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Hashim, Fatimah; Awang, Halima – Journal on School Educational Technology, 2006
How learners learn to take responsibility for their own learning remains a challenge for educators. One concept that has not been widely considered that we propose is an important requirement in successful independent learning is the concept of Gumption (Pirsig, 1974). Gumption is all about initiative and creativity, zeal and vigour--the practical…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Creativity, Educational Quality, Teaching Methods
Wharton, John – 1981
An art teacher can lead students through exercises and discussions which explain and develop techniques, promote ingenuity, give pride of craftsmanship, and provide the base upon which a lasting interest in the visual world can be built. The art teacher's first priority in the studio is to take students who, for the most part, have been deprived…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Art Expression
Mountain, Lee – 1981
Remedial readers may be given opportunities to be creative through three approaches: inventiveness games, branched fiction, and pantomime and creative dramatics. Inventiveness games can stimulate creative thinking and serve as a launching pad for creative writing activities. In branched fiction, the story works up to a cliffhanger situation and…
Descriptors: Ballads, Creative Dramatics, Creative Thinking, Creative Writing
Shapiro, Phyllis P.; Shapiro, Bernard J. – 1971
A recent study (Shapiro & Shapiro, 1970) showed that fourth graders from an upper middle class background with varying degrees of intelligence, creativity, and language achievement could be taught to express themselves poetically. The present study was undertaken to replicate these results with children from less advantaged backgrounds. The two…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Expression, Creative Teaching, Creative Writing
Barnfield, Gabriel – 1968
This book offers a perspective on creative drama, an art form akin to the spontaneous, imaginative painting produced by children, which frees the soul of the child to act naturally, give out unabashedly, and develop through such acting the realization of his own deep emotions. Critical of formal drama which can inhibit and deaden the free…
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Creative Dramatics, Creativity, Dance
Amidon, Jeanette; And Others – 1969
The purpose of the Central Atlantic Regional Educational Laboratory (CAREL) literature program was to encourage pupils' imaginative and expressive power and to improve their ability to use language effectively. The curriculum was designed for 3- to 8-year-olds who represented a wide socioeconomic background. Specialists trained teachers to relate…
Descriptors: Creativity, Curriculum Development, Kindergarten, Language Ability
Polk County Public Schools, Des Moines, IA. – 1969
This document reports the second year of Project IMPACT (Innovation and Motivation in Polk County for the Advancement of Creative Teaching), an ESEA Title III inservice program concerned with the need to "humanize" the process of education and the need to develop innovative teaching methods which will aid productive thinking and minimize…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Cognitive Processes, Creativity, Inservice Teacher Education
Evertts, Eldonna L., Ed. – 1970
Articles by four diverse educational innovators offer teachers some approaches to children's writing: (1) Eldonna L. Evertts advises that free self-expression should precede close attention to syntax and spelling; (2) James Britton, in four separate articles, points out: the intimate relationship between speech and children's processes of…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Children, Communication (Thought Transfer), Creativity
Rossi, Dominick Ferrantelli – 1975
This dissertation argues that the skill of using language to communicate should be based on the continuous development of the ability to use imagery, metaphor, and the inherently ambiguous nature of language. Since language is a symbolic restructuring of experience, any method designed to teach language arts must reflect the interplay between…
Descriptors: Child Language, Creative Expression, Creativity, Doctoral Dissertations
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Arnold, Donald G. – Foreign Language Annals, 1978
The Guichard technique is a response to the need for lively, sustained conversation in the language class. Referring to simple blackboard drawings by the non-artist teacher, students create people and situations involving an imaginary French family. (Author/SW)
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Creativity, Illustrations, Imagination
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jaggar, Angela M.; And Others – Language Arts, 1986
Illustrates how all of the language arts are used by teachers and students to uncover the imaginative potential of language and their creative potential. Models ways of thinking about and investigating how instructional experiences, including classroom activities and the ways teachers interact with students, affect learning. (HTH)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Creativity, Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smith, Peter – Art Education, 1985
Contradictions in the literature abound concerning Franz Cizek's role in fostering creative art. Researchers should turn to student recollections to determine what Franz Cizek's contribution to art education really was. A former Cizek student who today is prominent in design work is interviewed. (RM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Childrens Art, Creative Art
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Arnold, Helen – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1984
Provided and discussed are examples of children's writing that can be valued aesthetically. Teachers should help children evaluate their own writing processes and products. This self-evaluation will help children develop their own creativity and make them more able to appreciate the writing of others. (RM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Child Development, Children, Comparative Education
Alberta Learning, Edmonton. Special Education Branch. – 2000
This guide is intended to help schools and classroom teachers in Alberta provide successful school experiences for gifted and talented students. Section 1 focuses on program administration, including Alberta legislation, policy, and regulations; district administration of programs; and school administration of programs. Section 2 identifies an…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Academically Gifted, Creativity, Curriculum Development
Orley, Ray – 1999
Part of a series for early years teachers in Scotland, this guide focuses on ways to provide creative opportunities that support and enhance child development. The guide discusses how to respect children's creativity while observing and developing their skills and suggests practical and creative alternatives to the mass production of identical…
Descriptors: Art Education, Childrens Art, Creative Development, Creativity
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