Title of article
Drawings of Emotionally Characterised Figures by Children from Different Educational Backgrounds
Author/Authors
Burkitt، Esther نويسنده , , Barrett، Martyn نويسنده , , Davis، Alyson نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی 1 سال 2005
Pages
13
From page
71
To page
83
Abstract
Previous research has shown that children
systematically alter the size and colour of their
drawings in response to the emotional character
of the figures which they draw. However, these
findings have been demonstrated only with children
receiving mainstream Western education.
This experiment was designed to investigate
whether children receiving a different kind of
education also use scaling and colour differentially
for depicting figures of contrasting
emotional significance. 76 children, 44 children
from mainstream schools (21 boys, 23 girls) and
32 children from Steiner schools (15 boys, 17
girls) were divided into two age groups, with 38
children in the younger age group (mean age 4
years 7 months) and 38 in the older age group
(mean age 6 years 8 months). All children
completed three drawings of differentially characterised
human figures: a neutral, a happy, and
a sad figure. Children from the mainstream
schools drew larger figures overall, but educational
background did not interact with the
specific emotional character of the figures in
producing these scaling changes. However,
there were differences between the two educational
groups in relation to the colours used for
the negatively characterised figures. The findings
are discussed in terms of the need to further
understand the role of the educational system in
mediating children’s depictions of emotional
character in their drawings.
Journal title
International Journal of Art & Design Education
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
International Journal of Art & Design Education
Record number
122729
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