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Dowell, William – Teaching Sociology, 2006
Sociologists agree that the sociological imagination fosters students' critical thinking skills (Eckstein, Schoenike, and Delaney 1995; Haddad and Lieberman 2002; Logan 1976; Mayer 1986; Misra 2000). The challenge lies in motivating students to develop their sociological imaginations. Convincing them of its importance and practical value takes…
Descriptors: Imagination, Sanitation, Sociology, Thinking Skills
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Thornton, Sharon G.; Romano, Rosalie M. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2007
As a post-9/11 society in the United States, people live in a complex and pluralistic world that pushes to rethink how to approach education. People want to know what is right and good, but how to discern this in a world where consensual understandings of meaning are missing, even within the nation's borders? Those in the northern, and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Western Civilization, Social Isolation, Social Bias
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Rosoff, Amy – English Journal, 2007
Inner-city high school teacher Amy Rosoff stresses the importance of play for survival. She offers examples of activities requiring imaginative play from students in classes at all levels from ESL [English as a Second Language] to AP [Advanced Placement]. (Contains 1 figure.)
Descriptors: Play, Imagination, Teaching Methods, Child Development
Ganguly, Indrani – 1995
It is important to incorporate visual thinking into science instruction. Imagination and perception play vital roles in scientific inquiry. Metaphors, like perceptions, are drawn from common experiences and are a means to anchor scientists' thought processes in generating a pattern that bridges the gap between the seen and the unseen. Metaphors…
Descriptors: Analogy, Concept Formation, Epistemology, Imagination
Eberle, Bob – 1996
The title of this book is an acronym that serves to describe the mental activity the games of the book are intended to bring about. Each of the seven letters in "scamper" is the initial letter for the word phrases making up the checklist used to create the Scamper games. Sections of the book include: (1) "Scampering with the Experts--Thinking and…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Brainstorming, Critical Thinking, Decision Making
Jones, Ginny Pompei – 1994
Many practitioners in the writing field tend to think of research skills as logical, analytical, abstracting abilities, not as personal, expressive or imaginative. Even many contemporary literary and composition theorists believe that theory must be divorced from everyday life. According to Richard Rorty, in many intellectual circles, the more…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imagination, Interviews, Research Papers (Students)
Bisplinghoff, Gretchen – 1993
This discussion of the movie "Field of Dreams" analyzes the film's structuring of individual perceptual response to its visual messages, as well as its contribution to our cultural myths using baseball as visual metaphor. The central premises of the film revolve around seeing and reading the visual messages correctly according to the…
Descriptors: Baseball, Cultural Background, Dreams, Emotional Experience
Hamilton, Virginia – 1976
The fiction writer uses language to create the illusion of reality. A work of fiction is an illusion of life in which characters attempt to transform basic reality by casting their desires and views upon it, thus creating internal conflict between elements of the real and the unreal. Characters must sort out through experiences that enable them to…
Descriptors: Authors, Biographies, Characterization, Childrens Literature
Fillmer, H. T.; Parkay, Forrest W. – 1990
Imagery has a significant role in cognitive development. Reading research has established the fact that good readers image spontaneously and that there is a high interrelationship between overall preference for a story, the amount of text-related imagery in the story, comprehension, and recall. Imagery researchers agree that everyone is capable of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Creative Thinking, Imagination, Instructional Innovation
Cohen, Leonora M. – OSSC Bulletin, 1988
To foster individual development, educators must seek the gifts in every child, in those not demonstrating academic abilities as well as in the most brilliant. Instead of stifling thinking, creativity, and interest development, educators must encourage these behaviors. Currently, a big discrepancy exists between the child's potential and what…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Cognitive Development, Creative Thinking, Curiosity
Fleischman, Sid – 1987
Few children aspire to be writers when they grow up. When one is young, authors seem as mysterious as phantoms and are just as invisible. In childhood, the imaginative and creative mind is given a bad rap. Children are told to stop daydreaming and do their homework. They quickly learn that lying is bad stuff. Yet, both exercise the imagination and…
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Creative Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education
Trostle, Susan L.; Yawkey, Thomas D. – 1982
The intent of this article is to describe the basic processes used by the child in order to create and imagine; to explain the significance of objects for encouraging creativity, imagination, and intellectual growth; and to show how creative thinking is nurtured using the world of objects. Five reasons are advanced to support the claim that the…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Processes, Creative Development, Creative Thinking
Sulzby, Elizabeth – 1982
A study required children to tell and to dictate stories that were real and make believe, all about the same basic topic, as part of things people do when they "write a story." A further purpose was to explore the reading knowledge of children who are just beginning to read. Children's reading attempts for these stories were used to…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Emergent Literacy, Fantasy, Imagination
Anderson, Craig A. – 1982
People daydream, plan, and anticipate. They think frequently about their own actual or potential behaviors, and create behavioral scenarios (or scripts) in which they are the main character. To investigate the relationship between thinking about a behavior and one's expectancies or intentions to perform that behavior, subjects (N=93) in Experiment…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Objectives, Cognitive Processes
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Lemisko, Lynn Speer – Canadian Social Studies, 2004
Philosopher and historian R. G. Collingwood developed and elaborated a theory and approach to reconstructing knowledge about the past that relies on the historical imagination. This paper argues that Collingwood's theory offers teachers sound reasons for using constructivist approaches in their classrooms and that his methodological approach can…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Imagination, Primary Sources, Teaching Methods
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