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Showing 46 to 59 of 59 results Save | Export
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Heydon, Liz; Reilly, Jill – Literacy, 2007
Practice in working with parents is changing and communicating with parents is increasingly a part of teachers' responsibilities. Besides focusing on supporting their children's learning, many schools now involve parents in education for themselves. Yet despite the expectation that they will work to engage parents in their children's learning, in…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Foreign Countries, Professional Development, Family Programs
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Westbrook, Jo – Literacy, 2007
This paper reports a small-scale study of wider reading at Key Stage 3 in current English classrooms in secondary schools in the south of England. Six English teachers, three of whom were relatively new to teaching, were interviewed on what they thought about wider reading. The findings indicate that because of a lack of time and absence of demand…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Literacy, English Teachers
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Pahl, Kate – Literacy, 2007
This article argues that it is possible to look at children's texts in relation to the lens of literacy events and practices from the New Literacy Studies, and apply this perspective to an understanding of creativity. Teachers can then use the possibilities within a text to ask children different kinds of questions. Drawing on a 2-year…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Play, Ethnography, Creativity
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Lambirth, Andrew; Goouch, Kathy – Literacy, 2006
This paper examines the history, rationale, uses and abuses of writing journals in primary classrooms. We argue that writing journals form part of a pedagogy derived from an understanding of how children can be motivated to express themselves, independently of teachers. Moreover, they demonstrate the power of welcoming children's home cultures…
Descriptors: Journal Writing, Student Journals, Elementary Education, Instructional Development
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Pagett, Linda – Literacy, 2006
Although it contains a statutory inclusion statement, England's National Curriculum "hardly acknowledges the learning practices of different minority groups" ( Gregory and Williams, 2003, p. 103). Through observation and interview, this study examines the repertoire of languages that six children for whom English is an additional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Minority Groups, Language Usage, School Culture
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Twiselton, Samantha – Literacy, 2006
This paper explores the relationship between student teachers' behaviour and their underlying thoughts and beliefs as they learn to teach English in the primary school. It draws on data from a study involving student teachers at a range of points in their Initial Teacher Education programmes at a university in England. It uses these data to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Instruction, Student Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education
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Stevens, David; Hodges, Gabrielle Cliff; Gibbons, Simon; Hunt, Philippa; Turvey, Anne – Literacy, 2006
In England, little research has been carried out into how pre-service secondary English teachers transform what they know as they learn to teach. They are seldom asked to reflect explicitly on the connections between the pedagogy of their undergraduate studies and their pedagogical experiences as student teachers. The initial teacher education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Teachers, English Teachers, Transformative Learning
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Sealey, Alison; Thompson, Paul – Literacy, 2006
The article compares evidence from an electronic corpus of texts written for a child audience with specifications in the National Literacy Strategy. The concepts and terminology associated with corpus linguistics are introduced and explained, and the research study from which the findings derive is summarised. Results of the analysis are presented…
Descriptors: Literacy, Educational Policy, Contrastive Linguistics, Word Frequency
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Spencer, Ken – Literacy, 2006
The effect of irregular English orthography (spelling) on foundation literacy, and in particular on alphabetic decoding, is discussed within the context of the orthographic depth hypothesis. A method for circumventing the retarding effects of traditional English orthography, based on the support provided for Chinese pupils learning their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Phonics, Independent Study, Spelling
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Hilton, Mary – Literacy, 2006
This article is written in response to the article published in issue 39.3 of this journal, in November 2005, on the nature of the Key Stage 2 National Curriculum reading tests: "Examining England's National Curriculum assessments: an analysis of the KS2 reading test questions" by Anne Kispal of the National Foundation for Educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reading Tests, National Curriculum, Curriculum Evaluation
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Taylor, Carol – Literacy, 2005
This paper considers the pioneering development of a community-focused literacy initiative that began in Derbyshire, a county in the middle of England. Read On-Write Away! (ROWA!) is viewed from the standpoint of its former director. The article describes the strategy in the context of national policy and other government initiatives in England,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy Education
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Kispal, Anne – Literacy, 2005
The Year 6 National Curriculum reading test has become a familiar and established annual experience at the end of the primary phase in schools throughout England. From 1993 onwards, each year the national reading test for 11-year-olds has consisted of a different set of texts, accompanied by a different set of questions. With over a decade's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Educational Research, Reading Tests
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Hopper, Rosemary – Literacy, 2005
What are adolescents choosing to read? This is an important question because of potential divergence between school students' reading interests and reading expectations in school. This article considers the findings from a study of the reading over one week in May 2002 of 707 school students aged between 11 and 15, undertaken in 30 schools in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reading Habits, Reading Interests, Early Adolescents
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Kelly, Alison – Literacy, 2005
What can listening to children's ideas about poetry teach us? This article considers ways in which exploring primary-aged students' perceptions of poetry can inform teachers' work with children. Using strategies from earlier studies in secondary schools, a small-scale project with Year 6 students revealed their complex and sometimes contradictory…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Student Attitudes, Poetry
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