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Bollenbach, Carolyn – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1986
Teaching comprehension skills requires teaching to intuition with activities such as presenting puzzling situations to introduce a topic, using art to elicit latent feelings, using imagery and improvisations to enhance visualization, and using music and dance to encourage nonverbal expressions. (DB)
Descriptors: Art, Comprehension, Elementary Secondary Education, Imagery
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Kohn, Art – Teaching of Psychology, 1992
Describes a classroom activity featuring a simple stay-switch probability game. Contends that the exercise helps students see the importance of empirically validating beliefs. Includes full instructions for conducting and discussing the exercise. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Intuition
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Johnson, David E. – Teaching of Psychology, 1989
Presents a technique for introducing analysis of variance (ANOVA) at the concrete level of operational thought, enabling students in introductory statistics courses to understand the complex correlations and interactions between variables. Helps students develop an intuitive understanding of the concepts of between- and within-groups variance and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Higher Education, Intuition, Learning Strategies
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Powell, Stuart; Jordan, Rita – British Journal of Special Education, 1993
This article examines ways in which intuitive understandings may help teachers in developing the thinking of pupils with autism. The article suggests that, by working toward students' development of an autobiographical memory, it may be possible for them to establish an awareness of their own role as a problem solver. (JDD)
Descriptors: Autism, Educational Therapy, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Development
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Schwab, Lynne – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1991
This article describes a process for increasing the quality of students' thinking through alternating from a quiet intuitive state to rational logical processing. The article provides specific teaching suggestions using guided imagery for students in grades K-2, grades 3-4, and grades 5 through college. (DB)
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education
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Rosenthal, Bill – Primus, 1992
Offers calculus students and teachers the opportunity to motivate and discover the first Fundamental Theorem of Calculus (FTC) in an experimental, experiential, inductive, intuitive, vernacular-based manner. Starting from the observation that a distance traveled at a constant speed corresponds to the area inside a rectangle, the FTC is discovered,…
Descriptors: Calculus, College Mathematics, Discovery Learning, Experiential Learning
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Howell, Helen; Bressler, Jean – Roeper Review, 1988
Teaching style preferences of 157 teachers of gifted students were correlated with percent of time spent in teaching gifted children, years of teaching experience, and teaching level. Of the styles identified (Sensing-Thinking, Sensing-Feeling, Intuitive-Thinking, and Intuitive-Feeling), more experienced teachers revealed a preference for the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Cognitive Tests, Comparative Analysis, Correlation
Bennett, Albert B., Jr. – 1987
The learning difficulties that students experience with fractions begin immediately when they are shown fraction symbols with one numeral written above the other and told that the "top number" is called the numerator and the "bottom number" is called the denominator. This introduction to fractions will usually include a few visual diagrams to help…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics, Functions (Mathematics), Fundamental Concepts
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Avital, Shmuel; Barbeau, Edward J. – For the Learning of Mathematics, 1991
Presents 13 examples in which the intuitive approach to solve the problem is often misleading. Presents analysis of these problems for five different sources of misleading intuitive generators: lack of analysis, unbalanced perception, improper analogy, improper generalization, and misuse of symmetry. (MDH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Geometric Concepts