Jonathan Todres, a law professor at Georgia State University, is the co-author of the forthcoming “Human Rights in Children’s Literature: The Narrative of Law." Updated May 4, 2015, 12:35 PM Politics, ...
Author Joseph L. Badaracco Jr. thinks that future business leaders can learn something from literature's classics. In his book, Questions of Character: Illuminating the Heart of Leadership Through ...
You can read self-help books or call in and ask Dear Sugar about your relationship woes, or you can dig into some literary classics to get your head straight about romance this Valentine’s Day. There ...
Young adult literature is fun. Sure, novels aimed at adults can be really wonderful too, but there is something particularly magical about YA. Books aimed at teens tend to grapple with themes of first ...
Following the release of new movie “Interstellar,” Paramount Pictures has teamed up with Google Play for Education to create a set of free lesson plans based on the film. The movie, directed by ...
With the Nobel prizes celebrating their centenary this year, the science awards have received a lot of attention. But on the eve of next week's presentation ceremony, perhaps it is time to look at the ...
There is a prevailing notion that children’s literature must have moral lessons. But children’s literature doesn’t always have to be based on morality or have moral lessons. This was the submission of ...
Romeo and Juliet are two impulsive teenagers who meet at a party on a Sunday, get married on Monday, and are both dead by Wednesday, along with a bunch of other people. Sex Lesson: Thirteen—the age ...
VietNamNet Bridge – Students find literature a boring subject, while teachers feel tired of teaching because there is no room for their creativeness. VietNamNet Bridge – Students find literature a ...
Why do we read novels? To a Victorian, the answer might have been obvious: for entertainment and moral instruction. That standard is lampooned by Oscar Wilde in "The Importance of Being Earnest" with ...
But across the ocean, Harvard business graduates are getting a dose of literary medicine to go with their statistics and accounting lectures. A recent article in the Harvard Gazette highlights a ...