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Lehner, Daniela – Journal of Peace Education, 2021
In this theoretical article, the qualities of the artist for peacebuilding and peace education are explored. Peacebuilding and peace education are not only based on skills and knowledge, but also on art, a creative process that originates in our imagination. The question guiding this paper is: How can we, as peacebuilders and educators, imagine,…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Artists, Creativity
Sara Karn – Canadian Journal of Education, 2023
Historical empathy involves a process of attempting to understand the thoughts, feelings, experiences, decisions, and actions of people from the past within specific historical contexts. Although historical empathy has been a rich area of study in history education for several decades, this research has largely taken place outside of Canada. In…
Descriptors: History, History Instruction, Empathy, Teaching Methods
Sarah Anne Bubash – ProQuest LLC, 2024
To successfully create inclusive environments that address the unique needs of each student, teacher candidates must adopt their students' perspectives. Radical imagination is essential for empathy, as it enables individuals to recognize diverse viewpoints (Greene, 1995). Arts-based methods provide a means for teacher candidates to practice…
Descriptors: Empathy, Inclusion, Teaching Methods, Cartoons
Feng, Mengyu – ECNU Review of Education, 2022
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the potential of the drama pedagogy that may contribute to primary children's moral growth in the Chinese educational context. It argues that drama may offer an ensemble-based, dialogic, and narrative pedagogy for teaching morality to complement the didactic traditional model. Design/Approach/Methods: The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Drama, Teaching Methods, Moral Development
Kandil, Yasmine – Research in Drama Education, 2023
This article examines the evolving nature of how race and difference are represented in creative applied theatre work in classroom and community-based settings. The author uses several examples of performances and workshops she's attended to ask important questions that point to the tensions percolating in our discipline around who gets to tell a…
Descriptors: Empathy, Creativity, Imagination, Political Attitudes
Jickling, Bob; Blenkinsop, Sean – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2020
The first climate change conference was held in 1979 in Geneva and sponsored by the World Meteorological Organization. Since then there have been many other initiatives and accords along the way. Each report appears to present an evermore grim picture than the previous one. Cumulatively, we have had more than enough science to know what to do, and…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Climate, Environmental Education, Teaching Methods
English Teaching and Imagination: A Case for Revisiting the Value of Imagination in Teaching Writing
Thomas, Helena – English in Education, 2019
The idea that education should value imagination has lost currency over the last few decades and this has implications for teachers as well as pupils. Situated in a system of increased accountability, teachers in England are arguably less able than ever to act on their freedom and to imagine curricular and pedagogical possibilities beyond those…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Imagination, Teaching Methods, Writing Instruction
Kewalramani, Sarika; Palaiologou, Ioanna; Dardanou, Maria; Allen, Kelly-Ann; Phillipson, Sivanes – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2021
This Australian study examines whether and how technologies such as Artificially Intelligent (AI) toys in a home-based setting might socially and emotionally support children with diverse needs through play. Building on the concept of 'emotional capital', and employing a design-based research approach, parents during the COVID-19 lockdown periods…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Robotics, Toys, Social Emotional Learning
Zhanat, Aliyeva; Kunimzhan, Abdikalyk; Aigul, Alimkhan; Agabekkyzy, Berkenova Rabiga; Nurziya, Abisheva – Cypriot Journal of Educational Sciences, 2022
It is extremely important to bring national and universal values to young individuals from an early age. This study aims to evaluate the views of teachers about teaching modern Kazakh stories over national values. The qualitative research method was used in the research. The study group of the research consisted of 40 primary school teachers…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Folk Culture, Story Telling, Elementary School Teachers
Fletcher, Natalie M. – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2016
The concept of empathy has gained appeal in many educational initiatives in recent years, notably in the charitable sector, yet conceptual confusions endure and the challenges associated with educating for empathy tend not to receive the attention they deserve. This article strives to help clarify the concept of empathy for educative purposes by…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Empathy, Imagination, Teaching Methods
Bartelds, Hanneke; Savenije, Geerte M.; van Boxtel, Carla – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2020
Teachers' beliefs about skills play a significant role in how they teach those skills. Similarly, students' mastery of a skill is influenced by their ideas about its value and what the performance of the skill exactly entails. In this study, 10 history teachers and 17 students in secondary school (age 16-17) were interviewed about their beliefs…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes, Mastery Learning, History Instruction
de Leur, Tessa; van Boxtel, Carla; Huijgen, Tim – History Education Research Journal, 2021
Imagining what it was like to live in the past may help secondary school students to understand historical developments and situations. In this case study, the opportunities of a drama task are explored by using a mixed-method approach. In small groups, Dutch 14-15-year-old students examined historical sources and produced a short film clip on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Group Discussion, Films
Parejo, José Luis; Molina-Fernández, Elvira; González-Pedraza, Ainoa – London Review of Education, 2021
Globalisation has brought about great social and economic impact, as well as great challenges. Major developments have taken place in the mobility of capital and, to a lesser extent, of goods; not so in the mobility of people seeking asylum due to persecution and war. This article approaches the phenomenon of migration, particularly of refugees,…
Descriptors: Empathy, Global Approach, Social Influences, Economic Factors
Kwan, Alistair – Journal of Museum Education, 2017
By prompting imagined or actual bodily experience, we can guide interpretation of tools to emphasize the action that those tools perform. The technique requires little more than an extension from looking at an object, to imagining how the body engages with it, perhaps even trying out those specialist postures, to nourish an interpretation centered…
Descriptors: Equipment, Human Posture, Empathy, Handicrafts
Garrett, Frances – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2018
The article discusses two versions of a complex role-playing exercise in undergraduate courses on Buddhism. The pedagogical exercise demonstrated how imagination cultivated through creative writing could be used to enhance learning about history, culture, and religion. Students were also challenged to generate an understanding of religious…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Buddhism, Religious Education, Teaching Methods