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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Frank, Roger – School Arts, 1978
An art teacher paired off his elementary classes and had one team member lead the other blindfolded through an obstacle course with a jungle theme. Students then painted their impressions. The object was to foster imagination and to build trust between partners. (SJL)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Class Activities, Educational Games, Elementary Education
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Ungaro, Don – Clearing House, 1982
Describes the development of a program that used fantasy characters and images to improve the spelling of children. (FL)
Descriptors: Fantasy, Imagery, Imagination, Memory
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Gunnison, Hugh; Renick, T. F. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1985
The rationale and theoretical foundations for fantasy relaxation and fantasy imagery procedures, designed to contact right hemisphere functions, are presented for specific use in the treatment of bulimia. (BL)
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Bulimia, Counseling Techniques, Eating Habits
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Meier, Susan Roberts – English Journal, 1983
Describes how having students draw both their own and a literary character's reality not only introduces students, quite painlessly and concretely, to a large number of literary terms, but also suggests that literature appreciation demands an imaginative extension into the life of another. (MM)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Activities, Humanistic Education, Imagination
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Zerull, David S. – Music Educators Journal, 1992
Discusses the use of imagination as a tool to improve students' musicianship. Suggests that imagery can be used to teach intonation, tone color, sight-reading, and expression. Describes active listening in which the students must use musical memory and participate in musical expression to produce a certain sound that may be difficult to describe.…
Descriptors: Applied Music, Imagery, Imagination, Intonation
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Raths, James – Educational Leadership, 1987
Outlines debriefing strategies to help students organize, compare, classify, evaluate, summarize, or analyze an experience and determine its meaning. Discusses several possible activities leading to increased understanding, including writing logs, diaries, or summaries, naming themes, imagining alternatives, evaluating, role-playing, drawing,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Restructuring, Cooperative Learning, Diaries, Evaluation
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Johnson, Virginia – Science and Children, 1981
Describes three fantasy trips for use in science classrooms. Includes suggestions for follow-up activities and alternate uses of fantasy trips. (DS)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Science, Fantasy, Imagination
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Yaffe, Stephen H. – Educational Leadership, 1989
Drama in the classroom means honing thinking skills, increasing comprehension, bringing the written word to life, and fun. And it's effective with general, gifted, and at-risk students from K-12. (Author/TE)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Dramatics, Creative Teaching, Creative Thinking
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Adelman, Clem – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1992
Argues for an understanding of play as a flux between the imagination and attempts to test consequences of "what if" questions. Discusses leading educational theorists' views of the role of play. Suggests that school authority which reduces creative play closes off children's means of finding answers to some vocational questions. (SG)
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Creativity, Early Childhood Education, Educational Theories
John-Steiner, Vera – 1985
In an attempt to find out more about how creative people engage in thinking, more than 50 men and women considered to be prominant in the humanities, the arts, and the sciences were interviewed. Letters, diaries and autobiographies of other creative individuals were examined in an effort to provide a broad base for studying the psychology of…
Descriptors: Art, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Creative Thinking
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Whitcombe, Allan – Mathematics in School, 1988
In spite of current sentiment to the contrary, the wellsprings of mathematics are not utility and relevance, but creativity, imagination, and an appreciation of the beauty of the subject. This has implications for the teaching of mathematics. (PK)
Descriptors: Algorithms, Creativity, Elementary School Mathematics, Elementary Secondary Education
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
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Wendon, Lyn – Reading, 1979
Describes a pictogram system in which letters are made to look like human and animal characters as a way of teaching phonics to children; tells how teachers have imaginatively implemented the system through activities in such areas as drama, singing, and story telling. (GT)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Creative Activities, Creative Dramatics, Imagination
Duffy, Bernadette – Open University Press, 2006
Learning through the arts has the potential to stimulate open ended activity that encourages discovery, exploration, experimentation and invention, thus contributing to children's development in all areas of learning and helping to make the curriculum meaningful to them. In this book, the author draws on her extensive experience of promoting young…
Descriptors: Young Children, Imagination, Creativity, Early Childhood Education
Karlstad, Maureen Synk – Insights, 1986
Imagination is central to our ability to understand reality. Parents and teachers should foster creative processes which facilitate the development of imagination in children. Expensive equipment or artistic expertise is not necessary to help children develop their imaginations. Instead, it is more important for teachers to allow children the time…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art Expression, Childrens Art
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