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Showing 1,246 to 1,260 of 2,307 results Save | Export
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Danielewicz, Jane – College Composition and Communication, 2008
Writing in personal genres, like autobiography, leads writers to public voices. Public voice is a discursive quality of a text that conveys the writer's authority and position relative to others. To show how voice and authority depend on genre, I analyze the autobiographies of two writers who take opposing positions on the same topic. By producing…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Writing (Composition), Personal Narratives, Authors
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Brookfield, Stephen – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2008
Nelson Mandela's autobiography "The Long Walk to Freedom" describes how an iconic political activist and freedom fighter reflected on, and sometimes modified, four core assumptions at the heart of his struggle to overturn the White supremacist, minority hegemony and create a free South Africa. Critical reflection's focus is on…
Descriptors: Freedom, Autobiographies, Foreign Countries, Content Analysis
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Goldman, Sylvie – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2008
Narrative analysis of personal events provides an opportunity for identifying autism specific issues related to language and social impairments. Eight personal events were elicited from three groups of schoolage children: 14 high-functioning with Autism Spectrum Disorders (HFA), 12 non-autistic with developmental language disorders (DLD), and 12…
Descriptors: Age, Autism, Language Impairments, Personal Narratives
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Ashby, Christine E.; Causton-Theoharis, Julie N. – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2009
Much can be learned about the experience of autism by listening to the voices of individuals so labelled. They describe their understanding of competence, living in a culture where autism is considered deviant, deficient and outside the range of 'normal' human experience. This paper utilises autobiographical accounts written by individuals who…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Autism, Autobiographies, Teaching Methods
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Wissman, Kelly – English Journal, 2009
When Don Imus made his infamous comments about the Rutgers University women's basketball team in 2007, he provoked widespread (yet short-lived) attention to the circulation of language practices demeaning to women of color. In an elective autobiographical writing course that the author designed with and for urban high school girls, the students…
Descriptors: Females, Poetry, Urban Schools, Authors
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Bernhardt, Philip – High School Journal, 2009
Incorporating autobiography into the classroom has the potential to facilitate reflective and interpretative practices, through which self-understanding and transformative learning may emerge. Bridging theory, practice, and the personal, this paper explores how autobiographical narratives were incorporated into a 9th grade social studies class to…
Descriptors: Grade 9, Social Studies, Autobiographies, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
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Leggo, Carl – International Journal of Whole Schooling, 2007
In school classrooms, teachers are always asking their students to tell stories about their lives in the contexts of family and neighbourhood. But what are the conventions and expectations that govern the stories that are told and written in classrooms? In what ways are students encouraged and constrained in writing the stories of their lives? Why…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Intention, Classrooms, Story Telling
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Phipps, Alison – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2007
This article presents an interview with Professor Boaventura de Sousa Santos. Santos is a professor of Sociology at the University of Coimbra, where he is the director of the internationally renowned Centro de Estudos Sociais. He offers a rich vein of theoretical reflection and translation for language(s) and intercultural communication.
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Activism, Foreign Countries, Intercultural Communication
Robinson-Cseke, Maria – Canadian Review of Art Education: Research and Issues, 2007
The author's autobiographical poem [inspired by George Ella Lyon (1999)], marked the beginning of an arts-based inquiry into a question of identity that took further shape through a video-artwork, "The Evolution of an Art Teacher: Where I'm From." Arts-based research is a methodology that uses a myriad of forms and combinations of creative arts…
Descriptors: Poetry, Art, Research, Self Concept
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Adams, Rebecca V. L.; Rabkin, Eric S. – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
While "Where the Wild Things Are" may be Maurice Sendak's most popular book, "In the Night Kitchen" is arguably the greater work. Though his journey in "Wild Things" shares many of the elements of Mickey's adventure in "Night Kitchen"--swinging between the protagonist's initiatory verbal assertions and silent, completely pictorial spreads that…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Sleep, Individual Development
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Richardson, Jonathan L. – American Biology Teacher, 2007
This autobiographical essay by a retired biology professor reminds teachers and students that pursuing a demanding career specialty--even a very satisfying one--need not stifle detours into byways of speculative curiosity where one can be "surprised by joy."
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Essays, Career Choice, Career Exploration
Dukes, Melanie Anne Dillett – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The past and present provide an important reference to understanding the circumstances and cultural differences that assist in the development of our methods of interaction. Therefore, the purpose of the study was to provide a process of personal self-reflection of experiences by which administrators, school officials, staff, and faculty can…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Fathers, Self Concept, Parent Influence
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Olson, Kate – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2009
This article examines the implications of educational policies on teachers' beliefs and practices for English learners (ELs) in the context of the California educational reform agenda. By utilizing cultural-historical activity theory, this study paints a personal and pedagogical portrait of how 2 educated and experienced bilingual teachers…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Educational Change, Autobiographies, Bilingual Teachers
Brown, Ruth Nicole, Ed.; Kwakye, Chamara Jewel, Ed. – Peter Lang New York, 2012
"Wish To Live: The Hip-hop Feminism Pedagogy Reader" moves beyond the traditional understanding of the four elements of hip-hop culture--rapping, breakdancing, graffiti art, and deejaying--to articulate how hip-hop feminist scholarship can inform educational practices and spark, transform, encourage, and sustain local and global youth…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Freedom, Intimacy, Autobiographies
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Murrow, Sonia E. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2008
In this article, I portray undergraduate education students at an urban, inclusive university participating in the process of defining their emerging philosophies of education. Excerpts from student writing demonstrate that, in a course organized around key essential questions, double-entry journals, and students' consideration of their…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Undergraduate Study, Educational Change, Autobiographies
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