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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Alessandro Gelmi – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This article aims to delve into the theoretical perspective on imagination in education, focusing specifically on Imaginative Education theory. The approach involves a dual objective: critically analyzing the limitations and specific potentials of Imaginative Education to stimulate contemporary discourse on imagination in education and using it as…
Descriptors: Imagination, Creative Thinking, Interdisciplinary Approach, Psychology
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Charara, Jeanane; Miller, Emily Adah; Krajcik, Joseph – Journal of Leadership, Equity, and Research, 2021
Decades of research support integrating play in kindergarten to benefit young students' social, emotional, and cognitive development. As academic readiness becomes a focus, time for play has decreased. As a result, there has been a demand for integration of play with content. This study modifies a project-based science curriculum about how living…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Play, Kindergarten, Young Children
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Collins, Ashok; Clemens, Manuel – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The opposition between learning as a process of self-cultivation ("Bildung") and learning as a form of vocational training for the workplace ("Ausbildung") is becoming ever more deeply entrenched in the twenty-first-century university. In language education in particular, the distinction between these two competing aims…
Descriptors: Individual Development, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Vocational Education
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Wolbert, Lynne; Schinkel, Anders – Oxford Review of Education, 2021
Wonder-full education recognises experiences of wonder as lying at the heart of learning and education. If we accept the premise that wonder is important for/in education, what should characterise wonder-full education? This paper clarifies what it is like to wonder, how the aims of wonder-full education are best described, and it discusses three…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Motivation, Curriculum Design, Teacher Competencies
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Rogers, Kimberly B.; Nemeroff, Adam; Caputo, Kelly – Teaching Sociology, 2020
Scholars of teaching and learning in sociology have argued that introductory courses should teach toward foundational learning goals instead of providing an exhaustive review of the discipline. Nevertheless, prior research has provided far more guidance on what instructors ought to teach than how they can cohesively support learning across the…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Sociology, Student Educational Objectives, Private Colleges
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Hill, Michael – Teaching History, 2020
Mike Hill was concerned that his students were unable to genuinely inhabit the historical places they encountered in his lessons. Drawing on fields as varied as history-teacher research, philosophy, and literary and media theory, Hill identified ways to curate his students' constructions of 'secondary worlds' in the historical past, including…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Curriculum Design, European History
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Dietiker, Leslie – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2015
This paper proposes a theoretical framework for interpreting the content found in mathematics curriculum in order to offer teachers and other mathematics educators comprehensive conceptual tools with which to make curricular decisions. More specifically, it describes a metaphor of "mathematics curriculum as story" and defines and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Curriculum, Figurative Language, Story Telling
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Nisha, Bobby – Educational Psychology, 2019
Spatial design as a discipline relies on the psychological construct of space. In the light of shortcomings and challenges faced by traditional approaches to spatial design learning, this paper investigates the role and value of Virtual Reality (VR) as a pedagogic vehicle. Based on understandings informed by action-research using VR with learners…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Computer Simulation, Interdisciplinary Approach, Spatial Ability
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McKnight, Lucinda – Gender and Education, 2015
While the issue of boys' dominance of the curriculum has a long history, the article examines this phenomenon in a contemporary context, through an empirical study with female teachers designing English curriculum around girls' media in a coeducational secondary school in Victoria, Australia. In this space, teachers, and the researcher, produce…
Descriptors: Females, Women Faculty, Curriculum, Secondary Schools
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Aprea, Carmela; Sappa, Viviana – Journal of Social Science Education, 2014
The development of a sound understanding of financial and economic crises phenomena must be considered an important goal within the scope of citizenship, economic and social science education. As with every other educational endeavour, this intention requires solid information about what informal conceptions learners hold about this specific…
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Financial Exigency, Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries
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Trotman, Dave – Thinking Skills and Creativity, 2008
The national secondary review promises new possibilities for innovation in curriculum design and the learner experience in Key Stage Three. With its emphasis on flexible curriculum frameworks and active pupil learning, this may create new avenues for the promotion of a frequently neglected area of the secondary pupil experience--the creative…
Descriptors: Imagination, Curriculum Design, Foreign Countries, Students
Clarkson, Austin – Online Submission, 2005
The description of the curriculum of a university course designed to engage the deep structure of the creative process. First presented in 1984, the course has been given to fine arts majors and candidates for the B.Ed. and M.Ed. degrees. The curriculum is summarized in twelve concepts and then described under the topics "Primordial Images,"…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Imagination, Undergraduate Students, Curriculum Design
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Eisner, Elliot W. – Language Arts, 2003
Argues that the absence of the arts in testing programs contributes to their marginalization. Considers the role of imaginative potential in determining what is important in schools. Considers what the arts have to do with literacy, that is, with the standard conceptions of reading and writing. Discusses transforming brains to minds, the arts as…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Elementary Education, Fine Arts, Imagination
van Zundert, Danielle – Francais dans le Monde, 1986
Describes an experiment in teaching language to young children through nature study. Activities are outlined, including the linguistic, cognitive, and cultural objectives for each. Brief illustrated descriptions are also given. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies, Elementary Education
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Huffman, Amy Bruno – Young Children, 1996
Describes an early childhood educator's approach to teaching children about rain, rainbows, clouds, precipitation, the sun, air, and wind. Recommends ways to organize study topics and describes experiments that can help children better understand the different elements of weather. (MOK)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Early Childhood Education, Imagination, Learning Activities
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