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Peer reviewedHansen, Will – Mathematics Teacher, 2004
An interdisciplinary activity in which students can see how a famous author, Leo Tolstoy, metaphorically applied the integration steps from calculus to illustrate his ideas about how history should be studied is described. The activity provides a startling and energizing conclusion to a unit on applications of integration and provokes students'…
Descriptors: Calculus, Interdisciplinary Approach, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
Pierpont, Katherine – Teaching Pre K-8, 2006
Katherine Pierpont tells of the creation and development of the popular children's book, "Olivia Forms a Band," by author/illustrator Ian Falconer. In this story, Olivia, a pig, and her mother, father , and brothers are off to have a picnic and see fireworks. Olivia insists that if there are fireworks, there must be a band, even if she must…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Authors, Animals, Interviews
Lucero, Evelina Zuni – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2004
In this article, the author relates her experience during her interview with Indian poet Simon Ortiz in the summer of 1978. She recalls how she had been amazed at how down-to-earth Ortiz had been despite his achievements. Ortiz was an important writer and has contributed much to native Indian literature with his essays, poetry, and short stories.…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Interviews, Role Models, Profiles
Kaminsky, James S. – Teachers College Record, 2006
This article is a retrospective account of the legacy of Paul Goodman's major educational works: "Growing Up Absurd"; "Compulsory Mis-education, and The Community of Scholars"; and "The New Reformation." It is argued here that what remains of interest in Goodman's work is to be found in the tropes and the anarchic Zeitgeist of his work. The legacy…
Descriptors: Humanism, Authors, Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy
Maxwell, D. Jackson – Library Media Connection, 2005
Kid's Stuff game will introduce students, parents, teachers and educators to authors and illustrators who have consistently created books for children and young adults that are of superior quality and interest. The research-base games for use in library media center, classroom and at home game also helps students learn to use computer card catalog…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Library Services, Childrens Literature, Authors
Sanchez, Alex – English Journal, 2005
Alex Sanchez writes about the importance of having literature with gay-straight themes available to students to help overcome homophobia and provide safer schools for everyone. Letters received from middle school, junior high school, and high school boys and girls across America in response to Sanchez's gay-straight themed novels are narrated.
Descriptors: Novels, Homosexuality, Literature, Students
Kinginger, Celeste – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2004
Research on the links between bilingualism and emotion suggests that when a second language is learned postpuberty or in adulthood, the two languages of an individual may differ in their emotional impact. The works of bilingual writer Nancy Huston offer unique insight into the process of ascribing differential emotional value to first and second…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, French, English, Bilingualism
Grady, Marilyn L. – Journal of Women in Educational Leadership, 2006
Recent obituaries and testimonials to Coretta Scott King and Wendy Wasserstein are reminders of the leadership legacies of these women. About Coretta Scott King (1927-2006), Burch in "The Miami Herald" (February 1, 2006) stated "Coretta Scott King built a legacy from pain and progress, first as the wife who stood tall next to a man bent on…
Descriptors: Females, Leadership, Biographies, Authors
Young, Arthur P. – Library Quarterly, 2006
"Library Quarterly's" seventy-fifth anniversary invites an analysis of the journal's bibliometric dimension, including contributor attributes, various author rankings, and citation impact. Eugene Garfield's HistCite software, linked to Thomson Scientific's Web of Science, as made available by Garfield, for the period 1956-2004, was used as the…
Descriptors: Library Science, Periodicals, Content Analysis, Time Perspective
Corcoran, Debra A. – American Educational History Journal, 2004
The name Alcott is familiar and associated with author Louisa May Alcott and Transcendental philosopher/educator Amos Bronson Alcott. Yet the literary world has come to know May Alcott not for the talented artist she was, but as Amy, the spoiled, artistic character in Louisa's novel "Little Women". May Alcott Nieriker is worthy of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art Education, Study Abroad, Artists
Elbow, Peter; Sorcinelli, Mary Deane – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2006
This year marks the 15th year of a program called "Professors as Writers" at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. The first meeting was a half-day workshop at the end of a spring semester to help faculty launch the writing they wanted to do over the summer. The program has grown over the years and now includes monthly retreats, as…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, College Faculty, Workshops, Writing (Composition)
Dyck, Reginald – Great Plains Quarterly, 2003
In 1913 Willa Cather created a female protagonist who is single, independent, entrepreneurial, managerial, strong willed, wealthy, and in love with the land of south-central Nebraska. This character offered a new vision for women at the turn of the twentieth century. Cather's fictional construction of gender, as well as her own experience, embody…
Descriptors: Females, Sex Role, United States History, Authors
Harvey, Carl A., II – School Library Media Activities Monthly, 2005
Traditional story times begin with "The author of this book is..." and "The illustrator of this book is...". Although library media specialists emphasize the role of an author and an illustrator in creating a book, students often have difficulty making the connection between the name and a real person. Learning involves making connections and…
Descriptors: School Libraries, Media Specialists, Educational Experience, Motivation Techniques
Lehman, Barbara – Journal of Children's Literature, 2006
This article profiles South African author Dianne Case, whose works are herein recommended to American children to gain a sense of what life was and, in some respects, still is like for many people in that country. Themes surrounding apartheid that pervade Case's stories echo many of her own life experiences. Case asserts that although young…
Descriptors: Authors, Books, Childrens Literature, Racial Segregation
Morris, Gerald – Journal of Children's Literature, 2005
The author of this article, who writes a series of Arthurian books, states that Arthurian retellings for children often fall into one of two extreme categories: (1) they are prim, romantic, reverential tales with soft-focus illustrations and soft-headed heroes; or (2) they are overt spoofs of the literature, a la Mark Twain and Monty Python. He…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Childrens Literature, Authors, Personal Narratives

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