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Showing 1 to 15 of 133 results Save | Export
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Oganessian, Armen – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2023
This paper addresses a surprising phenomenon in the evangelical theological classroom. Evangelical theological students often approach theology as an exclusively analytic subject, failing to use imaginative criteria in "doing theology." Specifically, they fail to use their literary imaginations or what some call narrative imagination.…
Descriptors: Christianity, Theological Education, Imagination, Student Attitudes
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Kerslake, Lorraine – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
Ted Hughes is one of the most important poets in English literature of the last century and his huge volume of work (including his poetry, prose, plays, translations, letters and critical essays) has received a great deal of critical attention. Hughes was, of course, much more than just a writer. Throughout his life he was deeply engaged with…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Environmental Education, Poetry, Activism
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van Genugten, Ruben D. I.; Beaty, Roger E.; Madore, Kevin P.; Schacter, Daniel L. – Creativity Research Journal, 2022
Previous research indicates that episodic retrieval contributes to divergent creative thinking. However, this research has relied on standard laboratory tests of divergent creative thinking, such as generating creative uses for objects; it is unknown whether episodic retrieval also contributes to domain-specific forms of creativity. Here we start…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Memory, Recall (Psychology), Time
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Bev Hayward – International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, 2024
Feminist Imaginaries are psychological and social spaces where creative possibilities are overflowing. They facilitate new ways of being, new ways of knowing and new ways of knowledge creation. This paper embraces a decolonial and feminist approach to storytelling, remembering, reclaiming and retelling; telling the stories of a band of wandering…
Descriptors: Females, Experience, Decolonization, Power Structure
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Ramel, Frédéric; Vergonjeanne, Anaëlle – Journal of Political Science Education, 2023
Although the esthetic turn in International Relations (IR) has recently expanded to teaching, with professors promoting the mobilization of artistic material in the classroom, its use in students' productions and examinations has received scarce attention. Drawing on a course at Sciences Po Paris dedicated to IR normative theory and given for five…
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, International Relations, Fiction, Learning Processes
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Bourke, Lorna; Marriott-Fellows, Megan; Jones, Amanda; Humphreys, Lorna; Davies, Simon J.; Zuffiano, Antonio; López-Pérez, Belén – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2020
The current study investigated the extent cognitive and emotion regulation deficits (i.e., executive functions) associated with autism impact on the development of imagination in writing. Sixty-one children participated in the study (M age = 9 years 7 months, SD = 14 months, 18 female, 43 male), comprising a selected group with autism…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Imagination, Creative Writing, Autism
Prendergast, Barbara T. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The purpose of this qualitative action research study was to examine a published language arts curriculum, determine how Anna Craft's possibility thinking framework could be integrated into the curriculum, and then observe how students responded to the implementation of lessons integrating the elements of possibility thinking. The findings…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Teaching Methods, Creativity
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Sciurba, Katie – Journal of Literacy Research, 2021
In response to anti-Black policing in 2020 that led to the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, Black children and teens turned to poetry as a means to channel their self-described terror, rage, pain, horror, tiredness, and need for change. Reminiscent of the poetry of the Black Arts Movement and works published in "The Black…
Descriptors: African American Students, Student Attitudes, Racial Bias, Poetry
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Stephenson, Lisa; Dobson, Tom – Support for Learning, 2020
With increasing concerns in the UK about the positive mental well-being and flourishing of children, this research, using drama and creative writing with primary school teachers, children and a theatre company, looks at the links between creative processes and children's well-being. This pedagogy applies a capability approach and we use this lens…
Descriptors: Imagination, Childrens Attitudes, Children, Creativity
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Bomford, Kate – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
This essay considers the relative merits of critical writing and writing in role as a means of enabling and assessing students' responses to literary texts. Drawing largely on the author's experience of teaching "Frankenstein," it argues that the distinction between critical and creative writing is not as absolute as is sometimes…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Student Reaction, Student Attitudes, Creative Writing
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Martín de León, Carmen; García Hermoso, Cristina – Research-publishing.net, 2020
Literary texts offer a rich environment for language learning that teachers can exploit to develop not only students' linguistic (pragmatic, discursive) and cultural skills, but also communication and creative skills. In our study, we have used literature with different writing activities that involved the use of students' imagination and…
Descriptors: Literature, Novels, Second Language Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness
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Muijen, Heidi; Lengelle, Reinekke; Meijers, Frans; Wardekker, Wim – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2018
Career agency is a vaguely defined concept that is usually explained in terms of cultivating self-reliance, while it is at the same time being critiqued as a difficult to reach goal as a result of societal pressures. Instead of viewing agency through the lens of these opposing viewpoints, focused on people either being self-reliant or determined…
Descriptors: Imagination, Personal Autonomy, Empowerment, Career Development
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Gannon, Susanne; Jacobs, Rachael; D'warte, Jacqueline; Naidoo, Loshini – English in Australia, 2021
Disruptions to learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic have been one of the most concerning consequences of school closures in Australia during 2020. Carefully planned curriculum sequences and learning progressions were flipped into online formats, with teachers having very little time to prepare and students being unused to learning away from each…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Online Courses
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Garrett, Frances – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2018
The article discusses two versions of a complex role-playing exercise in undergraduate courses on Buddhism. The pedagogical exercise demonstrated how imagination cultivated through creative writing could be used to enhance learning about history, culture, and religion. Students were also challenged to generate an understanding of religious…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Buddhism, Religious Education, Teaching Methods
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Gouthro, Patricia A.; Holloway, Susan M. – Studies in Continuing Education, 2018
Many educators in adult, community and higher education contexts are concerned with fostering reflective learning amongst their students. This paper explores the concept of critical reflection and considers how engaging with fiction may be an innovative pedagogical approach to support critical learning opportunities. Drawing upon interviews with…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Adult Education, Fiction, Teaching Methods
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