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Harlan, Jane E. – 1993
This paper attempts to make explicit some assumptions about the creative abilities of people with developmental disabilities, and offers constructive strategies for replacing negative ideas and attitudes with positive attitudes. The paper points out that: a high degree of artistic ability can coexist with considerable impairments in other areas of…
Descriptors: Adults, Art Activities, Attitude Change, Children
Paffard, Michael – English: Literature, Criticism, Teaching, 1968
The primary concern of the English teacher should be to develop the unique potential every student has for imaginative thinking and creative expression. The ability to think creatively stimulates the student's intellectual curiosity, frees him from the rigidity of social class values, religious dogma, and historical precedent, and enables him to…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Expression, Creative Thinking, Creativity
Carlson, Ruth Kearney – Elementary English, 1964
Educational experiences which facilitate the development of original thinking and learning are (1) the "open system" of education which stresses freedom at home and at school; (2) the emphasis on sensory awareness of the environment; (3) the development of curiosity and sense of wonder; (4) the growth of imaginative powers and original thinking…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Children, Cognitive Development, Creative Activities
Alliance for Arts Education, Washington, DC. – 1978
The report summarizes discussion and recommendations of five seminars on promoting the arts in education. The seminars were sponsored by the Arts Advocacy Project, a joint venture of the Music Educators National Conference, National Art Education Association, National Dance Association, and American Theatre Association. The seminars examined how…
Descriptors: Administrators, Aesthetic Education, Art, Art Education