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Lerzan Aras – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2024
The first year architectural education is based on understanding the nature of creativity in design thinking, which serves to build a solid base for a real design process; and in studios several methods are used to develop it. This study aims to discuss how using fairy tales can serve as a tool for encouraging creativity in first year design…
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Fairy Tales, Creativity, Teaching Methods
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Gibbons, Andrew; Peters, Michael A.; Delaune, Andrea; Jandric, Petar; Sojot, Amy N.; Kupferman, David W.; Tesar, Marek; Johansson, Viktor; Cabral, Marta; Devine, Nesta; Hood, Nina – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
This is a collective writing project that is part of the larger design of Infantologies, Infanticides and Infantilizations; a quartet that explores the philosophy of infants from thematic perspectives, that puts infants at the centre of our reflections, and that encourages a different academic style of thinking.
Descriptors: Infants, Philosophy, Imagination, Childrens Literature
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Arlandis, Sergio; Reyes-Torres, Agustín – Journal of New Approaches in Educational Research, 2018
This article approaches the study of children's literature as a threshold of change that allows readers to explore the reality around them, imagine other worlds and understand other perspectives. Based on the notion of the child's cognitive development organized into four stages--pre-reading, fantastic stage, fantastic-realistic stage and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Self Concept, Imagination, Child Development
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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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Morgan, Alun – Environmental Education Research, 2010
This article explores the relevance of J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings" to environmental education and contemporary concerns about social and environmental injustices. It presents an account of the relationship between Tolkien's environmental biography and those aspects of the story that highlight the connection between his personal…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Fantasy, Ethics, Literary Criticism
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Clark, Roger; McDonald, Keith – Children's Literature in Education, 2010
This article considers Guillermo Del Toro's "Pan's Labyrinth" as a text which utilises key codes and conventions of children's literature as a means of encountering the trauma of Fascism. The article begins by placing "Pan's Labyrinth" at a contextual crossroads involving fairy tale and a Spanish cinematic tradition and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Fairy Tales, Political Attitudes
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Zipes, Jack – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
People speculate with the fantastic. Fantasy is a celebrity and money-making machine. As a module in people's brains, it has the capacity to transform plain junk into gold that glitters. Fantasy mobilizes and instrumentalizes the fantastic to form and celebrate spectacles that exist and have always existed--illusions of social relations of…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Aesthetics, Popular Culture, Cartoons
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
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Cairns, Sue Ann – Children's Literature in Education, 2008
To compensate for her feelings of anger and helplessness over her mother's abandonment and subsequent displacements, the foster child Gilly Hopkins seeks power and agency through the primary means at her disposal: through the use of language and fairy tales. She constructs a Cinderella fantasy of an idealized mother who will rescue her. She also…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Foster Care, Fantasy, Fairy Tales
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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Forman-Brunell, Miriam; Eaton, Julie – American Journal of Play, 2009
The authors investigate the nearly ubiquitous cultural icon for girls' play, the princess. They survey historical instances of princess play from the beginning of the American republic to the New Millennium, look at the literature concerning princesses in various periods, and discuss the individual recollections about princess play of a number of…
Descriptors: Play, Females, Imagination, United States History
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Pridmore, John – International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 2007
The nineteenth-century fantasy writer George MacDonald believed that "it is better to be a child in a green field than a knight of many orders." In this paper, I shall explore the bearing of this high estimate of childhood on spiritual education. MacDonald explores the spirituality of the child in his essay "A Sketch of Individual Development" and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Fantasy, Fairy Tales, Children
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Baker, Deirdre F. – Children's Literature in Education, 2006
This paper sketches a "map" of certain patterns in current children's fantasy. Beginning with literal maps of fantasy worlds, I point out the similarities of the physical layout of a number of invented worlds, suggesting that sameness of geography often indicates a lack of innovation in the ideological or philosophical ideas behind the stories.…
Descriptors: Novels, Geography, Fantasy, Fairy Tales
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Mages, Wendy Karen – Review of Educational Research, 2008
This systematic review of the literature synthesizes research from a number of disciplines and provides a succinct distillation of the methods and measures used to study the impact of creative drama on the language development of young children. An analysis of the merits and limitations of the reviewed studies reveals a number of methodological…
Descriptors: Drama, Dramatics, Young Children, Language Acquisition
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MacVeagh, Charles Peter; Shands, Frances – Language Arts, 1982
Examines the possibly factual origins of several elements of fantasy literature, including giants, dwarfs and goblins, fairies, talking animals, and the ability to transform beings into other shapes. (HTH)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Fables, Fairy Tales
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