39,017 results on '"short stories"'
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2. SHORT STORIES. LITERATURE CURRICULUM IV, REVISED TEACHER AND STUDENT VERSIONS.
- Author
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Oregon Univ., Eugene. and KITZHABER, ALBERT R.
- Abstract
THE INTERRELATIONSHIP OF SUBJECT, FORM, AND POINT OF VIEW, WITH EMPHASIS ON THE LAST, IS THE CONCERN OF THIS 10TH-GRADE LITERATURE UNIT. BACKGROUND INFORMATION, STUDY AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS, AND SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES AND WRITING ASSIGNMENTS ARE PROVIDED FOR SIX SHORT STORIES REPRESENTING VARIED POINTS OF VIEW--(1) H.G. WELLS'"THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND," (2) O. HENRY'S "A DOUBLE-DYED DECEIVER," (3) STEPHEN CRANE'S "A MYSTERY OF HEROISM," (4) AMBROSE BIERCE'S "JUPITER DOKE, BRIGADIER GENERAL," (5) ALAN SILLITOE'S "ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON," AND (6) WALLACE STEGNER'S "BUTCHER BIRD." SEE ALSO ED 010 129 THROUGH ED 010 160, ED 010 803 THROUGH ED 010 832, TE 000 195 THROUGH TE 000 220, AND TE 000 227 THROUGH TE 000 249. (MM)
- Published
- 2024
3. Beginnings VI: A Publication of Adult Student Writing of the 2003 Ohio Writers' Conference.
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Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center. and Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center.
- Abstract
This document is a compilation of 74 items that were written by Ohio adult basic and literacy education students and presented at the Sixth Annual Ohio Writers' Conference. The compilation is organized in seven sections titled as follows: (1) "Beautiful Ohio: Visions of What Used to Be" (7 poems and essays commemorating famous historical figures and events); (2) "Beautiful Ohio: This Majestic Land" (12 poems and essays by Ohio natives and immigrants); (3) "Beautiful Ohio: Land Where My Dreams All Come True" (8 essays and poems by individuals who have moved to Ohio from other parts of the Untied States and abroad); (4) "Issues and Attitudes" (13 essays and poems on a wide range of topics, including meeting the needs of Ohio's students, violence, drug use, attitudes toward the homeless, and hiding from dyslexia); (5) "Personal Reflections" (14 reflections on topics ranging from having a bad day to losing close friends in a drag race); (6) "Family" (10 essays and poems expressing attitudes toward family and recalling specific family members); and (7) "Love and Inspiration" (10 poems and essays exploring the meaning of love and recounting experiences of being in love). Biographies of the authors and a list of honorable mention authors whose works were not included in the compilation are also presented. (MN)
- Published
- 2003
4. Beginnings V: A Publication of Adult Student Writing of the 2002 Ohio Writers' Conference.
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Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center. and Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center.
- Abstract
This document is a compilation of 68 items that were written by Ohio adult basic and literacy education students and presented at the Fifth Annual Ohio Writers' Conference, which was devoted to the theme "writing and the arts." The compilation is organized in seven sections as follows: (1) choices (8 items, including a poem expressing its author's feelings about having a chronic disease and an essay about a man's journey from a foster home and prison to literacy education); (2) feelings (14 poems and essays revealing individuals' feelings about events and experiences such as death, pregnancy, losing a loved one, and loving two men); (3) people (17 poems and essays recalling people who had made a special impact on the authors' lives, as well as a rap inspired by Edgar Allen Poe's poem "Annabel Lee"); (4) learning (8 poems and essays describing their authors' experiences with and attitudes toward learning); (5) nature (10 poems); (6) places (5 items, including a short story and poems on places in the United States and abroad); and (7) potpourri (6 essays and poems on topics ranging from a cherished pet to childhood recollections). Biographies of the authors and a list of honorable mention authors whose works were not included in the compilation are also presented. (MN)
- Published
- 2002
5. Comprehension Promotes the Retention and Utilization of Literary Writing Techniques.
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Blackmore, Heather L.
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This study described how a fifth grade reading and writing class utilized short stories to comprehend how authors used eight different writing techniques in their own writing. The researcher found that when the fifth grade students comprehended how to use a writing technique they were able to apply it to their own personal, expressive writing. The researcher also analyzed the retention of the writing techniques over an eight-week study. It was found that if the writing technique was comprehended and utilized, a fifth grade student eventually mastered the technique. The integration of reading and writing are essential in the process of comprehension. The two strategies which developed comprehension included reading as a writing strategy and writing as a reading strategy. When teachers find a balanced approach of the two strategies the result is a total comprehension of the material being studied. (Contains 36 references. Appendixes contain a reading survey instrument and a writing survey instrument.) (Author/RS)
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- 2002
6. Reading as Comprehension and as Interpretation in Learning English as a Foreign Language (EFL).
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Chi, Feng-Ming
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This study investigated how 12 Taiwanese English-as-a-Foreign-Language (EFL) college students comprehended and interpreted 4 English short stories. Free writing was used to collect the data, and a topical unit was used to analyze the data. The results identified two patterns: the comprehension level and the interpretation level. The comprehension level was divided into three categories: summarizing, elaborating, and inferring. The interpretation level was also divided into three categories: evaluating, associating, and transferring. The comprehension level helped participants understand the text, but the interpretation level helped participants become critical thinkers and readers. The pedagogical implications suggest that ESL/EFL teachers should broaden their views of reading instruction and, furthermore, should provide a rich learning environment for students to make personal, sensible, and meaningful connections through a social inquiry process. (Contains 11 references.) (Author/SM)
- Published
- 2002
7. Teaching Short Science Fiction Stories in English as a Foreign Language in Mexico.
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Zoreda, Margaret Lee
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This paper describes an advanced English course at a Mexican university entitled, "Short Science Fiction Stories in English." The course is based on an ecological, co-emergent approach in which the various components of curriculum action are understood to exist in a dynamic and mutually specifying relationship. With this conceptual approach, the course provides enriching transcultural encounters. The paper describes the theoretical-methodological framework of the course, its objectives, the choice of the short story, the syllabus, class management, and evaluation policy. Science fiction provides university students with a vision of the impact that science and technology project on society from the Anglophone point of view, offering spaces for critical transcultural encounters. The course's three objectives include stimulating appreciation and enjoyment of literature in English, offering a critical analysis of the manifestations of Anglophone cultures as they are revealed in science fiction, and promoting the improvement and diversification of English knowledge and competence. Students complete 24 stories and 2 essays on science fiction, meeting twice weekly for 2 hours. They read and discuss in groups and complete portfolios. Some students prepare film scripts or write original science fiction stories. A course syllabus is appended. (Contains 15 references.) (SM)
- Published
- 2002
8. Year 6 Planning Exemplification 3. National Literacy Strategy.
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Department for Education and Skills, London (England).
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Third in a series of booklets designed to assist Year 6 teachers with planning instruction to meet objectives of the National Literacy Strategy, this booklet contains Summer Term planning exemplification for three "revision" units (Narrative, Poetry and Non-fiction) prior to the Key Stage 2 tests and one unit after the tests (Extended narrative writing). After an introduction (background and context, Year 6 Term 3 Planning), the Revision Units section of the booklet offers framework objectives, a rationale, and week plans and transcripts, and resources sheets for the three units. For the Extended narrative writing unit, the booklet presents framework objectives, rationale, a 3-week plan, a short story, structural analysis, story frame overhead transparencies, a demo-write for chapter 1, a class grouping chart, and a flowchart. (RS)
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- 2002
9. Great Expectations. [Lesson Plan].
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Discovery Communications, Inc., Bethesda, MD. and Devine, Kelley
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Based on Charles Dickens' novel "Great Expectations," this lesson plan presents activities designed to help students understand the differences between totalitarianism and democracy; and a that a writer of a story considers theme, plot, characters, setting, and point of view. The main activity of the lesson involves students working in groups to write a short story, in a serial manner much like Dickens did when he wrote "Great Expectations." It includes objectives, materials, procedures, adaptations, discussion questions, evaluation methods, extension activities, annotations of suggested readings and web links, vocabulary, and related academic standards and benchmarks addressed in the lesson plan. The lesson plan also contains a description of a video clip related to the lesson, comprehension questions related to the video clip, and answers to those comprehension questions. (RS)
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- 2002
10. 'American Frontiers.' [Lesson Plan].
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Discovery Communications, Inc., Bethesda, MD.
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Based on short stories and novels, this lesson plan presents activities designed to help students understand that in the 19th century, the American frontier brought both solutions and problems; and fiction writers as well as documentarians have portrayed the American frontier. The main activity of the lesson involves students writing essays addressing whether characters in the novels and short stories do or do not correspond with information students found from nonfiction sources. It includes objectives, materials, procedures, adaptations, discussion questions, evaluation methods, extension activities, annotations of suggested readings and web links, vocabulary, and related academic standards and benchmarks addressed in the lesson plan. The lesson plan also contains a description of a video clip related to the lesson, comprehension questions related to the video clip, and answers to those comprehension questions. (RS)
- Published
- 2002
11. The Story Project: An Online Site for Reading and Sharing.
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Padgett Wheeler, Sally
- Abstract
This paper describes an online publishing site at Georgia Perimeter College called "The Story Project." The Web site contains more than 60 stories written by faculty members, students, administrators, staff, family, and friends, and serves to encourage student writing, create a community of writers, celebrate common and diverse past experiences, preserve the past, and encourage leisure reading. The stories range from school-related experiences to childhood adventures, travel stories to romantic recounts, sports stories, and immigration experiences. There are also military and civil rights categories, and the college hopes to expand and add more current history categories. Advantages of the Project include exposure to the past through real-life accounts and the educational opportunities inherent in having students publish their work. The College benefits from the stories by identifying potential subjects for articles in one of the College's publications, by celebrating the school's common and diverse experiences and heritage, through an opportunity to involve alumni and friends, and by bringing the College together for a unified goal and experience. The paper contains several excerpts from stories published in Georgia Perimeter College's "The Story Project." (CB)
- Published
- 2002
12. Adult Learning in the Nineteenth Century in the Mirror of Novels and Short Stories: Czech Literature.
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Kulich, Jindra
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Czech novels and short stories dealing with life in the 19th century were reviewed for information about how adults in rural areas of Czechoslovakia learned and the topics that interested them. The literature review confirmed that adults living in rural areas of Czechoslovakia in the 19th century generally had a great desire for education, including self-education, and faced many obstacles to gaining the knowledge they desired. Village schoolteachers and parsons played a crucial role. Schoolteachers not only disseminated books and periodicals but also strove to improve agriculture, gardening, and beekeeping. Enlightened parish priests of the time spread education among the common folk, often in cooperation with schoolteachers. The rural clergy loaned and distributed books to the common folk. Often, village schoolteachers and parsons continued their own education together. The story "The Village in the Foothills" provides a picture of lifelong learning in rural Czechoslovakia. The Czech literature also demonstrates that although some burghers and gentry actively fostered education of the common folk, some actively opposed it. Several novels and short stories document the existence of innovators among farmers, merchants, and others in rural Czechoslovakia. Numerous literary works describe the physical and other hardships faced by those undertaking educational work in rural Czechoslovakia. (Contains 23 references.) (MN)
- Published
- 2002
13. Selecting and Promoting Young Adult and Children's Award-Winning Books. What This Means for Publishers, Authors, Teachers, Librarians and the Consumer.
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Hill, Margaret, White, Maureen, and Brodie, Carolyn
- Abstract
Children are naturally drawn to award-winning books. Those who work with children know that the appeal of these books often comes from the shiny gold, silver, or bronze seals affixed to the covers of these special books. Teachers and librarians, however, need to be aware of the fact that the Newbery and Caldecott, and lesser known awards, are awards based on specific criteria that may or may not always meet the reading needs or appeal of every child. This paper answers the following questions: Why are award books important?; How are award books selected?; What have award books meant to the U.S. bookseller's market?; What trends are being seen in award-winning books?; What can teachers and librarians do individually and collaboratively to promote these award-winning books?; and Where can information on children's awards be located on the Web? The paper discusses the Newbery, Caldecott, Mildred L. Batchelder, and Pura Belpre Awards, as well as the Notable Children's Books, Children's Choices, and Teachers' Choices lists. It also discusses the Paul A. Witty Short Story Award and the Lee Bennet Hopkins Poetry Award. Contains an annotated list of recommended readings and resources. (NKA)
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- 2001
14. Beginnings IV: A Publication of Adult Student Writing of the Ohio Writers' Conference.
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Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center. and Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center.
- Abstract
This document contains 61 poems, short stories, and personal reflections that were selected from more than 300 entries submitted by adult literacy students throughout Ohio. The works included are as follows: "The Apartment" (Shirley Pettit); "The Last Poem Before I Die" (Lonnie Littleton); "A Family Lost" (Mary Rapp); "Inner Child" (Regina Mulkey); "Life Changes" (Michael McFadden); "Blood" (Toshia Smith); "Life as a Single Father" (Dale Sherman); "A Turtle?" (Marjie Mustard); "The Paper" (Christine Seman); "Fade Myself" (Faith D. Crabtree); "Wings to Fly" (Karen Barnes); "My Life on the Streets; Mi Vida en las Calles" (Christian Velez); "Relax, Be Gentle" (Karen S. Smith); "Divorce" (Carol E. Gessner); "Hobbies" (Linda Montgomery); "Hit Man" (Diane Brown); "Liquid Nightmare" (Larry Hurd); "Life and Choices" (Patricia Santos); "Shaking Hands" (Mahammed Kutubuddin); "I Never Dreamed" (Roberto Benitez); "Goodbye, Love" (Christopher Barker); "Old Friends" (Cynthia Rush); "Love" (Adam D. Rice); "A Christmas Rose" (Twila Cross); "Haircut" (Kum Sun Kim); "Mommy" (Renee Glaze); "A Day in the Life of a Typical Mother" (Sally White); "New World" (Christine Seman); "Fly Away...Beside Me" (Monique Ross); "My Grandson and Me" (Art Massengil); "My Teacher" (Monique G. Ross); "September" (Prescious Eutsey); "Dear Mom" (Dawn Bradley); "Playing Tricks" (Carrie Miller); "Being Proud" (Fumiko Adair); "The Butterfly" (Laura Lee Green-Kulcak); "A Tennessee Childhood" (Art Massengill); "Boyhood Days" (Earl Willford); "The Night a P.T. Boat Prowled Lake Erie" (Philip H. Edwards);"Supreme Court of India" (Mahammed Kutubuddin); "My Mountains" (Milita Stringer); "Family Memories" (Laura Lee Green-Kulcak); "A Terrible Day in My Life" (Thuy Nguyen); "A Love Letter" (Tatyana O'Neill); "The Street Beggars" (Quang Minh Cao); "Autumn" (Anh Phuong Nguyen); "Ponies" (Cynthia Harrison); "Morning" (Marjie Mustard); "Winter" (Art Massengill); "Untouched Island" (Heather Tilley); "Butterfly" (Anh Phuong Nguyen); "Winter's Fun" (Carol Rudder); "Our Unusual Household and Its Inhabitants" (Angela Murphy); "The Little Lame Donkey" (Etta Lorene Bailey); "High Pressure Performance" (Jeff Bell); "The Cellar" (Katherine White); "Restoring a '55 Chevy" (Ed Garcia); "Peace" (Vickie Hargraves); "Silent Tears" (Christian Velez); "Sunglasses" (Amanda JoAnna Edge); "A New Beginning" (Tri Huynh); and "A Family of God's Servants" (M. Foltz). Concluding the document are brief biographies of some of the authors and a list of 141 adult literacy students who submitted entries that were not published. (MN)
- Published
- 2001
15. Wired for Short Fiction: A Paradigm Shift for the 21st Century.
- Author
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Nellen, T
- Abstract
For one instructor of eleventh and twelfth grade English, teaching the short story offers the best opportunity to teach fiction writing to students. It contains all the elements novels contain, but students can read many short stories in the same time they need to read a novel. Students can also write their own short stories. Above all, literature is crucial in problem solving and in critical thinking. After reading peer-reviewed short stories on the Internet, the students were given material no one else had commented on and allowed to use their critical eyes and become judges of good or bad literature. The students read nine short stories from "Verbiage Magazine" and selected four or five as the centerpiece for an essay. The essay was to be followed by the writing of a short story. Their essays and short stories were published on the Internet on their "Webfolios." They became aware of audience because of the listserv and the webfolios. Eventually, the class gets to the classics and the traditional compare and contrast. The classics should be especially enjoyable for the students because they will know how to read them on their own terms and not on someone else's terms, and they will be able to defend their opinions and present a logical argument. The project evolved into a three-step process: first, the class analyzes a classic short story; then they compare and contrast a classic and a contemporary short story; and finally, the students write their own short story. This constructivist move from the traditional reader response paradigm is designed to be truly more satisfying for the students and the teacher. (NKA)
- Published
- 2001
16. I smikh, i plach: zbirka tekstiv (Laughter and Tears: A Reader). Collage 3: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
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Alberta Learning, Edmonton. Learning and Teaching Resources Branch. and Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana
- Abstract
Part of a Ukrainian language development series, this intermediate-level reader provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, newspaper articles, short stories, fairy tales, fables, and dialogs for use by native speakers, heritage language, or second language learners of Ukrainian. (CNP)
- Published
- 2001
17. Tsikave: zbirka tekstiv (It's Interesting: A Reader). Collage 3: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
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Alberta Learning, Edmonton. Learning and Teaching Resources Branch. and Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana
- Abstract
Part of a Ukrainian language development series, this intermediate-level reader provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, newspaper articles, short stories, fairy tales, fables, and dialogs for use by native speakers, heritage language, or second language learners of Ukrainian. (CNP)
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- 2001
18. Dva shliakhy: zbirka tekstiv (Two Paths: A Reader). Collage 3: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
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Alberta Learning, Edmonton. Learning and Teaching Resources Branch. and Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana
- Abstract
Part of a Ukrainian language development series, this intermediate-level reader provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, newspaper articles, short stories, fairy tales, fables, and dialogs for use by native speakers, heritage language, or second language learners of Ukrainian. (CNP)
- Published
- 2001
19. Uiavy sobi...: zbirka tekstiv (Just Imagine...: A Reader). Collage 3: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
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Alberta Learning, Edmonton. Learning and Teaching Resources Branch. and Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana
- Abstract
Part of a Ukrainian language development series, this intermediate-level reader provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, newspaper articles, short stories, fairy tales, fables, and dialogs for use by native speakers, heritage language, or second language learners of Ukrainian. (CNP)
- Published
- 2001
20. Beginnings III: A Publication of Adult Student Writing of the Ohio Writers' Conference.
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Ohio State Literacy Resource Center, Kent.
- Abstract
This document contains 58 poems, essays, letters, personal narratives, reminiscences, and short stories that were selected from 255 entries submitted by 170 adult student writers in Ohio. The student-authored literary works, which adult educators can use in their adult literacy classrooms, are grouped under the following themes: family, learning, nature, feelings, and reminiscences. Among the titles included are the following: "Raising Special Children" (Sharon Sheppard-Scott); "I Finally See" (Sharon Harsh); "The Bloodshed of Our Children" (Vickie Hargraves); "Brittany's Brace" (Norma J. King); "Daddies" (Cindy Wright); "My Success" (Tracy Graham); "To Mommy's Little Angel, Rebecca" (Amy Chandler); "An Evening Death" (Toni White); "A Single Mother's Reward" (Sharon Cavell); "Su Ah and Hyun Ah" (Kum Sun Kim); "Innocence Taken" (Regina Mulkey); "An Unsolved Fire" (Karen S. Smith); "A Tribute to the Step-Up Experience" (Karen Bowman); "Never Give Up" (Ruan Luong); "Safety at Home" (Kathy Brooks); "My Life's Dream" (Nora Thomas); "The Greatness in Yourself" (Stacy Jones); "Santa's Wife a Missing" (Karen Safewright); "Angle of the Lake" (Phil Edwards); "Maybe Tomorrow I'll Find What I'm After (A Man in Search of a Love)" (Lonnie Littleton); "My Old Kentucky Home" (Glen A. Baldwin); "Ramadan" (Traci Cornist); "Sharecropping" (Harold Lester); "Christmas in Ukraine" (Zenia Kovalska); "Hair Day" (Norma J. King); and "Wildmen" (Ken Tallon). Concluding the document are biographies of the authors and a list of honorable mention winners. (MN)
- Published
- 2000
21. Alice Walker in the Classroom: 'Living by the Word.' The NCTE High School Literature Series.
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National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, IL. and Jago, Carol
- Abstract
This small book is a handy guide for bringing the work of author Alice Walker into the classroom. It includes biographical information, ideas for literature circles using Walker's short stories, sample writing lessons using Walker's poems, suggestions for teaching "The Color Purple," and a wealth of resources for further investigation of Alice Walker and her work. The book's 6 chapters are: (1) "Where Life and Art Intersect," with background information about Walker, including her activism during the 1960s civil rights movement; (2) "Writing from Models," offering guidelines for having students write their own poems modeled after several of Alice Walker's; (3) "'The Color Purple,'" exploring how students can develop the reading skills they need to navigate this challenging text; (4) "Taking a Critical Stance," offering reviews and critical analysis of Walker's work from various viewpoints, helping students reconsider and refine their own experience; (5) "Censorship," exploring issues of censorship in the classroom and providing suggestions for teachers committed to supporting their students' right to read; and (6) "More," containing additional sources of information about Alice Walker and her work. A chronology of Alice Walker's life is included. (Contains 19 references.) (SR)
- Published
- 2000
22. The World of Naguib Mahfouz. Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminars Abroad Program, 2000 (Egypt and Israel).
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Emery, Ken
- Abstract
This resource packet was created to allow teachers to easily select from some of the short works of Naguib Mahfouz, probably Egypt's most famous and prolific writer, that will familiarize students with the author and his world. The packet first gives an overview of the life and work of Mahfouz, citing seven sources for further information. The resource packet is then divided into two parts: (1) "Introduction" and (2) "The Stories." The introduction suggests Internet activities that teach about Cairo (Egypt) and Islam. It offers ideas for student research on 20th century Egypt. Part 2 contains eight short stories (translated into English from Arabic) which reflect a broad range of Naguib Mahfouz's writings. (BT)
- Published
- 2000
23. Journal-Writing in University Pleasure-Reading Activities.
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Wu, Siew-Rong
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This study used journals and image notebooks to examine English as a Foreign Language (EFL) university students' cognitive skill development as they completed pleasure-reading activities that preceded creative writing tasks. Participants were freshmen at Taiwan's National Yang-Ming University who were enrolled in an English reading and writing course. Students completed a short story project in which they chose mystery novels, detective novels, or other novels to read for pleasure. This pleasure-reading activity was designed to facilitate their intrinsic motivation. To put the theory of the writing-reading connection into practice, the researcher observed and analyzed these student writers' journals, image notebooks, and final learning assessments, investigating their cognitive development in reading and writing. Results found that students were successfully empowered to create their own short stories by using the writing skills they learned both in and out of class from extensive reading of mystery or detective stories. (SM)
- Published
- 2000
24. Mark Twain and American Humor [Lesson Plan].
- Abstract
In this three-part lesson, students examine structure and characterization in the short story and consider the significance of humor through a study of Mark Twain's "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County." In Part I, through skits and storytelling, students first examine the structure of Twain's story and the role he creates for his tall-tale storyteller, Simon Wheeler. They then investigate Twain's use of dialect by continuing a story that Wheeler starts to tell, imitating his comic style. In Part II, students compare Twain's story with one of the Sut Lovingood stories by George Washington Harris, again examining the story's structure by performing it as a skit. After considering how this structure "frames" the trickster Sut Lovingood, as compared to the frame Twain creates for his trickster, Jim Smiley, students produce a character sketch of Harris' comic protagonist and a sample of his humorous dialect. Finally, in Part III, students read a humorous story by Nathaniel Hawthorne in order to gain perspective on Twain's brand of humor and its significance within the context of American literary tradition. After debating the merits of "moral" humor like Hawthorne's as compared with the "folk" humor of Harris and Twain, students test the possibilities of blending these traditions by recasting a paragraph of Hawthorne's story in dialect style. The lesson plan also contains the subject areas covered in the lesson, time required to complete the lesson, the skills used in the lesson, the grade level (9-12), and lists of the standards developed by professional or government associations that are related to the lesson, as well as activities to extend the lesson. (RS)
- Published
- 2000
25. The Effect of Cross-Age Tutoring by High Schoolers on Their Understanding and Ability To Create a Short Story.
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Ankcorn, Denise
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to see if cross-age tutoring by high schoolers would have an effect on the students' understanding and ability to write a short story. High schoolers, in an elective creative writing course, were paired up with sixth graders from a local feeder elementary. The high schoolers spent time studying specific short story elements and then commenting on drafts of the sixth graders' stories. The results of this study showed an average increase in students' scores of 15% on a test of basic short story elements. This indicated that the students had an increased understanding of the elements covered in the tutoring experience. Also, through the evaluation of the high schooler's own stories, the students demonstrated an ability to use the skills they had learned in their own writing. Thus, this cross-age tutoring experience that focused on story writing skills was an effective method for teaching specific short story elements to high school students. Contains 13 references, and 10 tables and 4 figures of data. Appendixes contain an open-ended survey; a test of short story elements, two short stories; guidelines for individual short stories; advice on introducing tutoring partners; biography sheets; and a short story planning guide. (Author/RS)
- Published
- 1999
26. A Student-Centered Short Story Curriculum.
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Ballard, Maggie and Frazier, Stefan
- Abstract
The outline for a reading course based on both intensive and extensive reading of short stories is presented. The 11-week course focuses on five stories, three selected by the teacher and two selected by the students as a class. A course overview details the sequence of reading and classroom activities, and the procedures for a typical four-week story unit are also specified. Each unit includes pre-reading activities, several options for text reading, a comprehension check, a discussion of literary issues (setting, character, plot), a session devoted to literature discussion circles, and extending activities such as role play, dialogue writing, debate, or discussion and special writing assignment. Additional materials include a sample exercise for one story, procedures for a literary circle, directions for student journal entry writing, notes on the evaluation of journals, procedures for keeping a vocabulary log, and directions for a concluding independent reading project. Contains 22 references and a list of potential stories for classroom use. (MSE)
- Published
- 1999
27. Guidelines for a Gender-Balanced Curriculum in English, Grades 7-12.
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National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, IL. Women in Literature and Life Assembly.
- Abstract
This booklet presents a book list, activities, and teacher resources to provide teachers a starting place for works of adolescent literature that will initiate conversations and questions about gender roles and the perceptions of appropriate behavior and activities. It is designed to bring teachers' attention to more recent titles in order to augment the curriculum and assist teachers in addressing the concerns of today's young adult readers. It lists 39 short stories and collections, 45 works of contemporary realistic fiction, 9 works of fantasy/science fiction, 19 works of historical fiction, 5 works of folklore, 17 works of biography or autobiography, 6 works of personal narrative, 17 informational books, 13 works about drama, and 9 works of poetry. It lists 12 teacher resources and 12 activities for building a more balanced English language arts curriculum in the English classroom. (RS)
- Published
- 1999
28. Short Stories in the Classroom.
- Author
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National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, IL., Hamilton, Carole L., Kratzke, Peter, Hamilton, Carole L., Kratzke, Peter, and National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, IL.
- Abstract
Examining how teachers help students respond to short fiction, this book presents 25 essays that look closely at "teachable" short stories by a diverse group of classic and contemporary writers. The approaches shared by the contributors move from readers' first personal connections to a story, through a growing facility with the structure of stories and the perception of their varied cultural contexts, to a refined and discriminating sense of taste in short fiction. After a foreword ("What Is a Short Story and How Do We Teach It?"), essays in the book are: (1) "Shared Weight: Tim O'Brien's 'The Things They Carried'" (Susanne Rubenstein); (2) "Being People Together: Toni Cade Bambara's 'Raymond's Run'" (Janet Ellen Kaufman); (3) "Destruct to Instruct: 'Teaching' Graham Greene's'The Destructors'" (Sara R. Joranko); (4) "Zora Neale Hurston's 'How It Feels to Be Colored Me': A Writing and Self-Discovery Process" (Judy L. Isaksen); (5) "Forcing Readers to Read Carefully: William Carlos Williams's 'The Use of Force'" (Charles E. May); (6) "'Nothing Much Happens in This Story': Teaching Sarah Orne Jewett's 'A White Heron'" (Janet Gebhart Auten); (7) "How Did I Break My Students of One of Their Biggest Bad Habits as Readers? It Was Easy: Using Alice Walker's 'How Did I Get Away...'" (Kelly Chandler); (8) "Reading between the Lines of Gina Berriault's 'The Stone Boy'" (Carole L. Hamilton); (9) "Led to Condemn: Discovering the Narrative Strategy of Herman Melville's 'Bartleby the Scrivener'" (James Tackach); (10) "One Great Way to Read Short Stories: Studying Character Deflection in Morley Callaghan's 'All the Years of Her Life'" (Grant Tracey); (11) "Stories about Stories: Teaching Narrative Using William Saroyan's 'My Grandmother Lucy Tells a Story without a Beginning, a Middle, or an End'" (Brenda Dyer); (12) "The Story Looks at Itself: Narration in Virginia Woolf's 'An Unwritten Novel'" (Tamara Grogan); (13) "Structuralism and Edith Wharton's 'Roman Fever'" (Linda L. Gill); (14) "Creating Independent Analyzers of the Short Story with Rawlings's 'A Mother in Mannville'" (Russell Shipp); (15) "Plato's 'Myth of the Cave' and the Pursuit of Knowledge" (Dennis Young); (16) "Through Cinderella: Four Tools and the Critique of High Culture" (Lawrence Pruyne); (17) "Getting behind Gilman's 'The Yellow Wallpaper'" (Dianne Fallon); (18) "Expanding the Margins in American Literature Using Armistead Maupin's 'More Tales of the City'" (Barbara Kaplan Bass); (19) "Shuffling the Race Cards: Toni Morrison's 'Recitatif'" (E. Shelley Reid); (20) "Readers, Cultures, and 'Revolutionary' Literature: Teaching Toni Cade Bambara's 'The Lesson'" (Jennifer Seibel Trainor); (21) "Learning to Listen to Stories: Sherman Alexie's 'Witnesses, Secret and Not'" (Susan Berry Brill de Ramirez); (22) "'Sometimes, Bad Is Bad': Teaching Theodore Dreiser's 'Typhoon' and the American Literary Canon" (Peter Kratzke); (23) "Teaching Flawed Fiction: 'The Most Dangerous Game'" (Tom Hansen); (24) "Reading Louise Erdrich's 'American Horse'" (Pat Onion); and (25) "Opening the Door to Understanding Joyce Carol Oates's 'Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?'" (Richard E. Mezo). An afterword "Writing by the Flash of the Firefly" and a bibliographic postscript are attached. (RS)
- Published
- 1999
29. The Responses of Adult ESL Learners to Short Stories in English in Collaborative Small-Group Discussions.
- Author
-
Levine, Lewis
- Abstract
This study examined the collaboration of four adult English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) learners as they participated in a small groups to construct meaning in response to English short stories. The study investigated learners' oral responses and utterances and noted how group discussion influenced the content of their responses to short stories during one particular discussion session and over the semester. Data collection involved audiotaping peer group discussions. Oral responses in group discussions were collected at three different intervals during one semester. Students read and discussed three different short stories at each interval, also giving presentations to the rest of the class. Students evaluated their own and each others' work. Overall, participants discussed a broad range of topics in the collaborative group. Their utterances during the discussions were highly fluid, constantly shifting, and dynamic. They used various strategies to communicate their ideas and opinions and to construct meanings of English short stories. Collaborative discussion of short stories enabled these ESL students to sharpen and extend their comprehension and oral skills. Two appendixes present synopses of short stories and questions used to evaluate group presentations. (Contains approximately 150 references.) (Adjunct ERIC Clearinghouse for ESL Literacy Education) (SM)
- Published
- 1999
30. Vzaiemyny mizh lyud'my: zbirka tekstiv (Relationships: A Reader). Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Dept. of Education, Edmonton. Language Services Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Petriw, Lesia
- Abstract
This book is one of four intermediate-level readers in a series intended for second- or native language learners of Ukrainian. It includes a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, sayings (aphorisms), short stories, and dialogs. Other topics in this series include (in translation): Human nature, relationships, courage, and fascination with the unknown. (CNP)
- Published
- 1999
31. Liuds'ka vdacha: Zbirka tekstiv (Human Nature: A Reader). Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Learning, Edmonton (Canada). Curriculum Standards Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Petriw, Lesia
- Abstract
This book is one of four intermediate-level readers in a series intended for second- or native language learners of Ukrainian. It includes a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, sayings (aphorisms), short stories, and dialogs. Other topics in this series include (in translation): Human nature, relationships, courage, and fascination with the unknown. (CNP)
- Published
- 1999
32. Khorobrist': Zbirka tekstiv (Courage: A Reader). Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Dept. of Education, Edmonton. Language Services Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Petriw, Lesia
- Abstract
This book is one of four intermediate-level readers in a series intended for second- or native language learners of Ukrainian. It includes a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, sayings (aphorisms), short stories, and dialogs. Other topics in this series include (in translation): Human nature, relationships, courage, and fascination with the unknown. (CNP)
- Published
- 1999
33. Reading as Transaction in EFL: A Thematic Analysis.
- Author
-
Chi, Feng-ming
- Abstract
The purpose of this study is to investigate how ten advanced Taiwanese English as a Foreign Language college students comprehend and interpret two English short stories--"The Discus Thrower" and "A Passage to India." Two types of data were gathered for this study: verbal self-reporting and post-reading responses. Oral interviews were used to analyze, interpret, generate themes, and to generally debrief the participants. Based on this analysis, four themes on reading emerged (sense-making, communication, reflexivity, and recontextualization) and are discussed in depth. Sense-making deals with how the participants made sense of the texts by searching for meaning flexibly and inflexibly. Communication deals with how they handled reading dissatisfaction and suspense. Reflexivity deals with situations where participants reflected upon themselves as in their roles as readers, thinkers, and learners. During recontextualization, participants changed their interpretations, previous understandings, and reading stances while they re-read the texts. Conclusions are fourfold: teachers should respect students' meaning-making of the texts and try not to impart their own interpretations; the reader response approach should include ungraded journals and free-writing as well as oral reflection; students should be encouraged to embrace difficulty, ambiguity, confusion, and divergence and not shun them; the level of reader flexibility is itself rather flexible, varying with the readers' orientations, assumptions, and beliefs from one text to the next. Two appendices containing the two English short stories, are included. (Contains 28 references.) (Author/KFT)
- Published
- 1999
34. Tsikavytys' neznanym: Zbirka tekstiv (Fascination with the Unknown: A Reader). Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Dept. of Education, Edmonton. Language Services Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Petriw, Lesia
- Abstract
This book is one of four intermediate-level readers in a series intended for second- or native language learners of Ukrainian. It includes a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, sayings (aphorisms), short stories, and dialogs. Other topics in this series include (in translation): Human nature, relationships, courage, and fascination with the unknown. (CNP)
- Published
- 1999
35. Hacia una pedagogia Co-emergente, Transaccional y Transcultural: El Cuento Ultracorto de Cienca Ficcion en Ingles (Towards a Co-emerging Transactional and Transcultural Pedagogy: The Science Fiction Short Short Story in English).
- Author
-
Zoreda, Margaret Lee
- Abstract
An outline of a "co-emergent" pedagogical perspective describes the conceptual framework for an advanced university-level English-as-a-Foreign-Language (EFL) course. The course framework, which involves choosing and studying a brief science fiction story, allows for transcultural encounters via a transactional literary approach in which the various components of curriculum action exist in a dynamic and mutually specifying relationship. This paper describes the theoretical-methodological framework of the course, its objectives, the choice of the short short story, the syllabus, class management, and evaluation policy. (Contains 15 references.) (CNP)
- Published
- 1998
36. Beginnings: [A] Publication [of Adult Student Writing of the] Ohio Writers' Conference.
- Author
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Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center.
- Abstract
This document contains 51 poems, essays, and short stories that were authored by adult student writers throughout Ohio. The works were selected from 130 pieces of writing submitted by the students of 51 adult basic and literacy education (ABLE) teachers who encouraged their submission for presentation at the first Ohio Literacy Resource Conference. The works are grouped by the following themes: family; nature; love; mixed bag; and life. Within those broad categories, a range of topics, viewpoints, and moods are represented. Among the pieces of writing included are the following: a mother's story of life with a daughter born with Klippel-Feil syndrome; an essay on housecleaning; a poem to a child at the time of his high school graduation; haiku; love poems; a tale of an American Indian girl who lived a long time ago; a story in which the author assumes the viewpoint of a slave; an essay on what makes a good leader; an essay on a Vietnamese city; an essay about Bill Clinton written by a Japanese immigrant; a student's recollections of life in the 1920s and 1930s; and a firsthand account of enrolling in ABLE. A list of teaching ideas for the booklet is included. (MN)
- Published
- 1998
37. Comparison of Video and Text Narrative Presentations on Comprehension and Vocabulary Acquisition.
- Author
-
Podszebka, Darcy, Conklin, Candee, Apple, Mary, and Windus, Amy
- Abstract
A study investigated the effect of video and narrative presentations on children's comprehension and vocabulary acquisition. Participants were students in four heterogeneously grouped eighth-grade English classes (n=16, 22, 21, and 11) in a rural school district in southwestern New York. The short story selected was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Red-Headed League." It was chosen for its difficulty level--the text is at the instructional level of most of the students involved. Each class received a different mode of instruction: one class read the story to themselves; another class viewed a video rendition of the story; another class saw the same video but had captions included on the screen; the final class both read the text version to themselves during class and then viewed the video the following class period. A pretest (a matching test) and a posttest (the same matching test with answers in a different order, a series of multiple choice questions to measure comprehension and recall, and a short-answer evaluation question to measure critical thinking) were given. Significant findings are that students who read the text had greater vocabulary acquisition, while students who viewed the video showed a greater comprehension of the story. It appears that video watching has a positive effect on comprehension, and vocabulary acquisition seems to be positively affected when coupled with text. Closed captioning is a recent positive addition to teaching reading through television and video. (Contains two figures; 14 references; and sample pretest and posttests.) (NKA)
- Published
- 1998
38. Storybuilding: Example Performance Package, Minnesota Profile of Learning.
- Author
-
Minnesota State Dept. of Children, Families, and Learning, St. Paul.
- Abstract
Developed by classroom teachers during the development phase of Minnesota's Graduation Standards, this performance package is made up of locally designed assignments that, taken together, show whether a student has learned and can apply the knowledge and skills related to writing a short story for a variety of academic and technical purposes, situations, and audiences. It begins with reference to the particular content standard addressed in the package, the educational level of the package ("partial middle"), and a summary statement of the content standard. It then describes the tasks associated with the student performances: (1) complete several narrative writing exercises; (2) develop a plan for a narrative (short story); and (3) write a narrative (short story). It then offers specific statements from the standard regarding what students should know and should do, the products, task description, special notes, and feedback checklists for each task enumerated in the package. (RS)
- Published
- 1998
39. Publication Portfolio: Example Performance Package, Minnesota Profile of Learning.
- Author
-
Minnesota State Dept. of Children, Families, and Learning, St. Paul.
- Abstract
Developed by classroom teachers during the development phase of Minnesota's Graduation Standards, this performance package is made up of locally designed assignments that, taken together, show whether a student has learned and can apply the knowledge and skills related to writing short stories and letters for a variety of academic and technical purposes and audiences. It begins with reference to the particular content standard addressed in the package, the educational level of the package (intermediate), and a summary statement of the content standard. It then describes the tasks associated with the student performances: (1) write three short stories based on direct observation or experience; and (2) write three formal letters. It then offers specific statements from the standard regarding what students should know and should do, the products, task description, special notes, and feedback checklists for each task enumerated in the package. (RS)
- Published
- 1998
40. Enhancing Discussion through Short Stories.
- Author
-
Marcus, Sybil
- Abstract
A teacher of English in a college-level intensive English language program describes a method for stimulating speech in high-intermediate and advanced students, using short stories. It is argued that in short stories, the themes are universal, and even shy students are willing to discuss this form of literature in class. Criteria for selecting stories are suggested: a theme that captures students' imagination; sufficient complexity to have varied interpretations; appeal for a cross-section of students; and rich vocabulary. The story should be written originally in English, and should range between two and twelve pages in length, depending on student experience. Reading the story is a homework assignment, and class discussion begins with a question about where the student's sympathies lie in the story and continues with clarification of any student misunderstandings of the plot. Discussion of cross-cultural topics and related social issues often ensues. Variation in narrative technique from story to story is recommended, and selection of some humorous stories among the serious is also encouraged. A list of stories addressing social issues, focusing on youth and age, using different writing styles, and including humor, with brief descriptions, is appended. (MSE)
- Published
- 1998
41. Rishennia: zbirka tekstiv (Decisions: A Reader). Collage 1: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Learning, Edmonton (Canada). Curriculum Standards Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Jaremko, Helen
- Abstract
This intermediate- to advanced-level reader is designed for learning Ukrainian as a native or second language. It provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, short stories, fairy tales, fables, sayings (aphorisms), and dialogs. (CNP)
- Published
- 1998
42. Nadzvychaini liudy, nadzvychaini podii: zbirka tekstiv (Deeds and Doers: A Reader). Collage 1: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Learning, Edmonton (Canada). Curriculum Standards Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Jaremko, Helen
- Abstract
This intermediate- to advanced-level reader is designed for learning Ukrainian as a native or second language. It provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, short stories, fairy tales, fables, sayings (aphorisms), and dialogs. (CNP)
- Published
- 1998
43. Konflikty: zbirka tekstiv (Conflict: A Reader). Collage 1: A Ukrainian Language Development Series.
- Author
-
Alberta Learning, Edmonton (Canada). Curriculum Standards Branch., Cyncar-Hryschuk, Markiana, and Jaremko, Helen
- Abstract
This intermediate- to advanced-level reader is designed for learning Ukrainian as a native or second language. It provides a selection of short texts in modern Ukrainian, including poems, short stories, fairy tales, fables, sayings (aphorisms), and dialogs. (CNP)
- Published
- 1998
44. Giving the Devil His Due.
- Author
-
Mallett, Sandra-Lynne J.
- Abstract
In their anthology, Guth and Rico cite as preface to Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown," a student paper saying: "The mere doubt of the existence of good and the thought that other human beings are evil can become such a corrosive force that it can eat out the life of the heart." This is what happens to Brown. In the story, he has help from the promptings of the Devil, or, he succumbs to his imagination and projects his own guilt upon his neighbors and family. A choice of these two interpretations may be left up to the individual reader. Teachers' manuals and the questions posed in texts about this story make clear that it is subject to varied interpretations. However, it is helpful in interpretation to consider the devil himself. The worldly-wise, sophisticated older man, as he is portrayed in the story, assists Brown to reach the conclusion or excuse that "everybody does it." The Devil does this by using tactics in current use by advertisers and politicians: poisoning the well and encouraging hopping on the bandwagon. He relies chiefly on his oldest tactic, the business that gave him his name: slander. By suggestion, or Brown's own suggestible imagination, Brown comes to project his own distrust on all of his community. If instructors can help students to understand exactly what happened to Brown, maybe some of them can avoid some of the devilish temptations to which everyone is susceptible. (Contains 19 references.) (Author/NKA)
- Published
- 1998
45. Integrating the Computer into Language Arts in a Fifth Grade Classroom: A Developing Instructional Model.
- Author
-
Lund, David M. and Hildreth, Donna
- Abstract
A case study investigated an instructional model that incorporated the personal computer and Hyperstudio (tm) software into an assignment to write and illustrate an interactive, multimedia story. Subjects were 21 students in a fifth-grade homeroom in a public school (with a state-mandated minimum 45% ratio of minority students achieved by busing in students from surrounding areas) in an affluent area in the southeastern United States. Students were instructed in the writing of interactive stories using the process approach to writing and the software. Results indicated that: (1) students' writing improved in quantity and quality; (2) students were more motivated to complete the assignment; (3) the computer allowed for greater flexibility in writing due to its nature as a word processing tool; (4) even a single computer can be effectively used in conjunction with the language arts curriculum in the classroom; and (5) there were inherent difficulties associated with integrating computer technologies into classrooms--many students did not have experience with computers, even those who do have experience may lack keyboarding skills, and finding time to accomplish such a project requires outside help. Findings suggest that computers can be integrated into classrooms, and that computers can be used to enhance writing instruction and improve the quality of written work. (Contains 11 references and a table of data.) (RS)
- Published
- 1997
46. Choices. Author: George Ella Lyon. Trade Book Teaching Ideas from the OLRC Reading Group. Teacher to Teacher Series.
- Author
-
Kent State Univ., OH. Ohio Literacy Resource Center. and Padak, Nancy
- Abstract
"Choices" is a collection of 13 stories that George Ella Lyon, a writer of children's books, wrote specifically for adult new readers after conferring with adult basic education students in Kentucky. Although the individual stories are written from various people's points of view, they all tell of the dreams, hopes, and lives of working class people. Literacy teachers might offer several of the stories to their students simply to read. Six stories can serve as the focus of class discussions and other oral and written class activities, including activities requiring students to work in teams and develop charts and Venn diagrams. The ideas developed for using the stories with beginning readers were field tested in three separate adult basic education and literacy classes consisting primarily of female students who ranged in age from 23 to 65 years and whose reading level ranged from grade 1 to grade 12. Most of the students immensely enjoyed reading the stories aloud and participating in the class activities, and many students demonstrated noticeable improvements in their reading skills, vocabulary, and comprehension. The group discussion activities designed around the stories also helped students learn social skills and problemsolving skills together. (MN)
- Published
- 1997
47. An Interactive Procedure for Developing Literary Appreciation and Language Skills.
- Author
-
Frank, Marcella
- Abstract
A classroom method used to develop advanced English-as-a-second-language students' appreciation for a literary work, ability to do close text analysis, and general language skills is described. The four-session procedure uses a short story and careful sequence of teacher questioning. In the first session, students are prepared to understand the story's creative aspects by considering elements that make it meaningful. They then read the text. In the second session, small groups compare notes on their analyses and begin whole-class discussion of story specific elements: setting; characters; action; theme; style; language; cultural references; symbols. Specific questions are presented here. Student are given the full 90 minutes of the third session to write about what the theme of the story is and how the author uses characters and symbols to bring it out. In the fourth session, the essays are returned with teacher comments and error corrections. Common problems are discussed, and an exemplary essay written by a former student is distributed to all students. They are then asked to rewrite their essays and to make corrections to sentences with errors on a list distributed to them. Story text, exemplary essay, and sentences for correction are appended. (MSE)
- Published
- 1997
48. Using Folktales To Teach Cognitive/Academic Skills.
- Author
-
Taylor, Eric K.
- Abstract
Classroom techniques are suggested for teaching English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) students cognitive and academic skills needed for academic success, using the reading and analysis of folk tales. Skills targeted include comparing and contrasting, evaluating ideas, supporting claims with facts and evidence, organizing and grouping ideas, and using inference appropriately. A comparison and contrasting exercise using two variations of a folk tale is described. An activity focusing on techniques for supporting and evaluating ideas is intended for use after students have read a number of unrelated folk tales. An exercise in evaluating and summarizing ideas uses a single tale. In each case, preparatory activities for the teacher, detailed in-class procedures, and suggested variations for more advanced students are described. Some suggestions are also made for following story reading with questions that promote inferencing. (MSE)
- Published
- 1997
49. Teaching EFL to Multiple Intelligences.
- Author
-
Ghosn, Irma K.
- Abstract
This paper is in large part a critique of Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences presented in his 1983 book "Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences," and asserts that the multiple intelligences (MI) concept has been widely misinterpreted. The paper outlines some of the misconceptions of Gardner's theory as identified by Gardner himself, and then presents a sample lesson where some of the multiple intelligences are addressed within the context of story reading in an English-as-a Foreign-Language/English-as-a-Second-Language (EFL/ESL) class. Gardner asserts that intelligence is a biological and psychological potential, a potential capable of being realized to a greater or lesser extent as a consequence of the experiential, cultural, and motivational factors that affect a person, and should not be confused with domain or a learning style. The six most common misconceptions are the following: (1) all concepts or subjects can be taught using all seven intelligences; (2) going through the motions of a certain intelligence is sufficient; (3) materials associated with intelligence used as a background will address the given intelligence for learning; (4) using intelligences as mnemonic devices is equivalent to teaching to multiple intelligences; (5) interpersonal intelligence implies cooperative learning, and applies to outgoing, extroverted people; (6) interpersonal intelligence suggests self-esteem programs, or applies to people who are introverts or loners. A sample lesson, including a short story, with some MI components is presented, offering a more complex experience for learners than the traditional bottom-up approach to EFL. (Contains 13 references.) (KFT)
- Published
- 1997
50. 19 Word List and Reading Exercises [and] Guide for Materials.
- Author
-
Weber, David
- Abstract
This paper presents a series of reading and writing activities centered around a 19-item word list suitable for use in tutoring adults. The activities in the paper involve short stories, writing exercises, and take-home exercises. Included with the activities is a guide that presents, in addition to the word list and the exercises, instructions for tutors in implementing the activities and comments about the activities. (RS)
- Published
- 1997
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