinguistic talk,…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Technology Uses in Education, Fiction, Narration
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Smith, Lorna; Thomas, Helena; Chapman, Susan; Foley, Joan; Kelly, Lucy; Kneen, Judith; Watson, Annabel – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
This paper tells a story of one student teacher's experiences as she considers the choice of fiction texts studied by young secondary learners of English, and how those texts are taught. Based on a series of interviews carried out in the South-West of England and Wales, the narrative provides a perspective on the limitations of current curricula…
Descriptors: Fiction, Student Teachers, Secondary School Students, Reading Material Selection
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Hanratty, Brian – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
While "Rebecca" is not currently a set text for A-Level English Literature, this paper argues that the novel's multi-faceted richness would justify its inclusion in any list of recommended texts. Divided into four interconnected parts, the paper offers, firstly, some approaches to the reading and teaching of fiction, generally. The…
Descriptors: English Literature, English Instruction, Novels, Fiction
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Zhang, Huaqing; Luo, Shaoqian – International Journal for Lesson and Learning Studies, 2022
Purpose: Against the backdrop of China's curriculum reform, this paper explores how a Chinese lesson study (CLS) of English literature instruction in a senior high school promotes the teacher participant's professional development (PD) in teacher beliefs and emotions, teaching contents, teaching approaches and learner outcomes.…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, English Literature, High School Teachers, Faculty Development
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McLean Davies, Larissa; Bode, Katherine; Martin, Susan K.; Sawyer, Wayne – English in Education, 2020
While "born digital" artefacts such as video games and e-books have been part of secondary school English in Anglophone countries for over two decades, databases of mass-digitised (hence "re-mediated") literary texts are yet to have a significant presence in, or influence on, literary work in subject English. The authors…
Descriptors: Databases, English Literature, Reading Processes, Technological Literacy
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Jones, Zach – English in Australia, 2021
Psychological trauma is swiftly becoming one of the most significant public health concerns and obstacles to effective education in the current teaching climate. This paper responds to my experiences as both a secondary English teacher and registered psychologist, examining the potential utility of trauma literature in the English classroom for…
Descriptors: Trauma, Public Health, English Instruction, English Literature
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Hanratty, Brian – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2018
This paper has two complementary objectives. After providing some theoretical perspectives on fiction generally, and on the teaching of fiction more specifically, it firstly evaluates, from a literary-critical perspective, a reasonably representative selection of the portrayal of teachers and teaching in some twentieth-century Anglo-Irish fiction…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, English Literature
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Perkins, Tanya – Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology, 2019
In the writing classroom, collaborative learning often takes the form of coauthoring, peer workshops, or critique sessions. While these are useful, what other active-learning approaches might be effective, particularly in light of the range of media with which students are increasingly familiar? World building--creation of an…
Descriptors: Creativity, Criticism, Cooperative Learning, Active Learning
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Badulescu, Dana – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2015
The present article examines a teaching experiment undertaken by the author in order to point out not only the importance of the arts and aesthetics, but also their limitations. It also argues that, despite these limitations, the spirit of the arts opens us up to freedom and flexibility. Their purpose is not to give answers or solutions, but to…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Teaching Methods
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Frailey, Marty; Buck-Rodriguez, Greta; Anders, Patricia L. – Journal of Developmental Education, 2009
This article describes elaboration in "literary letters" (Atwell, 1984, 1987) written by developmental reading students. Nineteen community college students received instruction in "elaborative thought patterns," or types of elaboration, to improve the quality of their responses to popular fiction. This instruction was part of…
Descriptors: Reading Attitudes, Self Efficacy, Fiction, English Literature
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Weiner, Stephen – English Journal, 2004
The students can explore an entirely fascinating new world through graphic novels introduced into the classrooms. The graphic novels include genre fiction like superhero and horror stories that combine words and pictures, which are appealing to the students. Several titles with connections to traditional English literature are recommended.
Descriptors: Novels, English Literature, Teaching Methods, Illustrations
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Morgan, Alice – Journal of General Education, 1972
Author points out two major difficulties with Emma" as an assignment: information (social facts, physical facts) needed to understand the setting and events, and the problem of making possible some relationship with so unreforming a work. (Author/MB)
Descriptors: Characterization, Eighteenth Century Literature, English Literature, Fiction
Reed, Vic – Media and Methods, 1980
Notes that the brief but crucial appearances of Prince Escalus in "Romeo and Juliet" offer a key to the understanding of how plot proceeds in any dramatic or comedic work. (FL)
Descriptors: Drama, English Literature, Fiction, Literary Criticism
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Sriraman, Bharath; Adrian, Harry – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2004
The tendency to generalize from specific experiences leading to new, more abstract concepts is a natural aspect of human thought. Generalizations are the end result of an inductive process that begins with the identification of similarities in seemingly disparate situations. It is the existence of such generalizations that makes it possible for us…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Literary Genres, English Literature, Logical Thinking
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