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  2. David Bleich (academic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bleich_(academic)

    David Bleich is an American literary theorist and academic. He is noted for developing the Bleich "heuristic", a reader-response approach to teaching literature. [1]He is also a proponent of reader-response criticism to literature, advocating subjective interpretations of literary texts.

  3. Reader-response criticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reader-response_criticism

    Since reader-response critics focus on the strategies readers are taught to use, they may address the teaching of reading and literature. Also, because reader-response criticism stresses the activity of the reader, reader-response critics may share the concerns of feminist critics, and critics of gender and queer theory and postcolonialism.

  4. Literature circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literature_circle

    Response logs, role sheets, and other process material that students have compiled over the course of the Literature Circle meetings can be also evaluated providing "a rich source of insight" (Daniels, 1994, p. 164) for the teacher to assess growth and progress of students.

  5. Reading comprehension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reading_comprehension

    It was the first method to convert a fundamental theory such as social learning into teaching methods through the use of cognitive modeling between teachers and students. [ 29 ] Since the turn of the 20th century, comprehension lessons usually consist of students answering teacher's questions or writing responses to questions of their own, or ...

  6. Louise Rosenblatt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Rosenblatt

    When Rosenblatt began teaching English Literature at Barnard, she developed an intense interest in each reader's unique response to a given text. Her views regarding literacy were influenced by John Dewey, [3] who was in the philosophy department at Columbia in the 1930s, as well as Charles Sanders Peirce and William James.

  7. Critical pedagogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_pedagogy

    Critical pedagogy advocates insist that teachers themselves are vital to the discussion about Standards-based education reform in the United States because a pedagogy that requires a student to learn or a teacher to teach externally imposed information exemplifies the banking model of education outlined by Freire where the structures of ...

  8. Norman N. Holland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_N._Holland

    Literature and the Brain explores the human experience of literature, explicating the processes by which the brain experiences the "willing suspension of disbelief," emotional response to characters, plot, form, and literary language, culminating in, perhaps, pleasure and evaluation. The book addresses the reading or viewing of poems, stories ...

  9. Didacticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Didacticism

    An example of didacticism in music is the chant Ut queant laxis, which was used by Guido of Arezzo to teach solfege syllables. Around the 19th century the term didactic came to also be used as a criticism for work that appears to be overburdened with instructive, factual, or otherwise educational information, to the detriment of the enjoyment ...