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Lewkowich, David – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2019
In this paper, I discuss the nostalgic encounters that a group of preservice teachers experienced while reading two graphic novels about adolescent life: Jillian and Mariko Tamaki's "This One Summer" and Lynda Barry's "My Perfect Life." Using the conceptual touchstones of psychoanalytic theory, I pay close attention to the…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Adolescents, Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers
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Levrini, Olivia; Tasquier, Giulia; Branchetti, Laura; Barelli, Eleonora – International Journal of Science Education, 2019
Can science teaching contribute to developing skills for managing uncertainty towards the future and projecting imagination forwards? If so, how? In this paper, we outline an approach to 'teach the future' through science education. In the first part, we describe a framework that has been constructed to orient the design of teaching modules…
Descriptors: Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Skill Development, Science Education, Climate
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Educational Perspectives, 2015
In the summer of 1899, [John] Dewey gave two series of talks at Honolulu High School on Tuesday and Friday evenings from 8:00 to 10:00. The first set of five lectures was entitled "The Life of the Child;" the second set, "Movements in Nineteenth Century Thought." The first talk of the lecture series was delivered on the evening…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Child Development, Imagination, Early Experience
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Gordon, Charles B.; Eifler, Karen E. – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2011
Adolescents are bombarded during most of their waking hours by images on various screens: computer, television, and film. As so-called digital natives, they are aware that these images are manufactured and manipulated to elicit certain responses. But while they acknowledge the artificiality of those images, they allow the same mediated messages…
Descriptors: Imagination, Intimacy, Adolescents, Media Literacy
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Wolfberg, Pamela; Bottema-Beutel, Kristen; DeWitt, Mila – American Journal of Play, 2012
Peer-play experiences are a vital part of children's socialization, development, and culture. Children with autism face distinct challenges in social and imaginary play, which place them at high risk for being excluded by peers. Without explicit support, they are likely to remain isolated from peers and the consistent interactive play that…
Descriptors: Autism, Play, Research and Development, Imagination
Milton, Penny; Kennedy, Robert – Education Canada, 2011
Three authors, writing from different perspectives in different time periods, share the view that students' sense of personal agency is fundamental to their intellectual engagement and deep understanding. The learner's imagination leads to powerful questions that grow when exposed to processes of productive inquiry and social interaction and when…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Intellectual Development
Wolfberg, Pamela J. – Teachers College Press, 2009
This now classic text remains a cornerstone of continuing efforts to develop inclusive peer play programs for children on the autism spectrum. The second edition has been thoroughly revised to reflect major new developments in the field of autism. Notable additions include an updated description of the Integrated Play Groups (IPG) model and…
Descriptors: Imagination, Play, Autism, Children
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Sturm, Brian W. – Knowledge Quest, 2008
Secret spaces serve as mirrors in which children can explore themselves and play with identities, while at the same time they act as windows to the real world through which children develop an understanding of social interactions and societal norms and expectations. The understanding of secret spaces has important implications for the physical…
Descriptors: School Libraries, Learning Resources Centers, Imagination, Interpersonal Relationship
Hall, Michelle – Library Media Connection, 2009
This article illustrates how the use of the basic elements of a story can help create an event that will stimulate imagination and encourage further reading. Margaret Robison, the librarian at the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind (VSDB) in Staunton, Virginia, decided that for Teen Read Week she would use a popular series as a bridge to…
Descriptors: Special Schools, Incentives, Reading Improvement, Reading Programs
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Mechling, Jay – American Journal of Play, 2008
Biology and the particular gun culture of the United States come together to explain the persistent and powerful attraction of American boys to both real guns and toy guns. The 1990s saw adults begin to conflate "the gun problem" with "the boy problem," sparking attempts (largely failed) to banish toy guns from homes and…
Descriptors: Play, Weapons, Males, Children
Greene, Maxine – Phi Delta Kappan, 2006
The author was invited to speak at a poetry slam conducted by Urban Poets, a group of teenage poets who perform their own works with the most passionate intensity. She had trouble deciding what to say to the young generation whose world differed so much from hers. She turned to Walt Whitman and a poem he wrote, "To the Young Poets," telling them…
Descriptors: Poets, Patriotism, Democracy, Poetry
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Piechowski, Michael M.; Colangelo, Nicholas – Gifted Child Quarterly, 1984
Overexcitability profiles of 49 adolescents were compared with those of gifted and nongifted adults. Results suggested that both gifted adolescents and adults as a group are characterized by two nonintellective factors: imaginational and emotional overexcitabilities and intellectual overexcitability. (CL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Gifted, Imagination
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Adamo, Simonetta – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2004
In this paper I shall describe the psychotherapeutic treatment of a 14-year-old boy, who suffered from mild Asperger's syndrome. This adolescent had a multiplicity of imaginary friends, which protected him from catastrophic feelings of loneliness and deadness, but at the same time interfered with the possibility of establishing meaningful…
Descriptors: Imagination, Fantasy, Asperger Syndrome, Psychotherapy
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Schofield, Andrew; Rogers, Theresa – Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 2004
The authors have come to believe, based on several years of collaborative work in an alternative literacy program, that developing the multiple literacies of struggling youth requires a curricular playfulness with students' ideas, biographies, and imaginations across genres and media. Social literacy and multiliteracy theories are powerful and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Literacy Education, Secondary Education, Foreign Countries