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Showing 1 to 15 of 146 results
Dallacqua, Ashley K. – Language Arts, 2012
This article explores the possibilities of graphic novels with young readers. During the 2009-2010 school year, while working with four fifth-grade students, the author examined the question "In what ways do readers engage while reading a graphic novel?" The fifth graders took part in book discussions and one-on-one interviews after reading two…
Descriptors: Novels, Literary Devices, Data Analysis, Grade 5
Anderson, Diane Downer – Language Arts, 2008
In "Reading "Salt and Pepper"" Anderson examines a story written by three third grade girls and their insights about that story as they re-read it during its production and retrospectively, eight years later. Using a frame for understanding children's writing as social practice, the children's interviews, showing their multiple and sometimes…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Grade 3, Gender Issues, Social Class
Colman, Penny – Language Arts, 2007
The relative absence of nonfiction in literature for young readers may have serious implications because nonfiction literacy matters. Nonfiction material is the crucible within which readers can gain the knowledge and skills that enable them to reach sound decisions in all arenas of life, avoid gullibility born of ignorance, and participate in an…
Descriptors: Nonfiction, Literature Appreciation, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres
Dooley, Caitlin McMunn – Language Arts, 2005
The strategies adopted and the efforts taken by Jacqueline, who is a teacher, to combat the pressures of testing and at the same time develop the love of literature amongst her students, is described. Jacqueline develops and practices her own beliefs regarding the methods for learning literature, which she has gained from her experience, reading…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Personal Narratives, Teaching Methods, Student Motivation
Peer reviewedMonahan, Mary Beth – Language Arts, 2003
Describes how a teacher researcher invited her students to be detectives on the lookout for language and to take a critical perspective on how it varies with each speaker, purpose, and context. Suggests that educators need to be careful about how they present language varieties so that their students appreciate them as more than "quaint artifacts…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewedPaul, Lissa – Language Arts, 2000
Offers a critical reading of a text used in Ontario, Canada, in a province-wide sixth-grade testing program, finding it representative of a genre called "Boutique multiculturalism," which fails as literature and fails as an inclusive text because it is emptied of all specific social, cultural, and historical content. (SR)
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Cultural Pluralism, Evaluation Research
Peer reviewedFraser, Jason W.; White, David E. – Language Arts, 2000
Offers a profile of Ann Turner. Examines her background, her approach to writing, and to writing historical fiction. Looks at aspects of Turner's historical writing and aspects of her style. Considers if there is a place for poetic language in historical fiction for children. (SR)
Descriptors: Authors, Books, Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedFoley, Margaret M. – Language Arts, 2000
Looks critically at the theoretical and ideological underpinnings of the practice of story mapping. Discovers a deep contradiction between the author's definition of reading as a constructive process and the reductionist nature of story mapping, which inhibits students' potential to explore a diverse range of personal responses by promoting…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Ideology, Literature Appreciation, Primary Education
Peer reviewedFlint, Amy Seely – Language Arts, 2000
Examines the discrepancies in engagement that arose when the teachers' instructional and the students' personal stances (regarding the intents and purposes of literacy) are misaligned during literacy events. Discusses the ways in which instructional and personal stances encourage and/or discourage engagement. Considers the opportunity to construct…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Class Activities, Grade 4, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedBeck, Cathy; Nelson-Faulkner, Shari; Pierce, Kathryn Mitchell – Language Arts, 2000
Looks at the characteristics of outstanding historical fiction including its literary qualities and criteria associated with authenticity. Discusses how teachers invite readers to approach their experiences with these novels. Looks at the role of historical fiction in today's classrooms. Presents brief annotations of 25 outstanding works of…
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Arts
Peer reviewedBallentine, Darcy; Hill, Lisa – Language Arts, 2000
Argues that the purpose of teaching students to read includes challenging children to take up books that contain "dangerous truths." Discusses two such books: "Forged by Fire" by Sharon Draper and "The Watsons Go to Birmingham--1963" by Christopher Paul Curtis. Includes children's statements regarding why they insist on being able to read good…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Class Activities, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Creative Dramatics
Peer reviewedElster, Charles A. – Language Arts, 2000
Illustrates how poems engage readers in heightened experiences of the world and of language itself. Shows some of the strategies that adults and elementary students employed when reading and responding to poems: summarizing the poem, entering in and opening out, entering the world of the poem, opening to the outside world, finding rich…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Instruction, Language Arts, Literature Appreciation
Peer reviewedMushegian, Sara S. – Language Arts, 1999
Recounts the author's family's summer reading and how she used it as an opportunity to talk with her children about books and, ultimately, about life. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Family Communication, Literature Appreciation, Parent Child Relationship
Peer reviewedKarolides, Nicholas J. – Language Arts, 1999
Presents an interview with distinguished educator Louise Rosenblatt. Discusses teaching methods, reading processes, application of theory to practice, literature-based curriculum, and what she is working on now. (SR)
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Principles, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMeacham, Shuaib J.; Buendia, Edward – Language Arts, 1999
Presents an accessible overview of modernism, postmodernism, and post-structuralism. Describes their characteristics, identifies how conceptions of literacy have changed as an outcome of post-structural and postmodern influences, and describes what literacy instruction looks like within each movement. (SR)
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Educational Principles, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education

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