This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people's engagement with poetry in a group of schools in London, UK. It does so with reference to the secondary Discourses of school-based learning and the Spoken Word community, an artistic 'community of practice' into which they were being inducted. It focuses on what happened when secondary students, already enculturated into school Discourses about learning (in their English lessons especially), learned about new ways of being readers, writers, listeners, and performers through the SWEP Discourse. The paper draws on qualitative data collected during the first three years of programme development to consider how an introduction to the social pra...
How to create the place of teaching poetry writing is an essential matter for children to explore th...
This article offers a case study account of a garden-themed poetry writing project run by a creative...
This paper explores what happened in the English classroom when two innovative projects merged and s...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
Drawing upon research undertaken for a project that explored the cultural value of poetry in lifelon...
I began this research by identifying that poetry was sometimes a challenging subject for primary sc...
This account of an action research project describes how children in two schools became inspired to ...
Poetry, once seen as the only form of creativity, is a valuable part of the English lesson, yet the...
Poetry plays an important role in the subject of English in secondary schools. Not only does poetry ...
The purpose of this article is clarifying what do the researchers think about the teaching writing p...
This paper explores the poetry writing of 15, multilingual ninth graders to construct a practitioner...
Although this qualitative group case study of a youth poetry team competing in a statewide Poetry Sl...
This article discusses a small scale project investigating the role of writing poetry in order to st...
Evidence suggests (Ofsted, 2007) that the role of the Subject Leader is crucial in how well poetry i...
Pressured into learning by rote, learners appear to fail to benefit on the joys and delights of lite...
How to create the place of teaching poetry writing is an essential matter for children to explore th...
This article offers a case study account of a garden-themed poetry writing project run by a creative...
This paper explores what happened in the English classroom when two innovative projects merged and s...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
Drawing upon research undertaken for a project that explored the cultural value of poetry in lifelon...
I began this research by identifying that poetry was sometimes a challenging subject for primary sc...
This account of an action research project describes how children in two schools became inspired to ...
Poetry, once seen as the only form of creativity, is a valuable part of the English lesson, yet the...
Poetry plays an important role in the subject of English in secondary schools. Not only does poetry ...
The purpose of this article is clarifying what do the researchers think about the teaching writing p...
This paper explores the poetry writing of 15, multilingual ninth graders to construct a practitioner...
Although this qualitative group case study of a youth poetry team competing in a statewide Poetry Sl...
This article discusses a small scale project investigating the role of writing poetry in order to st...
Evidence suggests (Ofsted, 2007) that the role of the Subject Leader is crucial in how well poetry i...
Pressured into learning by rote, learners appear to fail to benefit on the joys and delights of lite...
How to create the place of teaching poetry writing is an essential matter for children to explore th...
This article offers a case study account of a garden-themed poetry writing project run by a creative...
This paper explores what happened in the English classroom when two innovative projects merged and s...