This article draws on research into using reader-response theory as a way of thinking about teaching grammar and poetry in the English classroom. Framing my discussion around world-based models of reader-response such as Transactional Theory (Rosenblatt 1938, 1978) and Text World Theory (Gavins 2007; Werth 1999), I argue that this approach is useful in that it foregrounds the creative nature of reading whilst providing a systematic way of analysing language. I analyse data from a series of Key Stage 3 poetry lessons, showing how world-based approaches provide a “concept-driven pedagogical tool” for the teaching of grammar, giving KS3 students the opportunity to build and develop on KS2 grammatical knowledge. I also show how this approach he...
Is there space for greater affective engagement with poetry in the English Literature university cla...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
By demonstrating lexical and grammatical analysis – the rough work that underpins critical discourse...
This article draws on research into using reader-response theory as a way of thinking about teaching...
This article explores the complex nature of the literature classroom by drawing on the cognitive lin...
This article explores the complex nature of the literature classroom by drawing on the cognitive lin...
There are various ways in which readers respond to literature. This article discusses how readers (...
Literature and reality have been said to be closely intertwined; more often than not, the literature...
I began this research by identifying that poetry was sometimes a challenging subject for primary sc...
Poetry reading is challenging for EFL students, but offers great rewards both in terms of language i...
In UK schools, there remains a compartmentalisation of English into ‘language’ and ‘literature’, evi...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...
In my previous school, Key Stage 3 (KS3) pupils (ages 11–14) became increasingly tentative in their ...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...
This paper explores the poetry writing of 15, multilingual ninth graders to construct a practitioner...
Is there space for greater affective engagement with poetry in the English Literature university cla...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
By demonstrating lexical and grammatical analysis – the rough work that underpins critical discourse...
This article draws on research into using reader-response theory as a way of thinking about teaching...
This article explores the complex nature of the literature classroom by drawing on the cognitive lin...
This article explores the complex nature of the literature classroom by drawing on the cognitive lin...
There are various ways in which readers respond to literature. This article discusses how readers (...
Literature and reality have been said to be closely intertwined; more often than not, the literature...
I began this research by identifying that poetry was sometimes a challenging subject for primary sc...
Poetry reading is challenging for EFL students, but offers great rewards both in terms of language i...
In UK schools, there remains a compartmentalisation of English into ‘language’ and ‘literature’, evi...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...
In my previous school, Key Stage 3 (KS3) pupils (ages 11–14) became increasingly tentative in their ...
This article explores reading in the English classroom through a cognitive linguistic lens. In parti...
This paper explores the poetry writing of 15, multilingual ninth graders to construct a practitioner...
Is there space for greater affective engagement with poetry in the English Literature university cla...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
By demonstrating lexical and grammatical analysis – the rough work that underpins critical discourse...