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Showing 46 to 60 of 169 results Save | Export
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DuBois, Fletcher – Journal of Museum Education, 2006
This article is an example of the use of an autobiographical curriculum theory approach which centers on the production of multiple educational lifelines across time and subject. Reactions to and questions about a late Medieval painting at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC are used to raise issues concerning what it means to be taught…
Descriptors: Museums, Art Education, Painting (Visual Arts), Personal Narratives
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Drake, Susan M. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Standards can help integrate a curriculum, as a fourth-grade teacher discovered when implementing a unit on the Middle Ages. Students created a medieval fair that demonstrated their learning in medieval history (social studies), pulleys and gears (science and technology), story telling (language arts), and costume and dance (fine arts). (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Integrated Curriculum
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Lieblein, Leanore; Pare, Anthony – English Quarterly, 1983
Argues that medieval drama in performance suggests a number of important issues about the nature of literature, particularly about the way narrative and dramatic art can express the life of a community. Presents a series of exercises that start with familiar, nonthreatening situations in order to approach the richness of medieval plays and the…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Drama, Dramatic Play, Higher Education
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Brasley, Stephanie Sterling – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
Information literacy (IL) was introduced as an important consideration when the American Library Association (ALA) Presidential Committee on Information Literacy (1989) touted the "Information Age" as the key catalyst for changes in how citizens view and interact with information. In the mid-1990s, with information technology taking center stage…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Information Technology, Information Literacy, Liberal Arts
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Hopton, Jim – School Arts, 1990
Describes how students incorporated the use of faux finishes in the construction of scenery for a school production of "Cinderella." After researching medieval castles and different types of stone surfaces, students used a sponge printing technique for exterior walls and a marbling technique for columns in the ballroom scene. (GG)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art, Art Education, Art Materials
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Christensen, Lois M. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 1999
Describes a unit for elementary students on the history and technology of writing from ancient to medieval times. Includes a contemporary writing and print exercise, an ancient and medieval writing exercise, a research activity on the evolution of writing, a biography study, a fine arts exercise, and a community survey. Addresses the unit…
Descriptors: Ancient History, Biographies, Elementary Education, Fine Arts
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Grimm, Reinhold – Unterrichtspraxis, 1992
The origin and development of two African saints are discussed: Saint Maurice, patron saint of the eastern empire of Otto I; and Caspar, the youngest of the three Magi. Their representation in German art is described and illustrated. (Author/LB)
Descriptors: African Studies, Art History, Art Products, Blacks
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Kostiukevich, Svetlana V. – Higher Education in Europe, 1996
Traces evolution of the medieval university's role in providing professional education. Argues that medieval universities evolved from two types of institutions--guilds and cathedral schools--into institutions that offered training in intellectual professions (theology, medicine, and law) but required prior mastery in liberal arts. The European…
Descriptors: College Role, Educational History, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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McNair, John R. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1991
Sketches the art of memory in the classical period, medieval times, and the sixteenth century. Maintains that in classrooms, workshops, and seminars the old memory art can illuminate the role of graphics in technical communication and can promote the creation of fresh, mnemonically powerful graphics for publications and presentation. (SR)
Descriptors: Business Communication, Higher Education, Memory, Technical Writing
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Simmer-Brown, Judith, Ed.; Grace, Fran, Ed. – SUNY Press, 2011
"Meditation and the Classroom" inventively articulates how educators can use meditation to educate the whole student. Notably, a number of universities have initiated contemplative studies options and others have opened contemplative spaces. This represents an attempt to address the inner life. It is also a sign of a new era, one in…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Instruction, Higher Education, Religion Studies
Reissman, Rose; And Others – Learning, 1994
Presents three curriculum boosting activities for elementary classes. A social studies activity builds bridges to other cultures via literature. A math activity teaches students about percentages using baseball card statistics. A language arts activity helps students learn to appreciate the language of Shakespeare. A student page presents a…
Descriptors: Baseball, Childrens Literature, Class Activities, Creative Teaching
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Jones, Patrick M. – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2007
Music educators must prepare students to survive and thrive in the global world of today (and in the anticipated future) through their best scholarly efforts. The magnitude of change caused by globalization requires a complete reexamination of school music offerings grounded in the realities of the global geo-sociopolitical environment--not…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Global Approach, Music Teachers
Bliese, John – 1979
The medieval study of classical rhetoric reached its zenith in the twelfth century. Rhetoric in its medieval phase can be divided into four distinct subdisciplines: "ars praedicandi," or the preaching art; "ars dictaminis," or the art of letter writing; "ars poetriae," which focused on style and developed elaborate theories of versification; and…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), European History, Intellectual History, Medieval History
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McGuire, Michael D.; Patton, John H. – Communication Monographs, 1977
Attempts to provide increased understanding of the nature and function of mystical preaching as a distinctive form of discourse by investigating the sermons of the medieval German mystic Meister Eckhart (1260-ca. 1327, 1329). (MH)
Descriptors: Clergy, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Mysticism
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Weisheipl, James A. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 1971
Descriptors: Art Education, College Faculty, Educational History
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