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Knapp, Edgar H. – High Sch J, 1969
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Emotional Experience, English Education, Imagination
Spinks, C. W. – 1982
Dreams can be used to draw students into an authentic expression of their creativity and to give them some validation for what they are as persons. A "dream seminar" in a writing course could have students read and discuss Whitman's "Leaves of Grass"; log, report, and discuss their dreams during the course; and explore other…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Emotional Experience, Expressive Language, Higher Education
Segal, Marilyn; Adcock, Don – 1982
By participating in their children's imaginative play or pretending, parents may be able to understand better their children's feelings, resolve parent-child conflicts, communicate parental values, and build parent-child relationships based on mutual respect. Many people seem to believe that pretending appears automatically in young children, that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Coping, Early Childhood Education, Imagination
Mettelka, K. A. – 1980
Frequently, writing students are so concerned with correct grammar and mechanics that their essays are stilted and dry. Their writing is further hampered by rhetorical formulas that describe what the structure of the essay should be when it is finished but not how to go about writing it. Can poetic invention strategies help produce better essays?…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creative Writing, English Instruction, Higher Education
Caldeira, John; And Others
This study explored the relationships between parents' reports of their children's play with imaginary playmates at home and (1) observational ratings of children's imagination, positive emotionality, concentration, social behavior and use of language during free play at nursery school, and (2) parents' records of their children's television…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Family Characteristics, Imagination, Language Usage
Karlson, Robert E. – 1978
A theory of teaching creative writing that involves preconscious learning is presented in this paper. Following a review of the literature on methods of developing writing ability, the paper describes a three-step creative process of preparation (the gathering and study of appropriate materials), incubation (the preconscious absorption and shaping…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes, Creative Development, Creative Thinking
May, Charles E. – 1977
This paper develops a relationship between the dynamics of sexual-fantasy response and the dynamics of literary response that could be exploited by encouraging students to learn by inventing, to fantasize, and to suspend their disbelief when reading all kinds of literature. Just as sexual fantasy focuses attention on the pleasures of sexual…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Creative Thinking, Fantasy, Higher Education
Koltai, Leslie – 1975
The inability of college students to read accurately or to write coherently is a problem. The solution lies in the classroom and with the instructors who must approach the challenge of reading and writing instruction with encouragement and excitement, remembering that the true objective is the development of students' imagination. Students must be…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, English Instruction, Higher Education, Imagination
Sutton-Smith, Brian; And Others – 1975
This paper provides an analysis of plot structure in stories freely narrated by five-to-ten-year-old elementary school children. The question was raised whether the stories, collected over a two-year period, would reflect the children's transition from home to school by a shift from a private to a public character. Structural analyses of plot,…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Early Childhood Education, Evaluation Methods
Lawler, Donald L. – 1975
Science fiction and fantasy play an important role in shaping the future while stimulating readers' imaginations. They expand our consciousness and provide living images of the world of creation, not as it is or was, but as it has the potential of becoming. Any literature, art form, or medium of expression which is capable of affecting the…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Fantasy, Futures (of Society), Higher Education
Razik, Taher A. – 1974
Creativity can be considered a function of knowledge, imagination, and evaluation and usually programed instruction is thought to be detrimental to creative behavior since the material is highly structured and the responses are usually restricted. However, this need not be so, for one seed of creativity, student control, is inherent in programed…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Creativity Tests
Burgess, Carol; And Others – 1973
This anthology presents a selection of children's writing collected and discussed by ten teachers from Great Britain. Part one presents a variety of different types of children's writing. Part two includes examples of creative writing. Part three includes examples of informative writing. Part four presents the writing of four pupils, ages seven,…
Descriptors: Children, Creative Writing, Elementary Education, English
Sloan, Glenna Davis – 1972
This study explores the proposition that literary criticism may be an important part of the elementary school curriculum and that its practice can be informed by the theories of Northrop Frye. The study is in three parts. The first chapter of Part I argues that there is virtually no emphasis in the elementary school on the study of literature as…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary School Curriculum, Imagination, Literacy
Blohm, Paul J.; Yawkey, Thomas Daniels – 1976
This paper describes and illustrates an approach to reading which combines the language experience approach (LEA) and imaginative play. The LEA and the components of the lesson are briefly reviewed. Imaginative play and its descriptive components are identified and explained. The procedure for combining the two elements is roughly as follows: The…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Education, Imagination, Language Acquisition
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Haley, Beverly – Clearing House, 1978
Nine steps are presented which a teacher should consider in order to elicit and develop creativity in students. An analogy is drawn wherein the teacher is a gardener, planting and caring for seeds of creativity. (KC)
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creativity, Educational Philosophy, Guidelines
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