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This illustrated handbook on teaching young children to draw has
been developed using what the authors call the "negotiated drawing
approach." It presents this approach to teachers, demonstrating how
it works, ideas for future work, and concrete evidence that it
actually produces good results.
This work traces the development of the human figure in children's
drawings, showing how children add to and alter their figures as
they get older and more skilful. It discusses why children's
drawings often seem so bizarre to adults, revealing what these
figures tell as about the child's Intelligence Or Emotional
Stability.; The Book Is Based In Examples From hundreds of
children, but concentrates on a particular set of drawings gathered
from one group of children attending a nursery. Also featured are
drawings by children with learning difficulties, so that readers
may see and learn from the different developmental patterns in the
drawing of human figures. Additionally, the book makes comparisons
of drawings by children in different cultures.
This work traces the development of the human figure in children's
drawings, showing how children add to and alter their figures as
they get older and more skilful. It discusses why children's
drawings often seem so bizarre to adults, revealing what these
figures tell as about the child's Intelligence Or Emotional
Stability.; The Book Is Based In Examples From hundreds of
children, but concentrates on a particular set of drawings gathered
from one group of children attending a nursery. Also featured are
drawings by children with learning difficulties, so that readers
may see and learn from the different developmental patterns in the
drawing of human figures. Additionally, the book makes comparisons
of drawings by children in different cultures.
First published in 1997. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
In this lavishly illustrated book, Maureen Cox gives a
comprehensive and scholarly account of children's understanding and
appreciation of art and their developing ability to produce their
own pictures. She discusses the main influences on children's
picture-making, including the popular media, adults' examples and
other children's pictures. As well as discussing the artistic
development of typically developing children, the book also
includes a discussion of children with intellectual disabilities
and those with a talent for art, some of whom are children with
autism. We tend to think of pictures as a strictly visual medium,
but the section on blind children's ability to recognise pictures
challenges this assumption. Cox evaluates the way that various
professional groups use children's pictures, for example to aid
recall of past events. Finally, she discusses the art curricula in
different countries and different educational philosophies and
suggests ways in which these different approaches could be
evaluated.
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