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Chapter 12 Nurturing the Imagination
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Course Objective #2 Gain knowledge and appreciation of the nature and meaning of the arts, the historical, cultural and social contexts, personal expression, production / performance, and art criticism.
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Course Objective #3 Plan and implement developmentally and individually appropriate curriculum and instructional practices based on knowledge of individual children, the community, and curriculum goals and content that honor children’s prior experiences at home and at school.
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Course Objective #4 Use and explain the rationale for developmentally appropriate methods that include play, small group projects, open- ended questioning, group discussion, problem solving, cooperative learning and inquiry experiences to help young children develop intellectual curiosity, solve problems and make decisions.
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Course Objective #5 Demonstrate current knowledge of and ability to develop and implement meaningful, integrated learning experiences, use the central concepts and tools of inquiry in curriculum content areas including art, music, drama, and movement
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The imagination is not just a faculty separate from the mind. It is the mind itself in its entirety Gianni Rodari (1996)
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Definition of dramatic arts Drama could be as formal as children memorizing and performing a theatrical production Dramatic play is the ability to make-believe and create pretend stories
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Piaget’s levels of play 1.Practice play – infants in sensorimotor stage explore and interact with objects using repeated actions 2.Symbolic play – preoperational children imitate action they have seen during make believe scenarios 3.Concrete operational – children play games with preset rules & organized sports, or re-enact stories they already know
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Vygotsky and Play Make believe only possible with emergence of abstract thought Play promotes learning as children practice social behaviors in safe environment Bruner and Sutton-Smith agree that play is a way to learn and think
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Power of Play Children learn about the world Active Intrinsically motivating Integrates everything children know Promotes longer attention spans and allows children to pursue interests more deeply Develops creatively, social, emotionally & cognitively Fun way to learn
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Dramatic Arts and Developmental Growth Physical Social Cognitive Language skills Emotional Drama concepts & skills
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How children develop through dramatic arts Proficiency in oral language and body control How to use costumes, props & settings Aesthetically organized & creative presentation of a message or story By age of 5 years most children capable of creating & performing complex stories, often sustaining them over an extended period of time
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Using dramatic arts to assess growth Content knowledge Critical and creative thinking Physical control Language development
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Meeting special needs Auditory needs Visual needs Accepting differences
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Sequence of development in dramatic arts (p. 393) Preschool: constructive play w/ blocks, sand, etc. w/ other children w/ increasing interaction uses voice to match character play more fictional, can pretend, imaginary playmates, role-play imaginary characters play more fictional, can pretend, imaginary playmates, role-play imaginary characters retell, invent & acts out stories w/ simple plots, invented stories incorporate ideas from familiar stories
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Sequence of development in dramatic arts (p. 393) Kindergarten more orderly object & constructive play cooperative play w/ shared purpose talks about their play fantasy play is more complex & fluid uses invented spelling & drawing to tell a story
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Sequence of development in dramatic arts (p. 393) Primary construction more complex, creates props, likes games w/ rules enacts roles & assigns roles in logical, fair ways increased control over voice evaluates dramatic performance can use dissimilar objects to represent others, knows difference between real & pretend, daydreaming replaces pretend play writes invented stories from experience or picture, stories have elaborate plots, scripts for drama & puppet shows
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Designing dramatic arts activities Informal dramatic play Play Centers Addressing diversity Adults may facilitate with words, props, modeling, rules, etc. Prop boxes, designated areas Play centers, antibias props, selected dolls, added diversity to prop boxes
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Developing the imagination Mental imagery –Reduces stress, fear & pain Planning guided imagery activities –For children who have learned to fantasize & can remember what they have imagined –Mind pictures, memory pictures, imagining the familiar, trips of the imagination, expressing mental images
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Pantomime Acting out without words Descriptive pantomimes – gradually longer and more involved Planning pantomimes – space, audience, props, seeing everyone, can everyone see and hear you, building on children’s skills, clear rules
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Pantomime Infants & Toddlers – doing things (Mulberry Bush), being things (walk like a lion), being silly, playing with props Preschoolers/Kndgt. – pretend within normal fantasy play, how would? Inside the picture, re-vision it, be someone, statues would? Inside the picture, re-vision it, be someone, statues Primary – messages, invisible objects, who or what or where am I? slow motion, tableaus (hold pose), verbs
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Improvisation Experience Representation of an idea through movement and words Descriptive improvisation Role-plays Props – often help people relax in roles and not worry about speaking Masks
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Improvisation Infants & Toddlers - Faces and sounds, picture perfect Preschool/Kndgt. – sound effects, clown around Primary – card readers, do as I say, talk back
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Story Play (or narrative drama) Experience Characters, verbal expression, use of the body, plot, conflict, setting, mood Finger plays – little stories to catchy rhymes Storytelling/retelling – ancient art form was way to preserve and relay history and culture Narrative drama – physical retelling of familiar poems, fables, nursery rhymes & stories Puppetry - inanimate object brought to life through manipulation
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Storytelling Infants & Toddlers – family stories, read stories, tell me Preschool/Kndgt. – family & school storeis, retell, puppets, masks, take a role, draw it Primary – story jar, odd pairs, everyone’s story, one word, “what would happen if …?” describe it, setting easel
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Costumes, hats & jewelry
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I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited, Imagination encircles the world. I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited, Imagination encircles the world. Albert Einstein
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For next week April 27th Post reflection on wiki Review (look at Appendix A on Safety) Make puppet(s) Make scenery, props, etc. Record music, make aids to increase participation of classmates Write puppet show script from familiar story Practice puppet show with your team
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