Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 7 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 24 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 57 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 145 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Dollerup, Cay | 16 |
| Beach, Richard | 6 |
| Goetz, Ernest T. | 5 |
| Bogdan, Deanne | 4 |
| Galda, Lee | 4 |
| Gambell, Trevor J. | 4 |
| Many, Joyce E. | 4 |
| Sipe, Lawrence R. | 4 |
| Chase, Nancy D. | 3 |
| Faust, Mark | 3 |
| Golden, Joanne M. | 3 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 42 |
| Teachers | 42 |
| Researchers | 4 |
Location
| Canada | 16 |
| Denmark | 16 |
| United States | 11 |
| Greenland | 10 |
| Turkey | 7 |
| Australia | 6 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 6 |
| United Kingdom (Great Britain) | 6 |
| India | 4 |
| New York | 3 |
| Nigeria | 3 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
| First Amendment | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
| Bem Sex Role Inventory | 1 |
| Program for International… | 1 |
| Program for the International… | 1 |
| Progress in International… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedSipe, Lawrence R. – Journal of Children's Literature, 1997
Reviews perspectives on how children's literature is used in the classroom, and how literature contributes to a broader conception of literacy. Deals with literature as a tool for the development of various sorts of literate abilities, and literature as the enabler of literary understanding. Offers a concrete example involving first and second…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Childrens Literature, Classroom Environment, Literacy
Efferent and Aesthetic Stance: Understanding the Definition of Lois Lowry's "The Giver" as Metaphor.
Peer reviewedMenexas, Vicky – Journal of Children's Literature, 1997
Clarifies the "efferent" and "aesthetic" stance on Louise Rosenblatt's theoretical continuum by relating her model to the plot, characters, and scenes in Lois Lowry's "The Giver." Shows that Rosenblatt's view applies to the ways readers read texts and to the way characters in the texts read their text-worlds. Presents…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Literary Criticism, Metaphors
Peer reviewedFaust, Mark – Research in the Teaching of English, 2000
Problematizes the word "experience" as it is currently being used by researchers and teachers who want to reform literature instruction in schools and colleges. Discusses how a fresh look at Dewey and Rosenblatt can reconstruct the courtroom and marketplace metaphors as sound alternatives to theories that perpetuate dualistic assumptions…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
Peer reviewedSumara, Dennis J. – English Education, 1997
Attempts to represent the complexity of the web of literary relationships and their transformational space using fragmentary texts that circle around the novel "The English Patient": self as relationship and the dialogic engagement with a book by the patient himself; and the relationship and engagement with this book and with each other of a group…
Descriptors: Discussion Groups, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewedSloan, Glenna – Journal of Children's Literature, 2002
Presents an overview of critical theory to show how the method of Reader Response evolved. Discusses theories of reading and the reader; variations within reader response; and implementing reader response in literacy programs. Includes a brief response by Robert E. Probst. (RS)
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education, Reader Response
Peer reviewedMori, Kyoko – Journal of Children's Literature, 2002
Notes that the author was struck by the "self-centered" readers she encountered in her classroom and at professional conferences--readers who respond to reading by thinking of their own life and experiences. Argues that reading is so much more than a trip into the self. Presents two brief responses, by Lauren L. Wohl and Daniel Hade. (RS)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, Reader Response
The Power of Text: What a 19th Century Periodical Taught Me About Reading and the Reader's Response.
Peer reviewedApol, Laura – Journal of Children's Literature, 2002
Concludes that the author's study of the once-popular but now largely forgotten periodical "The Youth's Companion" shows how children's literature can call forth in readers a powerful response--a personal, literary, critical and active response that is shaped by a text's purpose, promise, positioning of readers, and the enduring passion it…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, Periodicals, Reader Response
Lesnick, Alice – Ethics and Education, 2006
This interpretive study proposes a framework with which to explore the ethical significance of classroom-based literacy practices. Overly narrow views of literature as a source of role models or moral precepts take insufficient account of the complexity of text and experience. Through analyses of telling examples from student writing and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Literacy Education, Ethical Instruction, Multicultural Education
The Impact of the Emotional Orientation of a Passage on the Reading Comprehension of Fourth Graders.
Wiggins, Janice Christine – 1988
A study investigated whether fourth graders recall different amounts of information for passages of different emotional orientation, whether there is a relationship between their emotional response to the passage and the amount of information recalled, and whether they recall different relationships when they read passages of different emotional…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades, Reader Response
Davis, Sara N. – 1988
Reading is best understood as a dialectic process where the influence of reader and text are constantly merging to create a jointly produced and evolving understanding. What occurs as the reader and text come together during reading is similar in form to a dialogue, a model for the reader-text relationship that has not been explored in the reader…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Comprehension
Fynes-Clinton, Michael; Mills, Perry – Use of English, 1987
Discusses ways to teach modern plays and poetry, using a reader response approach that makes the works more accessible to students. (HTH)
Descriptors: Drama, English Instruction, Literary Criticism, Poetry
Peer reviewedHade, Daniel D. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1988
Argues that one way to investigate the relationship of text to story taker (reader or listener) is to compare how the writer has made the story to how the story taker has recreated the story. Indicates a resonance between the story taker's retelling and the original text. (RAE)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Cognitive Development, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewedCorcoran, Bill – English Journal, 1988
Presents three strategies for teaching the personal, operational, and cultural dimensions of literary response. (MM)
Descriptors: Context Effect, English Instruction, Literary Criticism, Reader Response
Peer reviewedWoodcock, Leslie S. – Children's Literature in Education, 1988
Describes a writing activity in which children in England wrote letters to various children's authors. Discusses the content of both the children's letters and the author's replies. (MM)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Letters (Correspondence)
Peer reviewedProbst, Robert E. – English Journal, 1986
Discusses using reader response instead of standard literature interpretation teaching methods for the study of adolescent literature in high schools. Asserts that this method gives authority to the students as reader because they must assume responsibility for understanding the text, themselves, and the world. (SRT)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Creative Thinking, English Instruction, Literary Criticism

Direct link
