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Skoda, Richard J. – Councilor, 1995
Maintains that historians, education professors, and education critics have called for a return to a history-centered social studies curriculum. Asserts that the use of biographies and autobiographies will reinvigorate the atmosphere of the history classroom. Includes a 22-item nonannotated bibliography of teacher resources on the topic. (CFR)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Biographies, Childrens Literature, Content Area Reading
Winks, Robin W. – Humanities, 1995
Discusses the historical validity of "The Hitler Diaries" and other historical forgeries. Maintains that forgeries and other hoaxes will continue to be part of human history. Questions why many people seem to need "historical revelations." (CFR)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Credibility, Cultural Traits, Deception
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Hartung, Beth – Teaching Sociology, 1991
Tries to make explicit race/class/gender connections in an undergraduate seminar on stratification. Students learn about models of social class and mobility and ideas of inequality. Attempts to balance the syllabus by including material about different groups and a representative group of scholars. Describes classroom discussions and experiences.…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Roth, Wolff-Michael; Lee, Stuart – Research in Science Education, 2000
Describes science educators trying to effect systemic change as actors in a cultural field struggling to change it. Uses a conversational hermeneutic analysis of autobiographical writings to examine some of the salient features of bringing about change in science education. (Contains 35 references.) (Author/WRM)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Educational Change, Epistemology, Graduate Students
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Gebhard, Susan – Journal of Teacher Education, 2006
Using published research studies, writings of experts in the literacy field, and anecdotes from the author's own experiences, this article examines the reading motivation and disposition of preservice teachers and suggests ways that children's literature courses positively affect both. Ideas of social modeling, constructivist course design, and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Males, Females, Reading Motivation
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Gordy, Laurie L.; Peary, Alexandria – Teaching Sociology, 2005
The reading and writing of creative writing have the potential to bring sociology to life in a dramatic way. Literature has been used in sociology in one of two ways: to provide sociological evidence and as an object of analysis--a social institution to be studied in its own right. Previous scholarship has proven that the use of literature in…
Descriptors: Imagination, Creative Writing, Autobiographies, Sociology
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Crippen, Carolyn L. – Journal of Women in Educational Leadership, 2004
Leadership was characterized as patriarchal and hierarchical during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Pioneer women were often not credited with leadership qualities although many, including school teachers, journalists, suffragettes, healthcare workers, and social activists played an important role in the development of Manitoba communities.…
Descriptors: Females, Leadership Qualities, Autobiographies, Foreign Countries
McCrary, Donald – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2005
The article explores the use of hybrid linguistic texts in the writing classroom, both as articles of study and possible models of composition. Standard English linguistic supremacy prevents many students from using their full range of linguistic knowledge. The inclusion of hybrid texts in the writing classroom might help students, in particular…
Descriptors: North American English, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Student Reaction
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Hilton, Louis R., III – American Educational History Journal, 2004
In using the autobiographies of African-Americans as a heuristic, educators are provided with a context to view African-American educational history. The autobiographies of African-Americans tell stories of triumph over adversity as also revealed in Melba Beals' autobiography, "Warriors Don't Cry," a recount of the struggle to integrate…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, African Americans, Heuristics, Context Effect
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Monroe, Jacquelyn – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2006
Social work, like other disciplines, has long used case studies as a (1) methodological approach to communicating a body of knowledge, and (2) as a tangible means to acquaint students with archetypical applications of realistic conditions. In social work, one required course sequence enhanced by case study assessments is Human Behavior and the…
Descriptors: Social Work, Case Studies, Behavior, Autobiographies
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Low, Denise – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2006
This author, a teacher of American Indian and Alaskan Native literature at an all-native school, contends that suppression of Indigenous literary texts is an aspect of colonization, and that reclamation of Indigenous American literature is a critical component of cultural sovereignty. In her classes, she emphasizes the hybrid nature of…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, American Indian Culture, Alaska Natives, American Indians
Marinara, Martha – 1995
Using Ariadne's thread in the narrative of the labyrinth as a metaphor for the elusiveness of language, this paper explores the concept of "self" to prepare for the discussion of autobiography as a "tool" for teaching writing, and to create a connection between a politically enabled self, a private self, and critical theory.…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement
Freire, Paulo – 1996
This book offers Paulo Freire's retrospection on his life and work. These reflections, conceived in the form of 18 letters to his niece, Cristina, provide a backdrop for a deeper understanding of the experiences--including his exile---that have informed his thinking and teaching. The first 10 letters look back on Freire's childhood and youth. The…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Education, Adult Educators, Adult Literacy
Bean, Thomas W. – 1993
A study explored preservice teachers' attitudes toward reading through detailed case study analysis of their reading autobiographies. Subjects, 45 students in a required content area reading class in Hawaii, completed a reading autobiography assignment in which they considered their reading experiences from their earliest memory of being read to…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Case Studies, Constructivism (Learning), Content Area Reading
Butler, Sydney J.; Bentley, T. Roy – 1990
Lifewriting is a form of autobiographical composition in which the non-expert, or even the beginning writer, tries to capture on paper the raw experiences of a lifetime. The intersections between family history and social or political events provide one set of starting points for the lifewriter who sets out on the neverending journey to capture a…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Foreign Countries, Interpersonal Communication, Lifelong Learning
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