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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Jerome Bruner and his predecessors in the contemporary intellectual tradition /

Fox, June Trachtenberg January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
2

A philosophical evaluation to the theory and practice of social studies teaching /

Paynter, William Howard January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
3

Secondary curriculum model building using a synthesis of the thought of Harold Alberty and Jerome Bruner /

Butterfield, William Lee January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
4

The effects of two perceptual sets upon the subsequent perception of pictures : an application of the perceptual theories of James and Eleanor Gibson and Jerome Bruner /

Sharer, Jon W. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
5

An analysis of the application of the concepts of structure and sequence in Jerome Bruner's theory of instruction to the teaching of biblical concepts

Lawson, Kevin. January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 1981.
6

Conceptual relations of architecture, painting, color, and education and their application in an elementary school

Wilson, Jeffrey Allen January 1996 (has links)
If the theories of Piaget (stages of cognitive development) and Bruner (anything can be taught to anyone as long as it is taught in their language) are combined and applied to an elementary school the resulting conclusion is very quickly hands-on learning. Or, more simply, elementary-aged children understand their world through tangible experiences, so teach them through tangible experiences. A child's early memory code is formed by concrete experiences (combinations of the 5 senses), but these experiences become the building blocks for their later abstract cognitive thought patterns. This theory of education is widely applied from the standpoint of teach (hands on lessons, manipulative, etc.), but is a low if not nonexistent priority in constructing the environments in our schools. The experiential aspects of our schools should not only provide for a purely more pleasing environment, but should also allow for strong behavioral imprinting experiences that would result in memory niches -- the foundation for later abstract cognitive thought patterns. This diagram shows the progression of memory coding through these stages and how the resulting thoughts would be accessed. / Master of Architecture
7

A comparative analysis of the violin teaching methods of Shinichi Suzuki and Paul Rolland with reference to the theories of Jerome Bruner.

Croft, Margaret Louise. January 1987 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.Mus.)-University of Natal, 1987.
8

The doctrine of the holy spirit in pentecostalism and neo-pentecostalism, with special reference to the work of Frederick Dale Bruner

Higgs, Michael John January 1974 (has links)
The problem of 'authority' is of paramount importance in determining the theological stance of any religious movement and not least is this the case where the movement is labelled 'fundamentalist' both by its protagonists and its antagonists. Intro. p. 1.
9

A concepção de cultura em Bruner e Vigotski: implicações para a educação escolar

Rabatini, Vanessa Gertrudes [UNESP] 13 August 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:26:01Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2010-08-13Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T19:53:54Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 rabatini_vg_me_arafcl.pdf: 523069 bytes, checksum: 37bf69972304695072e774d98fcf417a (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / A presente pesquisa de mestrado teve como objetivo analisar a concepção de cultura em obras selecionadas do psicólogo norte-americano Jerome Bruner e do psicólogo soviético Lev Semenovich Vigotski e as suas implicações para a Educação Escolar. Este trabalho é fruto de uma pesquisa de iniciação científica, que analisou as concepções de escola em autores contemporâneos sob a perspectiva da Teoria da Atividade, comparando-as com as ideias pedagógicas contidas nos trabalhos de Vigotski, Leontiev e Luria. No decorrer dessa pesquisa constatou-se que muitas dessas concepções sobre a escola eram perpassadas pela questão da cultura. Portanto, com o objetivo de um estudo aprofundado, selecionamos autores como Bruner e Vigotski porque ambos desenvolveram uma concepção de cultura que traz várias implicações para a Educação Escolar na atualidade. Para analisar a cultura nas obras de Bruner e Vigotski, procedemos inicialmente a uma primeira leitura exploratória por meio da qual apreendemos de suas obras núcleos teóricos conceituais, sejam eles: universo simbólico, narrativa e comunidade cultural, para o primeiro autor; e natureza social do psiquismo, signos ou instrumentos culturais e função psíquica superior, para o segundo autor. Feito isso, realizamos uma análise comparativa dessa concepção e constatamos que Bruner transita em um veio fenomenológico hermenêutico, afirmando premissas da pós-modernidade e do multiculturalismo; enquanto Vigotski em uma vertente materialista histórico-dialética sustenta a ontologia do ser ligado à sua historicidade e às relações sociais. No que tange a análise dialética singular-particular-universal, concluímos que a concepção de cultura entre os dois autores se distancia. Para Bruner essa concepção é focada na particularidade aparente, já Vigotski, entende que a prática humana, na qual se inclui a produção da cultura,... / The objective of this master’s research was to analyze the concept of culture in selected works of the North American psychologist, Jerome Bruner, and of the Soviet psychologist, Lev Semenovich Vigotski, and the implications for school education. This work is the result of scientific initiation research and is an analysis of the concept of school in the writings of contemporary authors, from the perspective of the activity theory, comparing these concepts with the pedagogical ideas in the work of Vigotski, Leontiev and Luria. During the research, it was found that many of these concepts of school are imbued with the issue of culture. In order to carry out an in-depth study, we selected authors like Bruner and Vigotski, as both developed a concept of culture that has various implications for school education today. To analyze the concept of culture in the work of Bruner and Vigotski, we began with an initial exploratory reading through which we grasped the existence in their work of a theoreticalconceptual unity, as follows: symbolic universe, cultural narrative and community in the case of the first author, and the social nature of psychism, signs or cultural instruments, and superior psychic function, in the case of the second author. That done, we carried out a comparative analysis of this conception and found that Bruner follows a hermeneutic phenomenological vein, affirming the premises of postmodernism and multiculturalism, while Vigotski, from a materialistic, historical-dialectic angle, supports the ontology of being linked to his historicity and social relations. With regard to the singular-particular-universal dialectic analysis, we concluded that the conception of culture is distant when comparing these two authors. For Bruner, the conception is focused on particularity, while for Vigotski, it is human practice, including the production of culture, which always contains the ... (Complete abstract click electronic access below)
10

A Pedagogical and Educational Examination of The First Month At The Piano by Mana-Zucca

Keith, Laura Helene 06 December 2009 (has links)
The First Month at the Piano by Mana-Zucca, published in 1935, is a pioneering piano method to be taught by rote, supporting sound before sight learning theories, to the pre-school student. It differs from the Suzuki method in that The First Month at the Piano uses short, repetitive patterns, intrinsic to the Edwin Gordon Music Learning Theory. The First Month at the Piano has been compared to educational theories and has been found to follow Lev Vygotsky's theory of scaffolding and Jerome Bruner's principles of structure, readiness for learning, and motivation. The First Month at the Piano has been shown to provide a wide variety of sensory experiences for the pupil and establish a comfort and familiarity with the instrument. After completing the method, the pupil will have a solid aural foundation at the piano and will be fully prepared for primer level notation. It is a highly adaptable method and modified versions were made from the originals which would be of interest to today's teachers of pre-school piano students. Incorporation of interactive MIDI with electronic keyboards would enhance the students' learning experiences and be a direction to follow for future use of this method.

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