Teaching Shakespeare at secondary or undergraduate university levels is remarkably variegated. Students bring their lives and experiences to their understanding, making it an unpredictably rich experience, regardless of the “level” of the class. I aim to tap into what they already know to enable them to find a path for them to forge their own connections. I want them to own what they read, to make it their own
William Shakespeare’s language has always been thought of as extremely challenging to understand, es...
This essay historicizes the Shakespeare curriculum at UC Berkeley’s English department over the last...
This chapter discusses how, when students follow the online discussion practices of Sheridan Blau\u2...
Teaching Shakespeare at secondary or undergraduate university levels is remarkably variegated. Stude...
Contemporary high school English students find Shakespeare distant because they believe Shakespeare ...
In How and Why We Teach Shakespeare, 19 distinguished college teachers and directors draw from their...
There are hundreds of How-to-Teach-Shakespeare books flooding the market, and more tomes pile up ann...
All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players. This line of William Shakespeare’...
Guest editor Delilah Bermudez Brataas' introduction to the special issue on Shakespeare in/and Educa...
This contemplative anthology offers personal essays by noted scholars on a range of topics related t...
This thesis explores the reasons teachers teach Shakespeare, especially his plays, in Secondary Engl...
This project addresses the teaching of the works of William Shakespeare in Iowa\u27s secondary schoo...
Shakespeare’s artistic communication within the speeches of his plays has the potential to augment s...
I’ve just finished teaching an undergraduate Shakespeare class at Baruch College—CUNY to a class of ...
This dissertation seeks to explore the approaches used by teachers of English in upper secondary sch...
William Shakespeare’s language has always been thought of as extremely challenging to understand, es...
This essay historicizes the Shakespeare curriculum at UC Berkeley’s English department over the last...
This chapter discusses how, when students follow the online discussion practices of Sheridan Blau\u2...
Teaching Shakespeare at secondary or undergraduate university levels is remarkably variegated. Stude...
Contemporary high school English students find Shakespeare distant because they believe Shakespeare ...
In How and Why We Teach Shakespeare, 19 distinguished college teachers and directors draw from their...
There are hundreds of How-to-Teach-Shakespeare books flooding the market, and more tomes pile up ann...
All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players. This line of William Shakespeare’...
Guest editor Delilah Bermudez Brataas' introduction to the special issue on Shakespeare in/and Educa...
This contemplative anthology offers personal essays by noted scholars on a range of topics related t...
This thesis explores the reasons teachers teach Shakespeare, especially his plays, in Secondary Engl...
This project addresses the teaching of the works of William Shakespeare in Iowa\u27s secondary schoo...
Shakespeare’s artistic communication within the speeches of his plays has the potential to augment s...
I’ve just finished teaching an undergraduate Shakespeare class at Baruch College—CUNY to a class of ...
This dissertation seeks to explore the approaches used by teachers of English in upper secondary sch...
William Shakespeare’s language has always been thought of as extremely challenging to understand, es...
This essay historicizes the Shakespeare curriculum at UC Berkeley’s English department over the last...
This chapter discusses how, when students follow the online discussion practices of Sheridan Blau\u2...