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・ An Illustrated Book of Bad Arguments
・ An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Post-Revolution Havana Cigars
・ An Illustrated History
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・ An Image of the Past
・ An Imaginary Country
・ An Imaginary Life
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・ An Imaginary Tale
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An Imaginative Approach to Teaching
・ An Imaginative Experience
・ An Imitation of Love
・ An Immortal Man
・ An Imperative Duty
・ An Impossible Job
・ An Impudent Girl
・ An Inaccurate Memoir
・ An Inch of Gold for an Inch of Time
・ An Incident at Krechetovka Station
・ An Incompetent Hero
・ An Incomplete History of the Art of Funerary Violin
・ An Inconsistent Truth
・ An Inconvenient Book
・ An Inconvenient Lie


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An Imaginative Approach to Teaching : ウィキペディア英語版
An Imaginative Approach to Teaching

''An Imaginative Approach to Teaching'' is a 2005 non-fiction book by Kieran Egan that explains his ideas about how students’ imaginations work in learning. It focuses on the applications of this philosophy in the everyday classroom setting utilizing a set of prescribed cognitive tools.〔TAŞAR, M. F. (2007). An imaginative approach to teaching. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 3(3), 247-48〕 This book is an elaboration of some of Egan’s ideas about how the acquisition of cognitive tools can work effectively in education. He expounded these ideas in his 1997 book ''The Educated Mind''.〔Sawyer, K. R. (2006). An imaginative approach to teaching. ''Teachers College Record'', 108(1), 179-82.〕
==Summary==
This book contains three main chapters. Each of these chapters focuses on a particular stage of cognitive development and the set of cognitive tools that people use at these stages. The stages are linked to the development of oral language, literacy and theoretical thinking.
The first chapter describes the cognitive tools linked with oral language use. These include story form, metaphor, binary opposites, rhyme, rhythm and pattern, humor, mental imagery among others. These tools first become present in preliterate people, which generally happen to be children before the age of seven.
The second chapter describes the cognitive tools that are added with the onset of literacy. These include a sense of reality, interest in extremes of experience, association with heroes, connecting knowledge with human meaning, narrative understanding among others. Egan states that these tools do not replace the previous toolkit, but are additions.
The third chapter describes the cognitive tools that are added when students are nurtured toward theoretical thinking. The two previous toolkits are prerequisites to developing this toolkit. Some of the tools indicated here are a sense of abstract reality, a sense of agency, a grasp of general ideas and their anomalies, a search for authority and truth, and meta-narrative understanding.
After each of these three chapters, a section referred to as a “half chapter” is included. These half chapters include suggested planning frameworks for the preceding cognitive toolkit and a series of example lessons or units.〔TAŞAR, M. F. (2007). An imaginative approach to teaching. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 3(3), 247-48〕

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