10,704 research outputs found
Michael Rodriguez interviews author Tom Springer
Author Tom Springer is interviewed about his writing career and his newest book "Looking for hickories". Springer talks about his career following after earning an Environmental Journalism degree from Michigan State University. He calls his genre "creative non-fiction" and explains how he weaves his memories into his books about life in rural and wild Michigan. Part of the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Springer is interviewed by Librarian Michael Rodriguez
A Modification of the Idea of Implied Reader: With Some Examples from Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Mark Twain wrote The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) in the third person and he chose to write The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) in the first person. This seems to drive us to a comparative study of the two novels from the viewpoint of relationship between the author, the text and the reader. This will involve examining the "rhetoric of text" and the "rhetoric of discourse." Although a considerable number of studies on the stylistic features of the two novels have been made so far, most of them have been on the textual level and little seems to be observed on the discourse level. In the present article, as a step toward a comparative study of rhetoric of discourse we will make a stylistic approach to Tom Sawyer by modifying the idea of "implied reader." It is well known that "author and reader are not the only figures involved in the discourse situation" and an author assumes that with him his readers share a common fund of knowledge of the world. Such a reader is traditionally called an implied reader. In this paper we will extend the idea of implied reader a little further and try to make some possible interpretations of scenes in Tom Sawyer by focusing our attention on the rhetoric of discourse. In doing so, we may come to understand the reason why Mark Twain employed the first person narrator Huck in Tom Sawyer's companion volume Huckleberry Finn
Performing the archive: following in the footsteps
Using documentation of Mike Pearson's performance 'Bubbling Tom', Deirdre Heddon attempts to step into his shoes and re-perform it
Investigating organisational culture from the ‘outside’, and implications for investing
Dr Alex Gillespie and Dr Tom Reader consider how organizational culture can be researched from ‘outside’ an organization and what dimensions could be of particular interest for potential investment decisions
CRE Author Tom Franklin
Common Reading Experience author and UM creative writing instructor Tom Franklin talks about his novel, Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter. Video by Mary Stanton.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/umvideo/1334/thumbnail.jp
如何以任務導向與讀者反應教學法在ESL 課程教授兒童文學
[[abstract]]This study uses task-based and reader response approaches to examine how the instruction works to booster students’ motivation when teaching children’s literature in an ESL classroom. The subjects of the study were fifty non-English major sophomores. The focal materials were the novel The Polar Express: Trip to the North Pole, and the film adaption. Tasked-based and response-centered activities, including learning sheets, group discussion, and essay-question writing activities, were also adopted in the lesson. To begin with, students were divided into groups, with five members in each group. Each group was assigned one chapter and asked to prepare a vocabulary list and a summary. The students were assigned to watch the movie in the school’s media center and then produce feedback about it. They were encouraged to produce multiple interpretations to cultivate critical thinking skills and asked to participate in classroom discussions. Their responses and reflections were captured in the essay-question writing activities. Finally, these response journals were collected as the results of the study, enabling the teacher to better understand students’ interpretations of and reflections on The Polar Express: Trip to the North Pole, and also evaluate the feasibility of using a movie adaption alongside a novel and the important teaching strategies in the lesson designed to teach children’sliterature. This kind of response-centered learning of children’s literature thus fits in the category of a reader response approach, since they both emphasize the significance of a reader who can work with the author/text to generate meaning. The teacher may start with
the situation of readers and guide them into an understanding of the text through their own responses to it. This includes all initial responses to the title, to what the students believe is happening, to possibly naïve, or ignorant, or misguided responses. This is because the reader creates their own ‘poem’ (a term taken from Louise Rosenblatt) through their interaction with the text. The results of the study showed that, by encouraging students to generate multiple interpretations and reflections of children’s literature, it is not too difficult for them to develop their critical thinking skills when learning in English. The use of children’s literature as an alternative teaching material not only enhanced the learners’ language acquisition and cultivated their literacy competence, but also helped free their imaginations, leading to more positive effects and responses.[[abstract]]本研究以任務導向與讀者反應教學法,檢驗在ESL 課程中教授兒童文學是否能激發學生的學習動機。研究對象為50 位非英語主修的大二學生,教材為《北極特快車》的小說與電影,而其他的任務導向與讀者反應活動,包括學習單、小組討論以及論述題寫作活動也將在課程中呈現。首先,學生五人一組分為數個組別,每組分派一個章節且被要求準備該章節的單字表及摘要,學生們也被指派在家裡或在學校的視聽自學教室,先行觀賞以該小說改編的電影做為功課。此外,老師必須鼓勵學生對故事或影片做多元的詮釋,藉以培養他們的批判思考能力,進而要求他們在課堂討論時多發表意見。在這方面,論述題的寫作活動也能看出他們的反應與回饋。稍後這些論述寫作紙本將會被收集起來,作為本研究的結果,使教學老師得以更瞭解學生對《北極特快車》的小說與電影的詮釋和回饋,同時也能評估使用電影改編與其原著的可行性,以及在教授兒童文學時一些重要的教學策略。這種以任務導向學習兒童文學的方法十分契合讀者反應的範疇,因為兩者皆強調讀者能夠親自與作者及其文本接近而產生閱讀意義的重要性。本研究的老師們視個別學生讀者的情況為依據,經由他們自身對文本的回應,引導他們進入文本、瞭解文本。要做到如此,就必須包涵所有學生最初對書名或影片名稱的回應,以及他們認為在故事中發生了什麼事的回應,即便天真、無知或是被誤導了,老師也必須包容,這是因為經由他們和文本的互動,讀者創造了他們自己的『詩』(羅森佈雷特的術語)的結果。本研究結果顯示,藉由鼓勵學生對兒童文學產生多元的詮釋和回應,激發他們在學習英語時同時發展批判性思考能力,並不是件難事。在語言教學上應用兒童文學可以是另一項教材選擇,這樣的教材不僅強化學習者的語言習得,培養他們的讀寫能力,也能幫助他們釋放想像力,導向更積極的學習效果與回應
Measuring and improving safety culture in the aviation industry
Europe has approximately 40 air navigation service providers employing over 50,000 staff and coordinating up to 30,000 flights a day. Two mid-air collisions, Milan Linate in 2001 and Überlingen in 2002, revealed serious problems in the safety culture of these service providers. Tom Reader developed a methodology for systematically measuring safety culture in air traffic management, which has contributed to stronger European air safety
Using hospital complaints to improve patient safety
LSE colleagues from the Department of Social Psychology consider the untapped reserve of data that could be used to improve hospital patient safety: hospital complaints. Guest bloggers Dr Tom Reader and Dr Alex Gillespie explain how the analysis of this untapped data could inform future learning
Analysing and learning from healthcare complaints
Around one in 10 patients experience unintended harm in hospital, and 14 per cent of such incidents lead to permanent disability or death. Alex Gillespie and Tom Reader have developed a tool for systematically analysing patient complaints, helping healthcare organisations to reduce errors and improve outcomes
Peace photographies:A short introduction
Tom Allbeson is Reader in Media and Photographic History at the School of Journalism, Media and Culture (Cardiff University, UK) and co-editor of the Journal of War and Culture Studies. His research concerns media history and visual culture in contemporary Europe with specialisms in photojournalism and conflict, visual culture and reconstruction, collective memory in post-conflict societies, and urban history. He is the author of Photography, Reconstruction and the Cultural History of the Postwar European City (Routledge, 2020) and co-author of Conflicting Images: Histories of War Photography in the News (Routledge, 2024).Pippa Oldfield is Senior Lecturer in Photography at Teesside University, UK, and former Head of Programme at Impressions Gallery, Bradford. She is the author of Photography and War (2019) and has curated numerous exhibitions on the topic of conflict and its aftermath, including Bringing the War Home: Photographic Responses to Recent Conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan and No Man’s Land: Women’s Photographic Viewpoints on the First World War...
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