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Showing 1 to 15 of 52 results Save | Export
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Geralyn Schroeder Yu – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2025
This article describes preservice art education students who curated an exhibition for a university gallery, using description and analysis as aesthetic inquiry processes. The students curated an exhibition that placed 1977 Central and Latin American and contemporary children's artworks in dialogue with each other. They constructed themes that…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Art Teachers, Exhibits, Children
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Wang, Bo; Ginns, Paul; Mockler, Nicole – Educational Psychology Review, 2022
Cognitive load theory's incorporation of evolutionary perspectives has generated several instructional designs based on movement, including the tracing effect, occurring when learners benefit from explicit instructions to trace out specific elements of lesson materials with the index finger. Historical descriptions of children's tracing behaviours…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Imagination, Prior Learning
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Clark-Fookes, Tricia – Research in Drama Education, 2023
In this article, a teaching artist shares their understandings about designing a large-scale interactive intermedial arts experience for children aged five to eight years, and articulates findings about the conditions that promote quality experiences of this kind. When designing interactive arts experiences, a tension exists between providing…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Creativity, Learner Engagement, Barriers
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Fidyk, Alexandra – LEARNing Landscapes, 2019
In looking back to childhood, and what constituted daily life, a case is made for unique ways of knowing that unfold through play, place, and tradition. A closer look at the relationship between childhood memory and the particularities of place, suggests that adult creativity, a sense of psychological stability, and an attitude of wonder, even…
Descriptors: Play, Children, Child Development, Memory
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Tanner, Sam; Miller, Erin – Critical Questions in Education, 2018
This conceptual framework investigates the symbol of the castle in the American imagination as one site of memory that contributes to white supremacy through childhood play. The authors conceive of long-form improvisation in relation to childhood play to imagine new pedagogical installments that might teach children to resist the hegemonic symbol…
Descriptors: Play, Whites, Racial Bias, Young Children
Papasotiri, Garifalia; Saiti, Theodoti – Online Submission, 2021
The mobility of peoples and their settlement in our country has created a new dynamic in dealing with population groups with particular linguistic, cultural and social characteristics. At the same time, it brought to the fore the case of the Roma, who have been active in Greece for decades without being fully integrated into the social and…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Multicultural Education, Minority Group Students, Migrants
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Ragatz, Carolyn; Ragatz, Zach – Parenting for High Potential, 2018
Why encourage children to play board games? In the increasing disconnect of our digital lives, playing games provides a way to connect and relate with others on a human level. Strategy and role-playing games provide intellectual challenges and stretch creativity to keep the gifted mind engaged in solving problems. At the same time, the players…
Descriptors: Games, Role Playing, Gifted, Children
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Önder, Mustafa – Asian Journal of Education and Training, 2018
Plays and toys have an important place in the education of children. Children learn by seeing and doing rather than reading, listening and understanding. Play is an important "job" for children. The basic function of plays is to facilitate children's adaptation to the world. Children can understand the real world by playing. They deal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Play, Toys, Children
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Brophy, Rachel – Global Studies of Childhood, 2016
Inviting questions about our emotional entanglement in relationship to childhood opens new space to think about how and why we construct the child in the way we do. I propose that the figure of the child stands in for our wishes, regrets and anxieties. And perhaps, one of the reasons we phantasize about childhood is because it can be used as a…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Children, Adults, Childrens Literature
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Skeens, Lisa M. – National Youth-At-Risk Journal, 2017
Guided imagery is a valuable intervention strategy that can benefit children who are at risk for social, academic, and mental health problems. Guided imagery is a technique that employs imagination, emotions, and a spectrum of bodily senses (Naparstek, 1994). This particular technique can be applied in community and academic settings to help…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, At Risk Persons, Children, Visualization
Neugebauer, Roger – Exchange: The Early Childhood Leaders' Magazine Since 1978, 2012
The author believes that everyone has the potential to be creative. The challenge is to foster the conditions that enable creativity to flourish. These conditions are play, rich experiences, freedom, and passion.
Descriptors: Creativity, Children, Early Childhood Education, Imagination
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Bramberger, Andrea – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2012
There are indications of a positive trend in education. International comparative investigations on academic achievement and longitudinal studies on life courses prove the need for and the importance of children's high intellectual knowledge. At the same time, new research initiatives and projects comply with the demand that aesthetic/cultural…
Descriptors: Poetry, Children, Aesthetic Education, Teacher Responsibility
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Bleazby, Jennifer B. – Education and Culture, 2012
The imagination has traditionally been associated with unreality and is commonly thought to be the antithesis of reason. This is a notion of imagination that can be found in Plato's writing and has influenced modern Western epistemology and educational ideals. As such, traditional schooling, which has focused on the cultivation of reason and the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Reflection, Epistemology
Diamond, Adele – ZERO TO THREE, 2014
Executive functions enable children to pay attention, follow instructions, apply what they have learned, have those "aha!" moments in which they grasp how multiple facts interrelate, think of creative solutions, obey social norms such as waiting their turn and not butting in line or jumping out of their seat, mentally construct a plan,…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Attention, Child Development, Infants
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Umewaka, Soraya – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2011
Many education systems have a tendency to be limiting and rigid. These systems teach children to value facts over knowledge and routine and repetition over playfulness and curiosity to seek knowledge. How can we unleash our children's imagination and permit them to use play and other creative tools as a means of learning? This article proposes new…
Descriptors: Imagination, Play, Creative Activities, Learning Strategies
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