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Rothstein, Mervyn – Wilson Library Bulletin, 1972
Descriptors: Athletics, Bibliographies, Books, Classics (Literature)
Karl, Jean – Wilson Libr Bull, 1970
The Here" is an examination of what constitutes great books; books that will aid our children to observe the beauty of a commom humanity and are concerned with the problems of today. The Beyond" deals with the forms tomorrow's literature may take. (MF)
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), Literary Influences
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Sutcliffe, Mary – Children's Literature in Education, 1998
Interviews William Horwood, a British writer who has undertaken a series of sequels to Kenneth Grahame's "The Wind in the Willows." Recounts the story of how the books came to be and their significance for the author. (PA)
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), Personal Narratives
Monaghan, Peter – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In this article, the author describes Liguria Study Center for the Arts and Humanities in Bogliasco, Italy, which offers a stately perch from which a few lucky scholars and artists can gaze at the Mediterranean and gather their thoughts making it so conducive to the study of arts and letters. The center provides scholars and artists midcareer and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Study Centers, Fellowships, Aesthetic Education
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Casement, William – Academic Questions, 2002
The decades since the 1960s have been unfortunate in many respects for American higher education, but things are not uniformly bleak. Here and there, the study of Great Books persists. The general picture that is available, then, of the health of great-books study in colleges today is mixed. High-visibility news stories, along with curriculum…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Core Curriculum, Classics (Literature), Western Civilization
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Pickens, Cortney – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2008
The way in which foreign languages, including the Classics, are taught is evolving. There are those who teach language for literature-based, instrumental purposes only, and those who want to see foreign language education cross boundaries into literature, culture, history, and geography. Foreign language educators have the opportunity to teach…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Communicative Competence (Languages)
Henry, Robin – Library Media Connection, 2006
This article offers a guide to introduce Shakespeare's plays and his life. All it takes are five days in the library media center; some student handouts; plenty of resources, both print and online; some word processing software; plus a little patience and flexibility. Students complete a timeline, a paper and a cover sheet, all of which can be…
Descriptors: School Libraries, Junior High School Students, Early Adolescents, Learning Activities
Hurley, John – 1998
When readers encounter Shakespeare's "Sonnet 73," they often fail to realize that it is an excellent model of what a good composition ought to be. The closing couplet functions the same way a thesis would in a prose work. The repetition of wording within the analogies in the three quatrains helps to make the work coherent. In addition,…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Figurative Language, Sonnets, Writing Instruction
Allen, Steve – 1980
A classic is a book that gives the exhilarating feeling that a part of life finally has been uncovered. It is a book that has stood the test of time, that people keep reaching for throughout the ages for its special enlightenment. Here are some suggestions to help open up the world of the classics: (1) know if what is being read is a novel, a…
Descriptors: Books, Classics (Literature), Guidelines, Literature
Armstrong, Leroy E. – Robert L. Telfer, Superintendent State Printing, 1916
This textbook is a reader developed on the principle that the expanding life of a child as a citizen of the world demands acquaintance with a considerable portion of the world's best thought as expressed in literature. The general method of presenting these classics rests upon the assumption that literature is addressed to the heart and to the…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Literature Appreciation, Classics (Literature), Teaching Methods
Baldwin, James; Bender, Ida C. – American Book Company, 1911
This textbook is the seventh reader in a series of school readers to help children acquire the art and the habit of reading well enough to give pleasure not only to themselves, but also to those who listen to them. The contents of this volume have been chosen and arranged to supply the young reader such selections that will be interesting to him…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Reading Instruction, Classics (Literature), Reading Skills
Baldwin, James; Bender, Ida C. – American Book Company, 1911
This textbook is part of a series of school readers to help children acquire the art and the habit of reading well enough to give pleasure not only to themselves, but also to those who listen to them. The selections have been chosen and arranged with strict reference to the capabilities and tastes of the pupils who are to read them, thus making…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Reading Instruction, Reading Skills, Oral Reading
Baldwin, James – American Book Company, 1897
This textbook is a fourth-year reader. The lessons in this volume have been prepared and arranged with a view towards several ends: to interest the young reader; to cultivate a taste for the best style of literature as regards both thought and expression; to point the way to an acquaintance with good books; to appeal to the pupil's sense of duty,…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Reading Instruction, Grade 4, Classics (Literature)
Jan, Isabelle – Wilson Library Bulletin, 1972
French children's literature, which includes so many masterpieces of the rarest and most remarkable kind does not constitute a literature in the strict sense. It has neither continuity nor traditions. (Author)
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), French Literature
Alderson, Brian – Wilson Library Bulletin, 1972
There is almost a revivalist movement in English children's classics, but the author questions their ability to survive in an increasingly mechanical age, and cautions against the negative effects of the new media and insensitive techniques of publishers. (SJ)
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), English Literature
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