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Alexander, Robert – Language Arts, 1984
Touches on the cognitive and self-discovery processes and imagination and creativity children experience before their verbal skills are fully developed. (HTH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Cognitive Processes
Fischman, Gustavo E. – 2000
This paper explores how the concept of caring relates to the pedagogical imagination of North American and Argentinean preservice teachers. It is guided by the assumption that pedagogical imaginations about schooling, manifested in the form of spoken, written, and drawn expressions, metaphors, and images, may help in the process of grasping…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues, Higher Education
Stern, Lois W. – 2001
This paper, three of four on literature and the young child, investigates two more ways that a parent's simple act of reading to a child during his or her early years helps him or her grow into a successful reader, namely: reading to the child will help him or her broaden the range of experiences; and reading to the child will help him or her…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Child Development, Childrens Literature, Concept Formation
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Bettelheim, Bruno – School Review, 1972
Author suggests that through encouragement of game play, children can learn to derive more meaning from their education and their lives. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Cultural Awareness, Discovery Processes, Educational Improvement
Youniss, James; Robertson, Anne De Shazo – Child Develop, 1970
Results supported Piaget's viewpoint that mental imagery and general symbolic functioning are dependent on the growth of intelligence with respect to the preadolescent period. (Author)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Deafness
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Benton, Michael – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1983
The phenomenon of a "secondary world"--the world of imagination created by writers of fiction in which writers and readers mentally participate--is described. Theories on the subject are discussed, and a three-dimensional model of the psychological structure of this world is presented. (PP)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Fiction, Imagery, Imagination
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Menge, Carleton P. – Adolescence, 1982
Using William Blake's work, discusses the element of the ideal in the development of contemporary adolescents. Discusses a model of constructive change in which explicit future outcomes are used as a starting point to construct new skills needed for change. Describes a monitoring system to measure progress. (RC)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Behavior Change, Humanistic Education
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Bell, Gordon H. – Journal of Moral Education, 1979
An analysis is proposed which reduces the concept of imagination to certain logically distinct forms and modes of imagining. This analysis is related to contemporary definitions of the educated person. Implications for moral education are presented together with an examination of philosophies which oppose development of children's imagination.…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Imagination
Stableford, Brian M. – Biology and Human Affairs, 1978
Discusses the conflict between the religious and scientific imaginations as existing between the intellectual realms of unquestioning faith and constant questioning. Relates this conflict to writers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, e.g., Bacon, Kepler, Wilkins, Godwin, Harrington, Campanella, Cyrano, Le Bret, Defoe, Swift, Voltiare,…
Descriptors: Anthropology, College Science, Eighteenth Century Literature, Higher Education
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Bybee, Rodger – Science and Children, 1980
Described are ways in which a classroom teacher may recognize creativity's primary processes in the behavior of children. Suggestions are made for developing creative learning activities in the classroom. (CS)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Creative Activities, Creativity, Elementary Education
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Friedrich-Cofer, Lynette K.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1979
The social, imaginative, and self-regulatory behavior of 141 children in Head Start centers was observed before and during one of the following four experimental treatments: (a) neutral films, (b) prosocial TV only, (c) prosocial TV plus related play materials, and (d) prosocial TV plus related materials plus teacher training for rehearsal using…
Descriptors: Childrens Television, Disadvantaged Youth, Imagination, Preschool Children
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Morelock, Martha J.; Brown, P. Margaret; Morrissey, Anne-Marie – Roeper Review, 2003
A study involving three children with impaired hearing, three typical children, and three showing intellectual advancement, found children scoring above 130 IQ at age four demonstrated significantly advanced pretend play as toddlers. Mothers of the high IQ children engaged in scaffolding behaviors involving higher stages of pretend transformation,…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Gifted
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Gleason, Tracy R. – Developmental Psychology, 2002
This study compared perceptions of relationships with parents, best friends, siblings, and imaginary companions among 4-year-olds with invisible friends, object companions, or no imaginary companion. Findings indicated that parents afforded instrumental help, and siblings were associated with conflict. Real and imaginary friendship provisions were…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Friendship
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Neilsen, Lorri – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2002
Describes a panel discussion on the acceptability of fiction in academic discourse. Gives advice to scholars wondering whether fiction should be considered as knowledge: stop taking yourself so seriously; embrace "scholartistry", the application of the artistry of imaginative powers to scientific inquiry; know that truth changes; explore…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Change Strategies, Consciousness Raising, Context Effect
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Taylor, Anne – Emergency Librarian, 1995
Suggests it is the responsibility of librarians and teachers to develop the imagination of children by exposing them to literature. Excerpts are used to illustrate literature as the basis of moral consciousness, personal enrichment, and culture. (Author/AEF)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Educational Responsibility, Enrichment, Imagination
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