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Semetsky, Inna – International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 2011
The paper presents education as a process of human development toward becoming our authentic Selves and posits the Tarot hermeneutic as one of the means of holistic, spiritual education. As a system of images and symbols, Tarot encompasses the three I's represented by intuition, insight and imagination in contrast to the three R's of traditional…
Descriptors: Individual Development, Hermeneutics, Intuition, Imagination
Khatena, Joe – Gifted Education International, 1995
This article examines the state of knowledge on the creative process, especially mathematical-scientific, verbal, musical, and artistic imagery. A creative imagination imagery model is proposed which has three major dimensions: the environment, the individual (with both content and process components considered in terms of the Structure of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Imagery
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Mellou, Eleni – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1996
This paper views creativity as the combination of the conditions of interaction and transformation-imagination-fantasy. These conditions operate together, simultaneously, in order to define the complex process of creativity. (DB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Imagination
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Nichols, Shaun; Stich, Stephen – Cognition, 2000
Presents a theory of pretense in which pretense representations are contained in a separate mental workspace, a Possible World Box, part of the basic architecture of the human mind with several similarities to beliefs. Maintains that pretend play is motivated from a desire to act in a way that fits the description being constructed in the Possible…
Descriptors: Adults, Beliefs, Children, Cognitive Development
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Blake, Nigel – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2002
As an educational theorist, the author finds Dreyfus' reflections on education, on skill, competence and proficiency, on embodiment and on commitment and risk, to be of deep importance and deserving widespread debate. Moreover, as an educator whose teaching is done at a terminal and whose practice is inextricable from the Internet, the author…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Schools, Interaction, Distance Education
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Bormann, Ernest G.; Cragan, John F.; Shields, Donald C. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2003
Joshua Gunn calls for the creation of a new post-humanist, -Marxist, -Freudian approach to rhetorical criticism that would combine literary, critical, and psychoanalytic methods in a new "popular imaginary" paradigm. While urging acceptance of his new paradigm, Gunn advances three major criticisms of symbolic convergence theory (SCT): (1) SCT is…
Descriptors: Models, Rhetorical Criticism, Rhetorical Theory, Convergent Thinking
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Webster, Peter R. – Design for Arts in Education, 1988
Discusses several problems confronting education in the United States, argues that music educators are among the most guilty of avoiding and even discouraging creative thinking. Presents a model of creative thinking in music and examines the conditions of motivation and environment that are important for child development. (GEA)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Imagination
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Wheatley, Walter J.; And Others – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1991
This article presents a model to evaluate the imagination and creativity of strategic planners. Characteristics recommended for strategic planners include the cognitive styles of extroverted, intuitive, feeling, and perceptive; marginal personality orientation, which allows for an open-minded viewpoint with integrative skills; internal locus of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Creativity, Futures (of Society), Imagination
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Bell, Gordon H. – Journal of Moral Education, 1979
An analysis is proposed which reduces the concept of imagination to certain logically distinct forms and modes of imagining. This analysis is related to contemporary definitions of the educated person. Implications for moral education are presented together with an examination of philosophies which oppose development of children's imagination.…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Imagination
Furner, Beatrice A. – 1987
Focusing on the role of language in learning, this paper discusses schemata and symbolic thinking that help students learn from unfamiliar experiences. The first part of the paper introduces the idea of symbolic thinking by comparing students encountering new ideas with convention-goers making their way around a new city. The section suggests that…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Structures, Creative Thinking, Educational Theories
Egan, Kieran – 2001
Examining some of the cognitive tools accompanying development of oral language in young children--tools that are somewhat suppressed with literacy development--can lead to educational principles that transcend the traditional focus on either the knowledge base or the child's mind. Of particular importance are the use of stories to give affective…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cultural Influences, Early Childhood Education, Educational Planning
Novak, John M. – 1987
This paper argues that just as imagination has been important for the inception and promotion of invitational education, it is also necessary for the development of inviting research strategies. Applying the educative process to the study of inviting, recommendations are made for relating the constituent parts of the inviting stance (optimism,…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Creative Thinking, Discovery Processes, Educational Attitudes