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Showing 151 to 165 of 256 results Save | Export
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Pahl, Kate – Reading: Literacy and Language, 2001
Compares a child's drawings at home with the child's drawings at school. Concludes that children can activate meaning in a different way at home than at school. Suggests that transforming artifacts across sites may be something children do that often goes undocumented. (SG)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Childrens Art, Elementary Education, Family School Relationship
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Kopczyska-Sikorska, Jadwiga; Szyszko, Marta – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2001
Investigated perceptions of poverty among 6- and 7-year-olds in Poland, expressed in drawings and discussion, comparing results to those of a United Nations Development Program study of preschoolers' perceptions. The approach showed that new forms of activity, based mainly on early intervention of psychologists, pedagogues, and physicians, are…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Art, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Ellyn, Tracy – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2005
"Lwa" is the term given to spirits who are believed to act as intermediaries in the lives of Haitians. Many Haitians call upon the "lwa" daily for their problem-solving abilities. The goal of any artist is to be one with his or her own artwork. When working with young art students, this is the key to keeping them on task. For…
Descriptors: Art Education, Sculpture, Studio Art, Art Activities
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van Staden, Christie J. S. – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2006
This article, which is a revised version of a paper presented at the XXIV World Congress of OMEP conference in Melbourne in July 2004, reports on a study that explored young children's (5-9 years) vision of their future environment in South Africa--as temporal dimension, illustrating their conceptual understanding of this concept. A sample of 320…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Young Children, Foreign Countries, Rural Areas
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Hargreaves, David J.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
These studies confirm the view that the "air gap" phenomenon, which refers to the area that remains when ground and sky lines are constructed at the bottom and top of a drawing, is commonly found in the free drawings of middle and later childhood, but that it is readily abandoned when task demands are modified accordingly. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Childrens Art, Cues, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries
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Montasser, Alyaa; Cole, Charlotte; Fuld, Janice – Early Education and Development, 2002
Provides examples from a study of six test segments of the television series "Alam Simsim," the Egyptian "Sesame Street," to illustrate how a systematic analysis of children's artwork can be used with other research tools to gain feedback from children. Shows how formative research is used to bring children into the production…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Art, Childrens Television, Educational Television
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Hagood, Maralynn M. – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2002
Investigates the use of three art-based instruments using imagery that measure children's cognitive development. Suggests that Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices, the British Picture Vocabulary Scale, and the Naglieri Draw-A-Person Test would be useful tools for art therapists to more systematically view children's drawings from a developmental…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Children, Childrens Art, Cognitive Development
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Matthews, John – Visual Arts Research, 1997
Studies how Singaporean children differentiate in drawing between a sphere and an elongated, straight-sided ovoid. Tests Piaget's and Inhelder's beliefs that very young children are unable to differentiate in their drawings between differently contoured shapes. Finds that children are able to show the difference in drawings between the two shapes.…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childrens Art, Developmental Stages, Foreign Countries
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Einarsdottir, Johanna – Early Education and Development, 2005
The study was conducted with a group of 5 and 6 year old children in one playschool in Reykjavik, Iceland. The purpose of the study was to shed light on what life in an Icelandic playschool is like for the children attending the program, finding out their views on why they attend playschool, what they do and learn in playschool, what the adults do…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Student Attitudes, Young Children, Foreign Countries
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Keun, Leong Lai; Hunt, Peggy – Research in Dance Education, 2006
An important outcome of Singapore's education system is the development of creative thinking skills. This project investigates the impact of a creative dance unit on a class of Primary One (seven-year-old) children's usage of bodily kinaesthetic intelligence to solve problems. One key objective was for the researchers to observe something new,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Creative Thinking, Thinking Skills, Dance Education
Numminen, Pirkko; And Others – 1996
This study examined characteristics of human figures representing the self as drawn by 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds and the presence of age or gender differences. A total of 150 children who were selected randomly from day care centers drew themselves on paper with crayons. There were equal numbers of boys and girls in each age group. Human figure…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Childrens Art, Foreign Countries
Douglass, Mildred, Comp. – 1989
This book is designed to be of assistance to primary school teachers who have had little training in arts and crafts and for use in teacher training colleges. Tested in Nigeria and Jamaica, this manual gives children an opportunity to develop their natural creativity, and also develops accuracy and manual dexterity in hand skills. Lesson plans are…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Childrens Art, Creative Activities, Creative Development
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Rubenstein, Judith; And Others – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1987
A study of children's art as a function of gender of child, picture condition (drawings of same-sex versus mixed-sex dyads), and child-rearing setting (United States town, Israeli town, and Israeli kibbutz) confirms that boys, particularly Americans, are more aggressive, competitive, and hierarchical in their depicted relationships than are girls.…
Descriptors: Aggression, Children, Childrens Art, Competition
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Carson, Janet – Art Education, 1981
Noting that Asian children frequently develop artistic sensitivity and skill at a very young age, the author presents insights gained from a year's study of Japan's art education practices and of cultural attitudes which foster children's art in that nation. (SJL)
Descriptors: Art Education, Childrens Art, Cultural Influences, Early Childhood Education
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Wilson, Brent – Human Development, 1997
Analyzed two sets of Japanese children's artworks, one in the graphic narrative style, the other, school art in the "high" art tradition. Argues that art derived from popular models provides children with important ways to investigate meaningful dimensions of the world and to experiment with life's major themes, dimensions of meaning…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art, Art Education, Children
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