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Smalley, Lucy – Journal of Museum Education, 2021
This paper was written as a response to a perceived shift in attitude towards the concept of the future and the heightened presence of future themes within museum and gallery education. The four case studies discussed in this paper are institutions based in the south of Sweden that all participated in a local art biennial in October 2019 entitled…
Descriptors: Museums, Futures (of Society), Fantasy, Attitude Change
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Favot, Kate; Carter, Mark; Stephenson, Jennifer – Australasian Journal of Special and Inclusive Education, 2019
The ability to generate narratives is important for literacy development. Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have been found to generate less complex narratives than typically developing peers. This pilot AB study was designed to investigate the efficacy of a brief intervention procedure to develop the macrostructure of original…
Descriptors: Autism, Fiction, Generalization, Intervention
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Dunn, Julie; Bundy, Penny; Woodrow, Nina – Research in Drama Education, 2012
Although significant research has been completed that examines the effectiveness of process drama as a pedagogical approach for developing additional languages and further work has focused on the affordances of digital technologies within drama work, scant attention has been paid to the possibilities which a combination of these approaches might…
Descriptors: Refugees, Drama, Teaching Methods, Language Acquisition
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O'Donnell, Holly – Language Arts, 1978
Uses summaries and excerpts from ERIC documents to define fantasy, examine its attraction for children, and describe how fantasy may be selected and used in the elementary school classroom. (DD)
Descriptors: Children, Elementary Education, Fantasy, Imagination
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Sherratt, Dave – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2002
A study examined whether it was possible to teach five children (ages 5-6) with autism to use symbolic pretend play. The intervention used structure, affect, and repetition and progressively faded out the structuring over three phases. All of the children were able to use some symbolic acts within play. (Contains references.) (CR)
Descriptors: Autism, Behavior Development, Children, Creativity