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English, Fenwick W.; Steffy, Betty E. – 1995
Although film and video archives are abundant and inexpensive and contain stories of leaders from a variety of occupations and historical periods, teachers of graduate-level educational administration courses rarely use them in their classrooms. This paper describes the advantages of using film/video as a teaching tool; in particular, its…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Creative Thinking, Film Study, Films
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Wright, Wayne E. – Educational Leadership, 2006
NCLB is leaving English language learners behind because it defies logic and common sense, is internally self-contradictory, and sets AYP expectations that the subgroup cannot possibly attain. Although the U.S. Department of Education allows states to use a variety of strategies to avoid having a Limited English Proficiency (LEP) subgroup, few…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Educational Improvement, High Stakes Tests, English (Second Language)
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Benson, Morton – TESOL Quarterly, 1989
Educational programs for teachers of English as a Second Language must devote more attention to differences between the standard varieties of American and British English, with instruction focusing on the major orthographic, morphological, syntactic, collocational, and lexical differences. (CB)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Dialects, Elementary Secondary Education, English (Second Language)
Toor, Rachel – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In this article, the author refutes the arguments forwarded by William Deresiewicz in his much-discussed essay, "The American Scholar." Deresiewicz claimed that his background (as a student at Columbia and a former associate professor of English at Yale) rendered him incapable of a few minutes of small talk with the plumber who came to fix his…
Descriptors: Anti Intellectualism, Colleges, Misconceptions, College Faculty
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Rice, Jeff – College English, 2006
What should college English be? This author contends that college English should be the intersection of the various areas of discourse that shape thought and produce knowledge. It should be the study of the mixing and remixing of connections: those connections that move from popular culture to the university, from geography to politics, from…
Descriptors: Internet, College English, Connected Discourse, Networks
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Bunch, George C. – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2006
In this article, I describe mainstream middle school classrooms designed to re-think the conditions under which language minority students who have lived in the United States for a number of years can develop English language skills while also gaining access to a rigorous curriculum. I describe a variety of transactions that students used to…
Descriptors: Language Minorities, Grade 7, Language Skills, English (Second Language)
Godzich, Wlad – ADE Bulletin, 1991
Asserts that the notion of national literature is no longer tenable. Suggests teaching both undergraduates and graduate students the history of the English discipline so that they may understand what determined its present configurations. Suggests introducing students to a variety of theories, methods, and controversies of the field. (PRA)
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Shohamy, Elana – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2007
Joel Spring (2007/this issue) argues that in most nation states around the world today, English plays a central role primarily as a commodity of globalization. At the same time in the United States, English is being perpetuated in nationalistic terms as the only legitimate language. This is done through a variety of mechanisms such as language…
Descriptors: Nationalism, National Security, Federal Legislation, Multilingualism
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Cahnmann, Melisa – Language Arts, 2006
Language arts educators who teach Latino English language learners know that part of their job is to help students learn to distinguish between the vernacular varieties of Spanish (or Mandarin, or Portuguese, or Swahili), English they use at home, and the school varieties of language expected in the classroom and in other professional and…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Poetry, Writing (Composition), Language Arts
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Lindfors, Judith W. – Language Arts, 1986
Presents the "Englishes" of children from different social backgrounds that are reflected in the forms and functions of their individual ways of communicating. Discusses implications of these language varieties for the classroom. (HTH)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Elementary Education, English, Interpersonal Communication
Adeyanju, Thomas K. – 1981
Received Pronunciation (RP) has traditionally been presented as a teaching model in Nigeria though performance has not measured up to expectation. In recent years, there has been much confusion regarding the choice of an English teaching model in developing countries, especially since the emergence of local varieties. On the one hand, experts…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Language Styles, Language Teachers
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McCann, Thomas M.; Ed.; Johannessen, Larry, Ed. – English Journal, 2009
Beginning teachers face many challenges and difficulties; as a result, one-third will leave the profession in the first three years and nearly half will be gone within their first five years in the profession. The challenge facing university teacher education programs is to fix the hole in the bottom of the bucket and find strategic new ways to…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Programs, Teacher Persistence
Hanson-Smith, Elizabeth – ESL Magazine, 1999
Highlights methods of teaching grammar that have been adapted for computer-assisted language learning. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, English (Second Language)
Hadley, Eric – New Universities Quarterly, 1980
Quotations from a variety of literature are used to illustrate the perspective that English instruction, as part of the humanities curriculum, has an essential place in the college curriculum and is indeed relevant to modern higher education. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, English Curriculum, Higher Education, Humanities
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Brice-Finch, Jacqueline – Clearing House, 1997
Notes that familiarity with the language of students--and especially awareness of the features of their languages that make acquisition of educated English difficult--enables the teacher to use a variety of techniques. Suggests that tolerance and acceptance of a panoply of dialects is a must, not a choice. (RS)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Language Standardization, Nonstandard Dialects, Secondary Education
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