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Veale, Ann – 1992
In light of criticisms that many early childhood programs fail to engage children's minds, this study suggests that children need programs in which they can: (1) explore experience in visual ways; (2) experience aspects of different cultures; (3) extend their thinking; and (4) develop their imagination. That art and play can provide suitable…
Descriptors: Art Education, Childrens Art, Curriculum Development, Educational Theories
The Bookmark, 1990
This issue of "The Bookmark" presents 20 articles focusing on the theme that libraries foster imagination. The articles are: (1) "Imagination and the Magic of Libraries" (Elizabeth S. Manion); (2) "Powerful Partners--Discovery and Democracy, An Interview with Cynthia Jenkins" (Anne E. Simon); (3) "Fostering Imagination in Children" (Susan Lehr);…
Descriptors: Childrens Libraries, Childrens Literature, Childrens Television, Creative Thinking
Jansen, Sue Curry – 1989
This paper builds upon the poetics of scientific discourse which provide extraordinary insights into the workings of the scientific imagination and into the ways it is both colonized and liberated by the medium of social and ideological transfer--metaphor. The paper examines what constructivism is teaching us about the role metaphor plays in…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Discourse Analysis, Feminism, Imagination
Sinatra, Richard; Stahl-Gemake, Josephine – 1983
Curriculum leaders, program specialists, and teachers can intentionally arouse the activation of one hemisphere of the brain over the other through the use of right brain strategies in language learning. While most functions of the left hemisphere are concerned with convergent production (getting the right answer), functions of the right…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Creative Thinking, Creative Writing, Divergent Thinking
Sutton-Smith, Brian – 1985
Well meaning parents and teachers often use children's play for the purposes of literacy and socialization. Yet, these attempts may deny play to children by subordinating play to some other concept. Evidence shows that even when parents play with their very young children they generally play games like shopping, cooking, and eating; whereas when…
Descriptors: Aggression, Child Psychology, Childhood Interests, Childhood Needs
McQueen, David – 1983
Imaging, or disciplined daydreaming, can be used in the composition class to expose students to their innate creativity, lessen writing anxiety, refresh memories before writing of personal experiences, and make impersonal subjects, such as historical events, vital and personal. Teachers can construct a classroom imaging session (which takes about…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Heuristics
Anderson, Philip M., Ed. – The Leaflet, 1984
The seven articles in this issue are concerned with the various uses of literature and literature study in the English curriculum, specifically to enhance thinking, teach composition, educate the emotions, develop reading comprehension and critical reading skills, explore and develop morals, and evoke a common culture. The titles of the articles…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Ethical Instruction
Alexander, Lloyd – Elementary English, 1974
The classics of our literature are still the best antidote to the abuses of language found everywhere around us. (JH)
Descriptors: Books, Censorship, Classics (Literature), Cognitive Processes
Croft, Martyn – 1979
Auditory imagination is used in this paper to describe a number of issues and activities related to sound and having to do with listening, thinking, recalling, imagining, reshaping, creating, and uttering sounds and words. Examples of auditory imagination in religious and literary works are cited that indicate a belief in an imagined, expected, or…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Aural Learning, Cognitive Processes, Communication Skills
Koste, Virginia Glasgow – 1978
The processes involved in drama and the dramatic play of children are essentially the same in that they rely on an imitation of nature, involve a transformation of reality through imagination, connect seemingly irrelevant elements creatively, and bring a temporary, limited order to an emotional experience. When child's play is used as a basis for…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Children, Childrens Games, Creative Dramatics
Hobson, Arline B.; McCauley, Perry B. – 1976
The learning activities in this handbook were taken directly from Tucson Early Education Model (TEEM) classrooms and designed to foster intellectual and language development. More specifically, these activities are designed to foster linguistic awareness, sensory perception, curiosity, and imagination, to guide the child in differentiating fantasy…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Creativity, Curriculum Guides
Simmons, John S.; And Others – 1976
Directed primarily at those who have not yet taught English and who aspire to do so, this book presents an approach for teaching English to adolescents of the 1970s and later that supports the practical, enduring aspects of traditional instruction but also uses innovative methods that are not excessive, trivial, or faddish. To assist teachers in…
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Decision Making, English Curriculum, English Instruction
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King, Corwin P. – 1973
This study of the human power to make mental images in the mind, here called "imagery," is studied as a phenomena of empirical psychology. The findings have importance for the process of communication, especially in behavioral modification through psychotherapy. Current research in imagery is reviewed, along with possible applications to…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes
Phinney, Jean – 1972
A dissertation proposal involved a study to observe spontaneous behavior of children in interaction with materials in order to gain understanding of the factors that influence classificatory and imaginative behavior in free play. Children at two levels of ability in terms of classification skills were observed in interaction with materials at two…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
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Carney, Helen K. – 1972
Central to this article is the belief that students learn best when permitted to exercise their imagination while studying foreign-language literary works. A teaching technique, demonstrating the author's approach to poetry and vocabulary expansion, emphasizes the active role students play in utilizing new vocabulary. Examples of how students may…
Descriptors: Imagination, Language Instruction, Literary Criticism, Modern Languages
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