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Reid, Mark – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2005
This paper is an exploration of the ways in which the concept of montage (a principle of film editing developed first by a group of Russian film makers in the 1920s) might be mobilised in support of the teaching of English, in particular the teaching of poetry. I will argue that montage can be used as the basis of a different kind of pedagogy in…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Films, Poetry, Teaching Methods
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Furey, Paula C. – American Biology Teacher, 2003
In this article, the author presents a poem on the distribution and adaptation of blue-green algae (Cyanobacteria). The poem describes some of the diverse habitats of cyanobacteria including examples from extreme and unique environments such as hot springs, and polar bear hair. The poem also describes some of the adaptations of cyanobacteria…
Descriptors: College Science, Teaching Methods, Creative Teaching, Poetry
Vita, Tricia – Teacher Magazine, 2004
Traveling classrooms for carnival kids didn't really come on the scene until the 1990s when Linda Brewer, a teacher of the Conklin International Academy, helped the idea get off the ground. The trade publication "Amusement Business" lists 325 carnivals in its annual booking guide, but fewer than a dozen shows have schools because it is expensive…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Itinerant Teachers, Creative Teaching, Educational Games
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Smierciak, Rich – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2004
A wonderful way to engage science students is to make them think a demonstration is not turning out the way the instructor intended. Basically, throw a little humor into teaching, and they will be hooked. Described in this article is a demonstration that uses Milk of Magnesia (MOM) as a visual and humorous method to review equilibrium chemistry…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Humor, Scientific Concepts
Sirc, Geoffrey; Sutton, Terri – Center for Urban and Regional Affairs, University of Minnesota, 2009
In June 2008, the Department of English at the University of Minnesota partnered with the Minnesota Spoken Word Association to inaugurate an outreach literacy program for local high-school students and teachers. The four-day institute, named "In Da Tradition," used spoken word and hip hop to teach academic and creative writing to core-city…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Teacher Surveys, Classrooms, Literacy
Olorunda, Olufunmilola Olufunmilayo – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The Center for Information and Communication Sciences graduate program commenced at Ball State University in 1986 with a specific focus to train graduate students to be leaders in the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) industry. The Center is the manifestation of a vision birthed out of creativity and resourcefulness. This study…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Graduate Students, Computer Science Education, Information Technology
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Bussert-Webb, Kathy – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2009
This article focuses on how 47 Latinos/as (Grades 2-5) described their day in a state-rated exemplary public school. They attended Tarea, a pseudonym for a test-focused South Texas school. Interviews took place during an after-school cultural arts program I taught at Tarea for enrichment purposes. The most common interview themes were lack of…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Art Activities, Educational Change, Hispanic American Students
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Beckstead, Larissa – Science and Children, 2008
The typical use of science notebooks is for students to record information as they complete an investigation, writing down their procedure, observations, data, results, graphs, and any other factual information pertaining to their experiment. The author did the same, but also incorporated specific writing assignments to prepare students to publish…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing for Publication, Investigations, Science Instruction
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Murrant, Coral L. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2007
We were recently challenged with trying to maintain the integrity and learning experience of our Physiology course, which included the use of long-answer, essay-style test questions, with a class size that increased over 2 yr by approximately 200 students. We reorganized the teaching assistant (TA) support structure in an attempt to keep the…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Teaching Assistants, Time Management, Integrity
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Hillyard, Cinnamon – PRIMUS, 2007
Popular culture provides many opportunities to develop quantitative reasoning. This article describes a junior-level, interdisciplinary, quantitative reasoning course that uses examples from movies, cartoons, television, magazine advertisements, and children's literature. Some benefits from and cautions to using popular culture to teach…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Popular Culture, Cartoons, Mathematical Logic
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Fraboni, Michael; Hartshorn, Kevin – PRIMUS, 2007
In the typical first-year mathematics course--whether it be calculus or a general education quantitative proficiency course--we struggle to help students see the relevance of mathematics to their own lives. Particularly in a focused course such as calculus, there is a danger that students see mathematics as an isolated subject, with applications…
Descriptors: Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Relevance (Education), College Mathematics
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Watts, Rowena – Literacy, 2007
This paper explores one way that teachers can develop creativity within potentially limiting confines and pressures of curriculum guidelines. The researcher considers the inclusion of film as a creative, engaging and effective strategy for teaching reading using data from a small-scale research project. Hypotheses are based on analysis of…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Nonprint Media, Guidelines, Teaching Styles
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Weitkamp, Emma; Burnet, Frank – International Journal of Science Education, 2007
"The Chemedian and the Crazy Football Match" is a comic strip developed by the authors to bring humor to aspects of the UK primary science curriculum. The comic strip was tested in six English primary school classes (years 3-5; ages 7-10); over 150 children participated in the project, together with six teachers. Children found the comic…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Science Curriculum, Humor, Foreign Countries
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Matthews, Lyn – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2007
Children's learning involves, in the simplest terms, assimilating knowledge and understanding and acquiring skills though being, doing and feeling. This requires a connection at a personal level. Furthermore, learning is given to fluctuation determined by the needs of the individual and the requirements of the educational system. This research…
Descriptors: Student Adjustment, Visual Arts, Art Activities, Transitional Programs
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Button, Stuart – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2006
This article presents an example of a project designed to get children of different ages working together and working for each other. The project relied quite heavily on children creating a dramatic context and the author shows how the dramatic element has the potential to affect their learning in positive ways. The provision of a shared…
Descriptors: Drama, Dramatic Play, Dramatic Arts, Theater Arts
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