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Paulston, Rolland – Compare, 2000
Presents a study questioning how comparative educators use their imaginations to construct new knowledge/understanding on representing educational phenomenon; the genres and forms of representations and how these code choices influenced ways of seeing and thinking; and how the self-reflexive history of imagination is patterned as an intertextual…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Creativity, Educational History, Educational Trends
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Weinburg, Carl – Teacher Education Quarterly, 1988
Training teachers as artists will develop an understanding of their own cognitive style and a trust in personal intuition. The art student imitates the masters, learns from peers, and develops by experimentation and subjective assessments. Teachers and art students both learn by becoming committed to their work. (JD)
Descriptors: Artists, Cognitive Style, Creative Development, Creative Teaching
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Jampole, Ellen S.; And Others – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1994
This study evaluated the use of guided imagery practice to enhance creative writing with 43 academically gifted students (stratified as either high or low creativity) in grades 3 and 4. Groups receiving the guided imagery practice (regardless of original creativity level) generated more original writing, which contained more sensory descriptions…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Creative Writing, Creativity, Elementary Education
Child Care Information Exchange, 1993
This special section on the spirit of play discusses (1) characteristics of adult play; (2) styles of playfulness; (3) the creation of environments that foster children's sense of wonder; and (4) strategies for training teachers to be playful and to be attentive to children's play. (HOD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Classroom Environment, Creative Activities, Creative Thinking
Healy, Jane M. – American Educator: The Professional Journal of the American Federation of Teachers, 1990
The rapid, disjointed, and vivid style of Sesame Street may impede rather than promote progress toward literacy and the development of voluntary attention. It robs children of the ability to create mental pictures. Contends that it is a failure as an instructional medium. (DM)
Descriptors: Attention, Childrens Television, Dysgraphia, Early Childhood Education
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White, Margaret H. – Early Child Development and Care, 1993
Learning to imagine is a crucial step in symbol-making in early childhood. Uses examples of children's symbol-making to illustrate the process by which children understand the world around them. Considers how effectively aspects of children's learning environments facilitate children's exploration and their development of imagination. (MDM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Childhood Attitudes, Children
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Cai, Mingshui – New Advocate, 1995
Explores the complicated question of whether imagination can bridge or transcend gaps between authors and the cultural groups they write about. Argues that cultural authenticity is the basic criterion for evaluating multicultural literature and the foundation on which to build literary excellence and that imagination cannot substitute for it. (SR)
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Images
Kennedy, X. J. – School Library Journal, 1991
This exploration of the two leading varieties of nonsense literature defines strict nonsense as that in which the laws of nature are suspended and replaced by new laws which the author decrees, and loose nonsense as usually comic writing about a singular unlikely event. Examples of these two types of verse in children's literature are cited. (22…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, Fantasy, Fiction
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Simpkins, William S. – Journal of Educational Administration, 1990
Creative projects, whether in the arts, literature, or social aspects of education, demand a mixture of the "subconscious" (imaginative) and "intellectual" (rational), not the rejection of one in favor of the other. Rationality and imagination are complementary in speculative research. An advocacy approach may be appropriate in certain cases. (20…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Advocacy, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking
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Ward, Thomas B.; Sifonis, Cynthia M. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1997
This study examined the impact of three conditions on how subjects (105 college students) generated ideas about imaginary extraterrestrials. Results are discussed in terms of constraints on innovation, ways of overcoming those constraints, and the general tendency for new ideas to preserve many of the central properties of existing concepts.…
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Divergent Thinking
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Spehler, Rebecca McElfresh; Slattery, Patrick – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 1999
Since vision, imagination, and a passion for justice are in short supply, educators must transcend traditional technical/rational approaches and create space for artists' prophetic voices to emerge. Empowering the voices of imagination through the arts will help renew the metaphysical dimension of educators' work. (27 references) (MLH)
Descriptors: Artists, Creative Expression, Educational Environment, Educational Philosophy
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Phillips, Donna K. – Voices from the Middle, 1997
Records the musings of a teacher preparing to teach a course on reading and writing in the content area to preservice secondary teachers. Notes that the teacher will trust her students to come with stories, questions, passion, and curiosity, and trust them to discover the power of literacy and to find its role in their future classrooms over time.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Imagination, Language Arts
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Roberts, Patricia; Jones, Virginia Pompei – JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory, 1995
Takes issue with the assumed antithesis of processes of the irrational (imagination and creativity) and those of the rational (reasoning and argumentation). Argues that numerous philosophers suggest richer ways of imagining the processes of argumentation. Explores various classroom practices that enable teachers to weave the creative and critical…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Creativity, Higher Education, Imagination
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Powell, Mark – Montessori Life, 1999
Examines how television viewing alters the way children learn and relate to their world. Describes Montessori's view of the learning process and the importance of the carefully arranged environment. Presents evidence that television interferes with learning and that reading assists the learning process. Differentiates the development of…
Descriptors: Children, Educational Environment, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Education
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Engel, Susan – Cognitive Development, 2005
This paper advances the hypothesis that young children use narrative play and stories to construct two types of fiction, the worlds of "what is" and "what if." Heinz Werner's conceptualization of children's spheres of reality, in which actions, symbols, and events are constructed in particular ways, is used as a theoretical framework for…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Young Children, Play, Narration
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