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Dressman, Mark; Rao, Dingxin – English in Education, 2020
This essay uses the metaphor of "savvy travelling" to discuss the limitations and problems associated with three current "best practice" approaches to the reading of literature in upper grade levels, particularly in the United States: close reading, response-based reading, and disciplinary literacy. A "savvy" approach…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Literature, High School Students, Teaching Methods
Wilson, Anthony – Education 3-13, 2021
This paper is a re-examination of Louise Rosenblatt's seminal work of reader-response theory, The Reader, The Text, The Poem. I argue that poems are essentially social in nature and that they open up a space in which conversation and interpretation can take place. With Rosenblatt I argue that until a reader engages with a poem, bringing to it a…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Poetry, Teaching Methods, High Stakes Tests
Römhild, Juliane – Higher Education Research and Development, 2019
In "Uses of Literature" (2008), Rita Felski outlines four ways in which our affective responses to literature can serve as a starting point for a new form of literary criticism drawing on reader response and ethical criticism. This article situates Felski's approach in the context of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) on…
Descriptors: English Literature, Teaching Methods, Reader Response, Reflection
Bittner, Robert – Journal of Children's Literature, 2020
LGBTQ+ identities complicate the ways in which #OwnVoices can be deployed in literary analysis and author studies. Recognizing LGBTQ+ identities in literature is about more than just the text; it is about the visibility and success of LGBTQ+ authors as well. Through a discussion of reader response theory and politics of recognition, the author…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Literary Criticism, Authors, Sexual Identity
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
Kitchen, Richard; Berk, Sarabeth – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2017
In our response to Clements and Sarama (2017), we address the 5 issues that they identify as criticisms of our Research Commentary (Kitchen & Berk, 2016). As in our original commentary, we highlight concerns we have regarding the delivery of [computer-assisted instruction] CAI programs and potential misuses of CAI, particularly at Title I…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Access to Education, Advantaged, Mathematical Logic
Rudin, Shai – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2020
Purpose: This study aims to examine the responses and perceptions of Israeli Arab teachers toward multicultural and educational issues concerning Jewish-Arab relations. Design/methodology/approach: This study is a qualitative research. The study included 44 novice Arab teachers, who teach Hebrew in the Arab sector and are currently studying toward…
Descriptors: Arabs, Jews, Phenomenology, Beginning Teachers
Macaluso, Kati – Reading Research Quarterly, 2015
Although the aims of literary study have often been spelled out in ethical terms, scholars have tended to discuss the how of literary interpretation in more ethically neutral terms. Reading pedagogical enactments of two predominant theories of literary interpretation--New Criticism and reader response--through the lens of Rancièrean ethics, I…
Descriptors: Literary Styles, Translation, Intervention, Teaching Methods
Williamson, Robert, Jr. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2013
Twitter offers an engaging way to introduce students to reader-oriented interpretation of the Bible. The exercise described here introduces students to the idea that the reader has a role in the production of a text's meaning, which thus varies from reader to reader. Twitter enables us to capture the real-time thoughts of a variety of…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Biblical Literature, Teaching Methods, Reader Response
Weisberg, Deena Skolnick; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Golinkoff, Roberta Michnick – Psychological Bulletin, 2013
Lillard et al. (2013) concluded that pretend play is not causally related to child outcomes and charged that the field is subject to a "play ethos", whereby research is tainted by a bias to find positive effects of play on child development. In this commentary, we embrace their call for a more solidly scientific approach to questions in this…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Child Development, Academic Achievement
Smyth, Stella – PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching and Learning in Thailand, 2014
In this "Idea Sharing" article, the author introduces Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure" as a critique of King James I's (England) concept of an absolute monarchy, in his constitutional treatise, "Basilikon Doron (1599)," the "kingly gift" that advises the young prince on the ethics of government and how to…
Descriptors: English Literature, Drama, Criticism, Ethics
Gobet, Fernand – High Ability Studies, 2012
Ziegler and Phillipson (Z&P) advance an interesting and ambitious proposal, whereby current analytical/mechanistic theories of gifted education are replaced by systemic theories. In this commentary, the author focuses on the pros and cons of using systemic theories. He argues that Z&P's proposal both goes too far and not far enough. The future of…
Descriptors: Gifted, Educational Methods, Teaching Methods, Educational Theories
Solway, David – Academic Questions, 2010
One of the major problems from which students suffer has to do with reading: reading with diligence, understanding, and, ideally, with the pleasure that attends discovery. Many students have long been hermeneutical-readers-of-a-sort. The problem has deep roots in a widely diffused media and technocyber environment that thins down and disperses the…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Hermeneutics, Literary Criticism, Reader Text Relationship
Stacey, Jennifer Davida; Granville, S. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2009
Amongst academics working with postgraduate students, there has recently been increasing interest in ways of supporting advanced academic literacy (AAL). This is a concern for us at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, where we teach a diverse group of postgraduate students, most of whom are subject practitioners in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Formative Evaluation, Academic Discourse, Teacher Education Programs
Parker, J. R.; Becker, Katrin; Sawyer, Ben – Educational Technology, 2008
Everything old is new again. In a recent "Point of View" editorial commentary in "Educational Technology," Richard E. Clark revisits the now-famous media-effects debate with a focus on serious games. Clark argues that serious games have little to offer that improves upon traditional methods. This article responds to those claims. While Clark's…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Reader Response, Rhetorical Criticism, Misconceptions