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Yu, Helen H.; Lorenzo-Elarco, Kenika M.; Murro, Mary J.; McAnany, Elisabeth L.; Anderson, Hana R. – Journal of Public Affairs Education, 2022
The scholarship on using popular culture -- specifically from films -- as an effective educational tool to enhance teaching opportunities that link leadership theory to practice has gained traction in the past decade. This article extends the discourse and uses "Harry Potter," the cultural phenomenon fantasy film series, as a source of…
Descriptors: Leadership, Leadership Training, Popular Culture, Public Administration Education
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Kool, Denise; Azevedo, Nathalia Helena; Avraamidou, Lucy – Educational Media International, 2022
Popular films can influence the public's image of women scientists and (re)shape social stereotypes. In this study, we examined how women scientists were portrayed in films in the context of fourth-wave feminism. Twelve characters of women scientists in eight films were analysed using sociological film interpretation across the following…
Descriptors: Films, Popular Culture, Scientists, Females
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Anu Lainio – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
This article explores the normative representations of higher education students in seven films and television series from four European countries. Drawing on the concept of the 'independent learner' as an 'ideal construction', I demonstrate how these texts offer complex and at times paradoxical representations of who gets positioned as the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Films, Television, Independent Study
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Kamshia Childs – Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education, 2024
Due to negative classroom experiences, lack of resources and access, the fear of the unknown, and at times a disconnect, students are often fearful of literacy learning (reading, writing)--and in some cases outright bored. This piece highlights a variation of Childs' "C.O.U.N.T." acronym, which addresses ways in which teachers can infuse…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Culturally Relevant Education, Popular Culture
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Martin P. Smith; Marcus W. Johnson; Lela Owens – Urban Education, 2024
In this study, we examine how race and racism impact the schooling of African American males by analyzing the first-person perspective of hip-hop superstar, Nasir "Nas" Jones. We selected Nas due to his unique yet prevalent educational trajectory and perspectives. Critical race theory is employed as a framework as well as notions of…
Descriptors: African Americans, Males, Racism, Popular Culture
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Candace Walkington; Matthew L. Bernacki; Vanessa Vongkulluksn; Meghan Greene; Taylor Darwin; Elizabeth Leyva; Brooke Istas; Jonathan Hunnicutt; Julianna Washington; Min Wang – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2024
Both personalization and utility value (UV) interventions have emerged in educational psychology as ways to increase students' interest in learning an academic subject, and potentially improve learning outcomes. However, empirical results for each approach have been mixed and these approaches have worked differently for different groups of…
Descriptors: College Students, Intervention, Mathematics Instruction, Vocational Interests
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Hueyuen Choong – International Journal of Music Education, 2024
This article explores the ways in which popular musicians in Malaysia learn the craft of Western popular music-making in comparison to those in the United Kingdom. Literature that studied popular musicians and their practices had largely focused on communities within Anglosphere regions, and there are insufficient understandings of the journeys of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Musicians, Cultural Differences, Popular Culture
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Díez-Gutiérrez, Enrique-Javier; Palomo-Cermeño, Eva; Mallo-Rodríguez, Benjamín – Music Education Research, 2023
Reggaetón music is very popular among young people of school-age. Thus, we intend to examine the values of equality transmitted in the lyrics of this music genre. Using critical discourse analysis and assisted by the Maxqda software package we analysed the lyrics of 65 of the most popular reggaetón songs of 2020. Results suggest that reggaetón…
Descriptors: Music, Popular Culture, Youth, Values
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Deb, Paromita – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2022
Owing to the different models of disablement in different religions and cultures around the world, social and aesthetic representations of intellectually disabled people are diverse in various societies. Disability is perceived in a different way in India than in the West. There are very few studies on the complex role of Indian mainstream Hindi…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Foreign Countries, Popular Culture, Films
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Li Bao; Pitsanu Boonsriana – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2024
Chengdu's popular music, with its profound historical and cultural significance, serves as an educational resource at the intersection of music, literacy, and cultural education. This research aims to propose guidelines for the teaching resource of Chengdu popular music for fostering literacy and cultural education. Located in the culturally…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Popular Culture, Music, Literacy
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Gina Childers; Donna Governor; Kania Greer; Vaughan James – Research in Science Education, 2024
Science fiction conventions are places where the convergence of science fiction and science is discussed within diverse communities. Many of these science fiction conventions offer programming focused on science, often described as "science tracks," for science experts to share their experiences, expertise, scientific findings, and…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Conferences (Gatherings), Scientific Concepts, Scientific Literacy
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Minhee Eom; Jean Braithwaite – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2024
The motivation of linguistically diverse young adults to learn Korean as a Foreign Language (KFL) was studied at a university on the US-Mexico border. This diglossic setting permitted a complex investigation of multiple elements, including L2-motivation theoretical attributes, exposure to Korean contemporary pop culture, and the linguistic and…
Descriptors: Korean, Second Language Learning, College Students, Student Motivation
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Laneshia R. Conner; Rujeko O. Machinga-Asaolu – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2024
While films are popular as teaching tools in social work education, to critique social inequalities, horror films have not been the conventional genre. This teaching note describes the creation and deployment of a course that uses horror films to address social justice issues as part of different critical reflection, which is linked to practice…
Descriptors: Social Work, Professional Education, Curriculum Development, Films
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Shantá R. Robinson – Current Issues in Education, 2024
Twenty-seven years ago, the documentary "Hoop Dreams" solidified a theory--that the world of athletics was one of the few places where adolescent Black males could find success. By the late 1990s, researchers were framing athletics as the next direction in the Civil Rights Movement. In this article, I argue that the historical framing of…
Descriptors: Males, African Americans, Adolescents, Athletics
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Goulding, Cathlin Bryn – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
For the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago, a cartoonist named Robert Ripley would create his first odditorium, a public archive of his personal collection of curiosities. While Ripley was not the first to capitalize on the display of "exotic" and "monstrous" curios, his odditoriums illuminate pervasive ideas about human difference…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Popular Culture, Mass Media Use, Human Body
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