WHAT IS CREATIVITY???????
Creativity
is a big deal in the 21st century classroom. Many countries include it as a
core aim for their students in national curricula and even countries such as
Singapore that come top of world education league tables are recognising the need for more of it in their schools.
This surge
of interest in creativity among teachers, school leaders, academics and governments is partly driven
by a growing belief that a fast-paced global economy requires workers with the
flexibility of mind to adapt to constant change rather than follow a
traditional career path.
Surprisingly
, few teachers describe themselves as creative. This is perhaps because they have a
performance-related, arts-based model of creativity in their minds, such as
playing a musical instrument, painting a picture, acting a part in a play,
writing a unique song, poem or story. This is in contrast to a broader
definition of creativity as the ability to make connections between two
previously unrelated ideas or contexts.
Let
teachers be creative!!!!!!
They need
to be given permission to innovate and improvise by school leaders, which is
risky in a school culture structured around high-stakes testing. Once given this permission and
support, teachers can develop creative learning environments for their
students. This comprises both the physical environment of the classroom and a
teaching environment with the following characteristics:
- students are given some control
over their learning
- there is a balance between
structure and freedom
- teachers are “playful”
- time is used flexibly
- relationships between teachers
and learners include high expectations, mutual respect, modelling of
creative attitudes, flexibility and dialogue
- students work collaboratively and
assess each other
While each
of these characteristics on its own might seem like a description of good
teaching, it is their combination which creates the environment to promote
creativity.
READ THIS
EXAMPLE……
One teacher surprised his class by setting up
a series of activities on their tables while they were out at break to
introduce the topic of “gases”. These consisted of a candle burning, a series
of plastic cups containing different numbers of marbles, and pairs of inflated
and deflated balls.
The
teacher gave no vocal instruction, but there were question cards with the
activities, for example:
Watch
the candle as it burns, what do you notice? Look at how the marbles are
arranged, shake them, what is happening? Squeeze the two rugby balls, what can
you say?
Initially
bemused, groups of pupils soon began interacting with the exhibits and
discussing their ideas. This unexpected start to the lesson – out of the normal
routine – together with an invitation to look at everyday phenomena
differently, provided the “hook” needed to engage children’s enthusiasm in a
new scientific topic.
EXAMPLE 2 : Abstract concepts, made fun
Another
science co-ordinator at a primary school
used stop-frame animation with plasticine models (like the Wallace and Gromit
films) to help children understand forces in real-life situations. Working in
groups of two or three, the children were asked to tell a story with their
short animations that would involve everyday examples of forces in use.
One
group of three girls shot a simple story of two boys having a fight “pushing
each other over” and a dog jumping on top of them. They then annotated the
resulting short movie on the computer with labels such as “push”, “pull”,
“gravity” or “air resistance”. One child commented:
You can be more creative when you do animation, because you can
design what you’re going to do, and you get to think things through, like what
forces you’re going to use and how the forces work.
Not only
did this experience help reinforce children’s understanding of the tricky and
abstract conceptual area of forces, it also enabled them to exercise choice,
make links with other areas of the curriculum and engage in critical reflection
as they viewed the results of their work.
Examples
such as these demonstrate how teachers’ own creativity and willingness to take
risks can promote creativity in the way their students are learning. Such
teaching for creativity is no laissez-faire, easy option – it requires careful
preparation. As Thomas Edison said of genius, it’s “1% inspiration, 99% percent
perspiration”.
Very informative and good article.
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