The thesis responds to the question 'How do children respond to poetry they hear from recordings, and what are the implications for teaching?' It makes a case for the educational value of listening to poetry in primary and secondary classrooms, traCing the erratic treatment of heard poetry in the curriculum over the last century through to present frameworks. Through a method of Conversation Analysis, transcripts derived from audio-visual footage of classroom responses to heard poems are considered. These yield insights as to how pupils respond to poems they hear and how they share their responses in group discussion. On the basis of such analysis, the thesis argues that pupils respond to heard poems in ways not adequately acknowledged by p...
If children are to be heard in research and pedagogy, we need to find ways to listen to them. But ho...
In this paper, we propose embodied listening as pedagogical praxis in which we are receptive to how ...
When we construct our knowledge in educational settings we usually listen to many different voices, ...
In the lived day-to-day of literature classrooms and poetry seminars, the line between literal and f...
Evidence suggests (Ofsted, 2007) that the role of the Subject Leader is crucial in how well poetry i...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
This paper contends that the current English curriculum does not adequately acknowledge the potentia...
THESIS 9538Over the past twenty years of teaching poetry at second level and working with second lev...
I began this research by identifying that poetry was sometimes a challenging subject for primary sc...
Making Poetry Happen provides a valuable resource for trainee and practicing teachers, enabling them...
Master of EducationRecent research suggests that students are, without being directed by a teacher, ...
Poetry stands out among literary genres as a rich resource for language teaching and learning (Danes...
This account of an action research project describes how children in two schools became inspired to ...
Considering the current contemporary focus on the child’s voice within the 2020 consultation process...
The masters's thesis discusses interpretative poetry reading in English classroom. Children and teen...
If children are to be heard in research and pedagogy, we need to find ways to listen to them. But ho...
In this paper, we propose embodied listening as pedagogical praxis in which we are receptive to how ...
When we construct our knowledge in educational settings we usually listen to many different voices, ...
In the lived day-to-day of literature classrooms and poetry seminars, the line between literal and f...
Evidence suggests (Ofsted, 2007) that the role of the Subject Leader is crucial in how well poetry i...
This paper explores the impact of a Spoken Word Education Programme (SWEP hereafter) on young people...
This paper contends that the current English curriculum does not adequately acknowledge the potentia...
THESIS 9538Over the past twenty years of teaching poetry at second level and working with second lev...
I began this research by identifying that poetry was sometimes a challenging subject for primary sc...
Making Poetry Happen provides a valuable resource for trainee and practicing teachers, enabling them...
Master of EducationRecent research suggests that students are, without being directed by a teacher, ...
Poetry stands out among literary genres as a rich resource for language teaching and learning (Danes...
This account of an action research project describes how children in two schools became inspired to ...
Considering the current contemporary focus on the child’s voice within the 2020 consultation process...
The masters's thesis discusses interpretative poetry reading in English classroom. Children and teen...
If children are to be heard in research and pedagogy, we need to find ways to listen to them. But ho...
In this paper, we propose embodied listening as pedagogical praxis in which we are receptive to how ...
When we construct our knowledge in educational settings we usually listen to many different voices, ...