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Webb, Angela Naomi; Zhbanova, Ksenia S.; Rule, Audrey C. – Education 3-13, 2019
Narrowing of the curriculum because of standardised testing has caused creativity to be neglected in many schools; integration into reading instruction may provide a solution. This repeated measures study incorporated figural transformation drawings after a read-aloud of a book highlighting nutrition information as a way to both review book…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Literary Genres, Nonfiction, Books
Hui Li; Sierra Eisen; Angeline S. Lillard – Grantee Submission, 2019
Children's media is replete with human-like portrayals of animals and objects that wear clothing, speak, drive cars, and experience human emotions. Recent research has shown that anthropomorphic portrayals of animals in books lead children to think anthropomorphically about real animals. Here we asked whether this is also the case for an inanimate…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Mass Media, Animals, Childrens Literature
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Dernikos, Bessie P.; Thiel, Jaye Johnson – Literacy, 2020
In this article, we "think with" theories of affect and transmedial storytelling to explore the cruel optimism that standardised reading pedagogies (e.g. read alouds; leveled readers/independent reading) can produce for readers. We draw on particular moments in a first grade classroom to argue that such pedagogies transmit…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Futures (of Society), Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Wright, J. Talmadge; Embrick, David G. – American Journal of Play, 2018
Computer game play has been criticized for disrupting family life by some who claim digital fantasy play alienates individuals from everyday interactions, even as others hold that such play increases sociability among players and their families. The authors argue that the truth about game play is more complex. They draw on research using…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Role Playing, Computer Games, Criticism
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Read, Kirsten; Rogojina, Alena; Hauer-Richard, Olivia – First Language, 2022
There is robust evidence that reading aloud with young children can help them learn new vocabulary. Building upon prior research, this study tested the effects of "both" book text features "and" readers' spontaneous extra-textual word-highlighting strategies on 3- to 4-year-olds' vocabulary retention from repeated read alouds…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Native Language, Language Acquisition, Reading Aloud to Others
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De Maynard, V. A. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
Within the context of psychological counsellors and therapeutic encounters of psychotherapists, clients may reveal illicit fantasies where it is unclear whether he or she is acting out his or her illicit fantasies. Using web-based survey methods to collect qualitative data, I explored therapists' decision-making when clients disclose illicit…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Psychotherapy, Counselor Client Relationship, Fantasy
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Chan, Greta C.; Foy, Jeffrey E.; Magliano, Joseph P. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2018
In some narratives one world is embedded within the main world of the story, which we refer to as the base world, and elements from one world can cross over into the other. This study explored the conditions in which readers perceive character crossover as being likely to occur. Participants read stories that set up the potential for a character…
Descriptors: Story Reading, Literary Genres, Reading Rate, Fantasy
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Pyyry, Noora – Environmental Education Research, 2017
In this paper, I explore thinking that happens in children's meaningful engagement with the city. To open up my argument, I discuss two events during which children are caught up in "intra-active" play with things and spaces. I argue that this mode of being joyfully engaged with one's surroundings is key to what Jane Bennett (2001) calls…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Urban Environment, Environmental Education, Play
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Parlevliet, Sanne; Amsing, Hilda T. A. – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2021
Between 1902 and 1913 two acclaimed educational reformers wrote several series of children's primers in the Netherlands. Jan Ligthart and Hindericus Scheepstra collaborated closely with the painter Cornelis Jetses who provided the illustrations. The series would become classics in both text and image. In this article the symbolic educational…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Change, Instructional Materials, Illustrations
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Gilmore, Britney; Kramer, Michael W. – Communication Education, 2019
Symbolic convergence theory provides a framework to examine how group consciousness and meaning are formed. Because dialectical tensions are present in all human interactions (e.g., a need for flexibility and structure), group consciousness involves converging on meaning in the face of dialectical tensions. This research combined symbolic…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Professional Identity, Teacher Role
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Lewkowich, David; Pasieka, Jillian – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2017
When it comes to education, the dream cannot be controlled by the strictures of language or the conscious mind, and in its insistently disobedient character, is unwilling to submit to the demands of a deliberate and conscious curriculum. Indeed, we might say that what dreams represent is the absence of education itself, and a mobile energy…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Reading Writing Relationship, Cognitive Processes, Transformative Learning
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Thomas, Ebony Elizabeth – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2018
Humans read and listen to stories not only to be informed but also as a way to enter worlds that are not like our own. Stories provide mirrors, windows, and doors into other existences, both real and imagined. A sense of the infinite possibilities inherent in fairy tales, fantasy, science fiction, comics, and graphic novels draws children, teens,…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, Young Adults, Adolescent Literature, Fiction
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Christodoulakis, Nikolaos; Carulla, Clara Vidal; Adbo, Karina – Education Sciences, 2021
Perezhivanie is a concept that was originally defined by Vygotsky, but it did not become a part of educational theory until recently. Today the concept has been revived, and it is now used as a way to include emotional aspects into education and educational research. The concept also provides a rationale for describing and forming personalised…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Research, Early Childhood Education, Metacognition
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Stillwaggon, James – Educational Theory, 2017
The progressive language of growth and development that informs our shared ideal of the educated subject also informs the curricular structure of schooling, in which new learning builds upon established knowledge and students' development depends upon their desire to take on those identities associated with various achievements of knowledge. Each…
Descriptors: Resistance to Change, Psychological Patterns, Fantasy, Educational Change
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Ira J. Allen – College Composition and Communication, 2018
This article addresses an impasse between rhetoric and composition practice and theory. On one hand, from the poststructural through the posthuman, our most vigorous theories challenge classical notions of selfhood and agency. On the other hand, from institutional assessment through writing about writing, composition's most vigorous practices…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), Theory Practice Relationship, Postmodernism
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