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Showing 31 to 45 of 428 results Save | Export
Dubin, Elizabeth; Prins, Esther – Journal of Adult and Continuing Education, 2011
Paulo Freire, a radical Brazilian educator, developed a libratory pedagogy that contributes to an important discussion on the imagination, though this aspect of his work is not emphasized in critical pedagogy and adult education literature. Theorizing a Freirean imagination as a productive educational faculty connects with the work of philosophers…
Descriptors: Instruction, Imagination, Critical Theory, Adult Education
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Hurley, J. Casey – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2011
In this article, the author states that it is widely thought that understanding, imagination, strong character, courage, humility, and generosity are the six virtues of the educated person. He stresses that today's schools are driven by a definition that says educated people are those who score high on standardized tests. This definition is…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Academic Achievement, Public Education, Public Schools
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Thaxton, Terry Ann – Teaching Artist Journal, 2011
In this article, the author takes a multidimensional and personal look at creative writing work in an assisted living facility. The people she works with at the facility have memory loss. She shares her experience working with these people and describes a storytelling workshop that was modeled after Timeslips, a program started by Anne Basting at…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Dementia, Story Telling, Imagination
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Shuffelton, Amy B. – Educational Theory, 2012
In this essay Amy Shuffelton considers Jean-Jacques Rousseau's suspicion of imagination, which is, paradoxically, offered in the context of an imaginative construction of a child's upbringing. First, Shuffelton articulates Rousseau's reasons for opposing children's development of imagination and their engagement in the sort of imaginative play…
Descriptors: Imagination, Social Science Research, Play, Children
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Fontaine, Haroldo Abraam – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2010
Questions regarding the proper role of the arts in education have occupied many thinkers throughout the ages, no less than the likes of Plato and Rousseau. Like them, several have argued that paintings, for example, are mere re-presentations of and certainly not, to borrow a term from Kant, the "thing-in-itself." From a Platonic and Rousseauian…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Films, Imagination, Ethics
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Lewis, Richard – New Educator, 2012
This essay employs the images and voices of children to describe how their learning about the world is supported as they engage in experiences that invoke creativity and imagination. The author states his belief that this "imagining," this giving body and substance to the nature of "imagination" is one of the foundations of knowing, a means of…
Descriptors: Young Children, Self Concept, Imagination, Elementary School Students
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Ryan, Mary – Studies in Continuing Education, 2012
The importance of reflection in higher education, and across disciplinary fields is widely recognised. It is generally embedded in university graduate attributes, professional standards and course objectives. Furthermore, reflection is commonly included in assessment requirements in higher education subjects, often without necessary scaffolding or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Reflection, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Porto, Melina – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2013
This article reports an interview with Michael Byram, Professor Emeritus, University of Durham in the United Kingdom, during his visit to Argentina in September 2011. Michael Byram is one of the main international referents in intercultural education. The interview addresses issues such as language education, intercultural and citizenship…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Interviews, Guidelines, Multicultural Education
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Notar, Charles E.; Padgett, Sharon – College Student Journal, 2010
It is the authors' contention that there is no such thing as "thinking outside the box." However, the term has become an iconic phrase for a generation. The discussion presents the authors' thoughts on why there is no box in which to think outside. If there is a box, then accidental learning would never exist for students.
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Imagination, Creativity, Innovation
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Honeycutt, James M. – American Psychologist, 2010
Social scientists have been studying imagined interactions since the mid-1980s and have measured numerous physiological correlates (Honeycutt, 2010). In this commentary I assess the research reported in Crisp and Turner (May-June 2009) and highlight the underlying mechanisms of imagined interactions that have empirically been laid out across…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Scientists, Factor Analysis, Imagination
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Bigler, Rebecca S.; Hughes, Julie Milligan – American Psychologist, 2010
This article presents the authors' comments on Crisp and Turner (May-June 2009), who argued that imagining intergroup interactions reduces intergroup prejudice. They argued that the procedure is remarkably effective, with "significant potential application for policymakers and educators seeking to promote tolerance for social diversity" (p.…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Group Discussion, Imagination, Attitudes
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Halpin, David – Oxford Review of Education, 2009
Over one half of Darren Webb's article on the concept of utopia in contemporary educational theory (Webb, 2009) reviews critically the "utopian realist" approach the author has advocated in various publications about education over the past nine years. The conception of utopianism to which the author subscribes also stresses the role of patient…
Descriptors: Democracy, Educational Change, Authoritarianism, Imagination
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Searle, Chris – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2009
This article stresses the quality of universality within young people's poetry. The writer uses the poetry mainly written by children of Pakistani origin living in Pitsmoor and Fir Vale in north-east Sheffield, Yorkshire, England, as a stimulus for the creative writing of children of the Mohawk nation in the reservation school of Tyendinaga…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Foreign Countries, Poetry, Children
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Crisp, Richard J.; Turner, Rhiannon N. – American Psychologist, 2010
In an article in the May-June 2009 "American Psychologist," we discussed a new approach to reducing prejudice and encouraging more positive intergroup relations (Crisp & Turner, 2009). We named the approach imagined intergroup contact and defined it as "the mental simulation of a social interaction with a member or members of an outgroup category"…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Imagination, Attitudes
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American Journal of Play, 2010
Since 1992 C. J. Rogers has lived with wolves and studied their societies at Raised by Wolves, a licensed, nonprofit research sanctuary situated in a high valley of New Mexico's Zuni Mountains, not far from the Four Corners. Rogers, who has taught at Northeastern Illinois University and Western New Mexico University, holds doctorates in both…
Descriptors: Interviews, Animals, Animal Behavior, Play
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