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Showing 1 to 15 of 36 results Save | Export
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Alessandro Gelmi – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This article aims to delve into the theoretical perspective on imagination in education, focusing specifically on Imaginative Education theory. The approach involves a dual objective: critically analyzing the limitations and specific potentials of Imaginative Education to stimulate contemporary discourse on imagination in education and using it as…
Descriptors: Imagination, Creative Thinking, Interdisciplinary Approach, Psychology
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Leaton Gray, Sandra – London Review of Education, 2022
This article discusses the work of Susan Isaacs (1885-1948), the IOE's (Institute of Education), first director of the Department of Child Development. In addition to introducing child psychoanalysis to the UK, Isaacs was instrumental in mapping out the basis for a conceptual understanding of the role of aspects of imagination (which she termed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Development, Child Psychology, Fantasy
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Silcox, Mark – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2012
The practice of make-believe has traditionally been viewed as valuable by psychologists and philosophers more or less exclusively as a mechanism for social initiation, a tool for everyday problem solving, or a method for children to learn about adult responsibilities. This instrumentalist approach has influenced the development of a wide variety…
Descriptors: Imagination, Fantasy, Games, Play
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Seeley, Claire; Gallagher, Sarah – Primary Science, 2014
Stories are a place where magical things happen, where ideas are challenged, where the imagination runs free and questions are asked. They are a safe place, where the reader can walk about with new identities, try new ideas, process life's ups and downs and make new meanings. This makes stories the perfect place for creative learning. In this…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Teaching Methods, Reading Materials
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2012
When he painted a portrait of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II (1552-1612), Giuseppe Arcimboldo used his imagination, and portrayed him as "Vertumnus," the Roman god of vegetation and the seasons. It's fun to find the different fruits, vegetables and flowers he used: pea-pod eyelids, a gourd for the forehead. Court painters of the time usually…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Artists, Art History
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West, Mark I. – American Journal of Play, 2010
Like many a modern play theorist, both Mark Twain and Walt Disney were enchanted by the way children act out stories, in particular pirate tales. For both Twain and Disney, this fascination grew out of their small-town, midwestern boyhoods, where avid reading and fantasy play helped stave off boredom and fill emotional gaps for both of them. Even…
Descriptors: Play, Authors, Fantasy, Imagination
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Gargano, Elizabeth – American Journal of Play, 2010
The author contends that reading some narratives of make-believe can become for many children the ultimate form of fantasy play, providing them with a sense of control absent in their real world. She employs terms from French structuralist critic Gérard Genette, from Austrian child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim, and from English pediatrician D. W.…
Descriptors: Imagination, Play, Fantasy, Childrens Literature
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Leong, Deborah J.; Bodrova, Elena – Young Children, 2012
It is the third week that Ms. Sotto's preschool classroom has been turned into an airport. The literacy center is a ticket counter, with a travel agency complete with child-made passports, tickets, and travel brochures. What is happening in Ms. Sotto's classroom is an example of what most early childhood educators mean when they talk about…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Play, Learning Activities, Fantasy
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Bongartz, Christiane; Richey, Esther Gilman – American Journal of Play, 2010
The authors use Noam Chomsky's theories about generative grammar to discuss the notion of linguistic creativity they believe lies at the core of storytelling as Salman Rushdie pictures it in his novel, "Haroun and the Sea of Stories." The production of meaning through the use of narrative helps explain the rules of the literary game,…
Descriptors: Play, Theories, Creativity, Story Telling
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Warner, Marina – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
Before children learn to read, they act like readers when they play with materials and objects like readers. In play, children beam their projective imagination upon inert material things and animate them with fantasy, infusing objects with meaning. The question of "the real" haunts the psychology of play and through play, the theory of fantasy:…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Imagination, Play, Fantasy
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American Journal of Play, 2009
Vivian Gussin Paley is a teacher, writer, lecturer, and advocate for the importance of play for young children. Author of a dozen books about children learning through play, she has received numerous honors and awards including an Erickson Institute Award for Service to Children, a MacArthur Foundation Fellows award, and a John Dewey Society's…
Descriptors: Play, Child Development, Friendship, Fantasy
Berkshire, Ann – Exceptional Parent, 2009
Children seem to naturally gravitate to particular interests, be it sports, the arts, or any of a myriad of other pursuits. Their area of interest seems an integral part of who they are so that they seem to have been "born that way." Even when a child is challenged--physically, cognitively, behaviorally, emotionally--their essence still seems to…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Woolf, Michael – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2011
Western Europe has been constructed in the field of education abroad as a "traditional" location: in some sense or another that label is used to suggest that it has a kind of static or dormant significance. In reality, Western Europe is an enormously rich location for study abroad precisely because it is a fluid learning environment that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Study Abroad, Culture, Educational Environment
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Paley, Vivian Gussin – Harvard Educational Review, 2007
In 1986, the "Harvard Educational Review" published Vivian Gussin Paley's article "On Listening to What the Children Say," which detailed the beginnings of her career as a teacher and author. The article described Paley's methods of tape-recording and analyzing her students' daily engagement in "the three Fs: fantasy, fairness, and friendship."…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Fantasy, Play, Developmentally Appropriate Practices
Cooper, Patricia M. – University of Chicago Press, 2009
Teacher and author Vivian Paley is highly regarded by parents, educators, and other professionals for her original insights into such seemingly everyday issues as play, story, gender, and how young children think. In "The Classrooms All Young Children Need", Patricia M. Cooper takes a synoptic view of Paley's many books and articles,…
Descriptors: Play, Early Childhood Education, Young Children, Educational Philosophy
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