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Showing 1 to 15 of 78 results Save | Export
Joseph Suntaik Oh – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The purpose of this study is to present the fundamental principles, methods, and effective communication methods of oral discipleship training for the believers in the oral cultures. To achieve the purpose, the researcher analyzed the data obtained from the individual interviews with 25 manaschys and 30 Kyrgyz Christian ministers. In this…
Descriptors: Christianity, Clergy, Oral Language, Foreign Countries
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Xin You; Natthapong Prathumchan – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2024
Wuyue ceremonial Chinese folk songs, historically performed during sacrificial ceremonies, represent a significant part of China's intangible cultural heritage. These songs are deeply rooted in ancient Chinese religious practices and are important for preserving cultural identity. This study investigates the literacy transmission practices that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Folk Culture, Singing, Oral Tradition
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Kaya, Mustafa; Erol, Sedat – African Educational Research Journal, 2020
Max Lüthi deployed five basic principles that reflect the characteristic features of tales to analyze European tales with a text-centered approach. These basic principles have been accepted as a universal form for tales that can exist, change and transfer from narrator to narrator and from nation to nation. In this context, this research aimed to…
Descriptors: Folk Culture, Turkish, Textbooks, Teaching Methods
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Ankit Dwivedi; Padma M. Sarangapani – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2024
India's long tradition of storytelling is well integrated into the social and cultural lives of people. It is a recognized resource for religious and secular moral education. While the desirability and usefulness of storytelling as a general pedagogical tool finds mention in national school and teacher education policy, there is limited research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Story Telling, Teacher Attitudes
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Sándor, Ildikó – Acta Educationis Generalis, 2019
Introduction: This study reviews the most commonly used Hungarian terminology of pedagogical folklorism terms, their interpretations and the conceptual debates around them, as well as the possible imprecisions related to them. With the help of Hungarian and international examples, it places the technical terms of the ethnography-folk…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnography, Ethnology, Folk Culture
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Karyolemou, Marilena – Applied Linguistics, 2022
In this article, we report the results of a study undertaken at the University of Cyprus (2017-2020) in the framework of the research project MapCyArS financed by the Leventis Foundation. The study concerns the design and development of an assessment test to evaluate proficiency in Cypriot Arabic (CA), a severely endangered language spoken in…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Metalinguistics, Language Skill Attrition, Language Maintenance
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Abbasa, Asriani; Kaharuddin; Jerniati; Musayyedah; Ratnawati; Aminah; Yulianti, Andi Indah; Syamsurijal; Thaba, Aziz – Eurasian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2022
Makassar language (bM) is a language of ethnic groups which is taught as local content subjects in schools, both in oral and written literary traditions. This study aimed to examine the behavior of affixes and clitic morphosyntactics in the passivation of Makassar sentences. Field research methods were used by applying the conversational…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Syntax, Morphemes, Oral Language
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Çelik, Tugba – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2018
Folk tales composed of poetry and prose, have succeeded to come until today by various narrators. These stories which especially contain heroism and love stories carry the accumulation of the Turkish society such as belief, experience, art and law. Many societies, including European countries are concerned about the growth of generations that are…
Descriptors: Turkish, Folk Culture, Oral Tradition, Qualitative Research
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Sandoval-Rivera, Juan Carlos A. – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2020
This article delivers the results of an ethnographic educational research project carried out in an indigenous community in Veracruz State, Mexico, in which cultural practices were identified that produce Indigenous Knowledge aligned with the sustainability paradigm, and therefore with the SDGs. Empirical findings are shown regarding knowledge and…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians, Sustainability
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Virtanen, Pirjo Kristiina; Apurinã, Francisco; Facundes, Sidney – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2021
This article looks at what origin stories teach about the world and what kind of material presence they have in Southwestern Amazonia. We examine the ways the Apurinã relate to certain nonhuman entities through their origin story, and our theoretical approach is language materiality, as we are interested in material means of mediating traditional…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, American Indian Languages, Ethnography, Story Telling
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Setiartin, R. Titin; Casim – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
Oral traditions in Tasikmalaya Regency are classified into types of fairy tales, legends, and myths. The three types of oral traditions are spread in 39 sub-districts in Tasikmalaya Regency. Not all of the oral traditions in Tasikmalaya Regency are well documented, this is due to the lack of oral tradition researchers in Tasikmalaya Regency. This…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, Moral Development, Religion, Ethnography
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Chia, Philip Suciadi – Journal of Research on Christian Education, 2020
Many doubt the effectiveness of Jesus' teaching that was intended to be preserved in his disciples' memory. The Gospels were written long after the Resurrection, and humans are prone to forgetfulness. These reasons alone suffice to arouse suspicion about the reliability of the disciples' memory and the record of Jesus' teaching in modern…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Religious Factors, Biblical Literature
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Hechter, Richard P. – Physics Education, 2020
'It is the belt!' This is how middle school teachers in a science teaching professional development program rationalized why they believe Orion is the most recognizable of all constellations in the night sky. It was from this foundation that we chose Orion to be the focus of a four-phase ethnoastronomy-based project reported here. Ethnoastronomy,…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Faculty Development
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Bila, Vonani; Abodunrin, Olufemi J. – Education as Change, 2020
Angifi Dladla's poetry and teaching doctrines are considered tools for consciousness raising, healing and popular education for decoloniality. Through "ku femba", an age-old practice that serves as a channel to cast away evil spells in a society bedevilled by violence, Dladla displays the relationship between man, ancestors and the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Educational Philosophy, Political Attitudes, Western Civilization
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Carolyn McKinney – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Framed by decolonial theory, this paper explores how language and literacy ideologies, including Anglonormativity, or the expectation that children should be proficient in a standardised version of English and are deficient if not, shape language and literacy practices in South African classrooms. While not legitimised, the use of fluid language…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Bilingualism, Ethnography, Decolonization
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