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Nobles, Susanne; Dredger, Katie; Gerheart, Megan Dixon – Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education (CITE Journal), 2012
Geographically distant classrooms can be a ripe learning space for teacher educators who want to show preservice teachers the power of technology in the English classroom. A classroom teacher described how she used a social networking platform to allow for collaboration with a preservice teacher in the hopes of making student literary analysis…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Preservice Teachers, Partnerships in Education, High School Seniors
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Romsdahl, Rebecca J.; Hill, Michael J. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2012
In graduate education, there is often a great divide between classroom learning and research endeavors. Using learning community (LC) values and strategies, our goal is to build stronger and more meaningful ties between these two aspects of graduate education so that students see them as complimentary learning rather than separate components. This…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Theory Practice Relationship, Models, Learning Activities
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Schillinger, Trace – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2011
In 2006, a secondary English and feminist studies teacher created a course and designed a study around a reading exchange for eighth-grade girls from two vastly different communities. Girls from a school in a northeastern state read young adult novels and wrote about their reading and related topics with girls from Washington, DC on a wikispace…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Females, Background, Differences
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Schim, Stephanie Myers; Briller, Sherylyn; Thurston, Celia; Meert, Kathleen – Death Studies, 2007
In death-averse American society, the field of thanatology is often socially and academically isolating. The purpose of this article is to describe the experiences of a group of death scholars and share insights gained as members of an interdisciplinary team. They discuss the ways in which they have created a special "safe" space for death study…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Death, Scholarship, Academic Discourse