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Hagood, Maralynn M. – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2003
Investigates the use of the Naglieri Draw-a-Person Test (DAP) for its appropriateness for use by art therapists. A total of 306 drawings were collected from 34 children, ages 5 to 10, over a 1-year period in three phases. Concludes that the Naglieri DAP would be a useful tool for art therapists in the assessment of cognitive development. (Contains…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Cognitive Development, Evaluation Methods, Freehand Drawing
Artwohl, Susan L. – 1980
Studies using human figure drawing as a measurement technique are reviewed as part of an inquiry concerning the effectiveness of instruction to improve children's body image. It is concluded that the findings reviewed are inconclusive as to whether instruction can improve children's perceptions and knowledge of body image, and that further…
Descriptors: Body Image, Children, Cognitive Development, Freehand Drawing
Sheridan, Susan Rich – 2002
This paper is concerned with the unfolding of human marks, beginning with scribbling, and their contribution to developing literacy. The paper argues that children's scribbles reveal a neural substrate destined for marks and influence that substrate significantly, cuing what is distinctly human in linguistic behavior and consciousness, or symbolic…
Descriptors: Attention, Attention Control, Brain, Children
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Pufall, Peter B. – Human Development, 1997
Frames a developmental psychology of art by contrasting the structural orientation of the study of drawing and the functional orientation of the study of artistry. This model maintains that graphic symbolization emerges with early mark-making, children's representative art is guided by perceptions of affordances, and children continue to engage in…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art, Art Education, Children
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Henley, David R. – Journal of Art and Design Education, 1994
Examines five different examples of scribble art with the purpose of entering the experience of the scribbler through empathetic understanding. The participants include a schizophrenic adult; a blind, deaf, and autistic 10-year old; a known artist; a precocious 3-year old; and an elephant. Paper discovers commonalties in their efforts. (MJP)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Art Criticism, Art Education, Art Expression