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Luzzatto, Paola; Ruzibuka, Letisia; Njau, Mary; Makoye, Anitha; Mbwambo, Jessie – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2022
An autobiographical, narrative art therapy approach to treat drug addiction was co-developed at the Methadone Clinic of Muhimbili National Hospital, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania. The 10-session art therapy intervention included a group of 7 men. The protocol, as illustrated with a case example, suggests that it could help resolve deep-seated pain,…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Clinics, Self Esteem, Psychological Patterns
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Deering, Catherine Gray – Psychology Learning and Teaching, 2018
This article presents a unique approach for teaching crisis intervention in that it involves students reading novels and autobiographies to use as case studies in order to apply the theories and concepts. A rationale for the use of literature as a projective device to help students experience personal growth and to target the affective domain of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Crisis Intervention, Novels, Autobiographies
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Prendergast, Monica M. – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2014
In this special issue, each author addresses how ABER work connects with and/or directly addresses society's need/s and the public good as perceived by the researcher. As there are many construals of the "public good" and the relation to art-making and the arts to this "public good," each author will conceptualize her/his…
Descriptors: Art, Educational Research, Research Methodology, Autobiographies
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Westwood, Marvin J.; Ewasiw, Joan F. – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2011
The aim of this article is to introduce an integrated approach for helping clients. The approach combines and builds on two group-based interventions: guided autobiography and therapeutic enactment. Descriptions of the two interventions individually and a transtheoretical model for change are provided. How change occurs through the proposed…
Descriptors: Group Counseling, Counseling Techniques, Intervention, Autobiographies
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Pliner, Susan M.; Iuzzini, Jonathan; Banks, Cerri A. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Scholars who study teaching and learning have provided the academy with a range of progressive pedagogies that move beyond traditional ways of teaching. In the call for the use of diverse classroom practices in higher education, many have highlighted the benefits and challenges that come with collaborative teaching models. In this chapter, the…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Team Teaching, Teacher Collaboration, Teaching Methods
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Brown, Alice W. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2011
Colleges survive sometimes because they are able to merge with another institution (a for-profit company, another private college, a state university). The change at the College of Charleston was shaped in the 1970s, when the college did not "merge" with a state institution--it "became" a state institution, which grew.. and…
Descriptors: Small Colleges, Private Colleges, Autobiographies, College Presidents
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Chung, Sheng Kuan – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2009
An autobiographical portrait is an artistic representation that shows not only a person's physical characteristics, but also his or her personality, knowledge, history, and/or lived experiences. Understanding student autobiographical portraits not only helps art teachers gain insight into their students' prior knowledge of and experiences with…
Descriptors: Females, Adolescents, Portraiture, Autobiographies
Wright, Rolland H. – Ethnicity, 1980
Discusses a view of marginality as it applies to groups interacting on a familiar, personal basis ("folklike" groups) as opposed to groups interacting as strangers ("urban" groups). Concept is discussed from the author's personal experience growing up in a socially isolated family in an urban community. (MK)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Case Studies, Ethnic Groups, Group Dynamics
Heller, Scott – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1992
Increasingly, academic scholars are turning to personal and autobiographical writing as a more fulfilling form of self-expression, as illustrated by the career changes of nine women and one man. One critic finds the personal tone an evasion of politics and lacking in rigorous analysis. (MSE)
Descriptors: Authors, Autobiographies, Career Change, Case Studies
Ritchie, Joy; Ahlschwede, Margrethe – Quarterly of the National Writing Project and the Center for the Study of Writing and Literacy, 1993
Describes the Nebraska Literacy Project, a 5-week workshop for K-12 teachers modeled after the Nebraska Writing Project. Shows how teachers can encourage students to look closely at their own literacy histories and their daily practices as readers and writers. Presents the literacy histories as recorded by some participants. (HB)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Case Studies, English Curriculum, English Instruction
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McCarthey, Sarah J. – Language Arts, 1994
Suggests that personal writing poses both opportunities and risks in writing classrooms. Discusses the experiences of two children in a fifth/sixth-grade writing process classroom. Notes that benefits of personal writing are opportunities for authenticity, finding voice, and a therapeutic value; whereas risks include coercion of students who are…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Case Studies, Classroom Environment, Intermediate Grades
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Roulston, Kathryn – Music Education Research, 2006
Increasing numbers of music education researchers have begun to use qualitative methods to examine research topics using interviews, observations, documents, and archival data. In this article, I review qualitative research methodology and its origins and methods, discuss topics that have been studied by music education researchers using…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Research Design, Ethnography, Case Studies
Butt, Richard; And Others – 1992
Teacher knowledge and development from the teacher perspective were studied. Teachers wrote their own stories using collaborative autobiography (writing individual stories in groups). This report documents the evolution of the research methodology in discerning the personal, individual, similar, common, and collective as researchers moved from…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Case Studies, Collaborative Writing, Comparative Analysis
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Monroe, Jacquelyn – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2006
Social work, like other disciplines, has long used case studies as a (1) methodological approach to communicating a body of knowledge, and (2) as a tangible means to acquaint students with archetypical applications of realistic conditions. In social work, one required course sequence enhanced by case study assessments is Human Behavior and the…
Descriptors: Social Work, Case Studies, Behavior, Autobiographies
Mayes, Clifford – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2005
How people experience, interpret, and enact time--personally, collectively, and transcendentally--is educationally significant. One's temporal hopes and fears, limitations and potentials, are the fundamental stuff out of which is forged "the constitution of human life in time." In this article, the author offers various perspectives on individual,…
Descriptors: Theory Practice Relationship, Time Perspective, Autobiographies, Spiritual Development
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