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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 16 to 30 of 774 results
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Hollowell, Clare – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
This article explores the constructions of class in British girls' school stories. Feminist scholarship has, to some extent, reclaimed the school story, pointing to the widening of acceptable gender roles for female characters in girls' school stories, compared to their counterparts in mixed-gender stories, and indeed real life. While…
Descriptors: Working Class, Females, Femininity, Foreign Countries
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Wolosky, Shira – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
The formative power of children's literature is both great and suspicious. As a resource of socialization, the construction and experience of children's literature can be seen as modes of disciplinary coercion such as Michel Foucault has anatomized. "Harry Potter", as a "craze" phenomenon, has attracted particular…
Descriptors: Discipline, Childrens Literature, Self Concept, Socialization
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Kansu-Yetkiner, Neslihan – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
This article examines the political polarization between Republicans and Islamists in Turkey as reflected in the peritexts of recent translations of world children's literature. This is reflected in terms of van Dijk's notions of an us vs them binarism, where a positive in-group is opposed to a negative out-group representation. In this…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Classics (Literature), Islam, Translation
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Snider, Jessi – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
Laurie Halse Anderson's young adult novel "Speak" concerns the rape and subsequent silence of ninth grade protagonist Melinda Sordino. By relying on extensive literary allusions involving trees, rape, silence, and transformation, Anderson creates a young adult problem novel that is both of the moment and timeless in its themes. The…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Novels, Trauma, Art Therapy
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Teorey, Matthew – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
This essay argues that Dr. Seuss's "The Lorax" (1971) successfully popularized the environmental message that Wallace Stegner presented in his largely forgotten essay "Conservation Equals Survival" (1969). The Seussian language and illustrations have inspired readers, particularly children, to consider and, more…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Authors, Conservation (Environment), Activism
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Abate, Michelle Ann – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This essay makes the case that Barbara Park's picture book "MA! There's Nothing to Do Here!: A Word from Your Baby-in-Waiting" (2008) adds another equal-parts absurdist and alarming item to the ever-growing responsibilities of expecting mothers: ensuring that their fetus is entertained. The messages that Park's narrative…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Political Affiliation, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Prenatal Care
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Chaudhri, Amina; Teale, William H. – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This study analyzed 90 realistic novels written and published in the United States between the years 2000 and 2010 and featuring mixed race characters. The researchers examined specific textual features of these works of contemporary and historical fiction and employed Critical Race Theory to contextualize the books within paradigms about…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Multiracial Persons, Racial Identification, Self Concept
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van Rij, Vivien – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This paper examines the work of one of New Zealand's most acclaimed writers, Maurice Gee, and the use of his children's fiction as an experimental ground for postmodernist techniques further developed in his writing for adults. In particular, it considers Gee's borrowings of his own and others' non-fictional and fictional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Authors, Fiction
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Pesonen, Jaana – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This article examines anti-racist strategies employed in Finnish children's literature. The examples from four stories illustrate that certain physical characteristics and cultural markers can become strong signifiers of nationality, that is Finnishness. The characters in these stories have to cope with experiences of exclusion and loneliness…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Racial Bias, Physical Characteristics
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Butler, Catherine – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
The position of authors of fiction in relation to critical discussion of their work is an unsettled one. While recognized as having knowledge and expertise regarding their texts, they are typically regarded as unreliable sources when it comes to critical analysis, and as partial witnesses whose personal association with the text is liable to…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Novels, Bias, Authors
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de Rijke, Victoria – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
Russell Hoban died in December 2011. In this article, Victoria de Rijke celebrates this mysterious writer's huge contribution to children's literature over 52 years; a career which began and ended with two mythological books: "The Mouse & His Child" (1967) and "Soonchild" (2012). Published in "CLE" over…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Authors, Mythology, Fantasy
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Lockney, Karen – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This article provides a close reading of Meg Rosoff's award-winning novel "How I Live Now". It argues that an understanding of the text can be extended through an application of ideas found in contemporary spatial discourse concerning place. Reading the novel within this context allows a discussion of ways in which it draws on…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Novels, Place Based Education, Literary Criticism
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McNair, Jonda C. – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
The purpose of this study was to examine how the social practices of African American families--with children in grades K-2--changed as a result of participating in a family literacy program utilizing African American children's literature. The families were exposed, through a series of workshops, to an abundance of children's literature…
Descriptors: African American Literature, Childrens Literature, Parents, Children
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Xu, Xu – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This essay examines how John Dewey's child-centered educational philosophy was adopted and adapted in the early twentieth century in China to create a Chinese children's literature. Chinese intellectuals applied Dewey's educational philosophy, which values children's interests and needs, to formulate a new concept of modern…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Twentieth Century Literature, Educational Philosophy
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Tilley, Carol L. – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
Between the years 1935 and 1946, National Comics--the leading comic book publisher in the United States--experimented with various strategies such as book lists and juvenile book reviews in order to encourage children and young adults to read books other than comics. This paper surveys these strategies and the work of key persons such as Malcolm…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Publishing Industry, Surveys, Reading Habits
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