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Woolfolk Creativity
Woolfolk Creativity
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Woolfolk Creativity
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Creativity Imaginative thinking or problem-solving, tional psychological counselling and guidance but more with assisting these students to develop and maintain positive attitudes to themselves as learners and others as members of a learning. community, As well, their parents also frequently require practical counselling and guidance in order to foster and support their gifted and talented chile’s development most effectively. Table 4.8 provides ideas for supporting gifted learners. © What are the characteristics of gifted students? TREES + 1s acceleration a useful approach with gited students? | A criteria for identifying gifted or talented students is creat chapter with this topic. ity and we conclude the Creativity c ider this student. He had severe dysiexia—a learning disabilty that made Teading and writing exceedingly difficult He described iimself as an ‘underdog’. In school, he knew that if the reading assignment would take others an hour, he had to allow two or three hours. He knew that he had to keep a list of all his most frequently misspelled words in order to be able to write at all. He spent hours alone in his room. Would you expect his writing to be creative? ‘The person in the stop/think/write above is John Irving, celebrated author of what one critic called ‘willy inventive’ novels such as The World According to Garp, The Cider House Rules, and A Prayer for Owen Meany (Amabile, 2001). How do we explain his amazing creativity? Let’ start by asking: What is creativity? Defining Creativity Howard Gardner defines the creative individual as‘a person who regularly solves problems, fashions products, or defines new questions in a domain in a way that is initially considered novel but that ultimately becomes accepted in a particular cultural setting’ (Gardner, 1993a, p. 35). The notion of solving problems that are important for a particular culture i also part of his definition of intelligence. So creativity, talent and intelligence are related; they allow us to solve important problems (Robinson & Clinkenbeard, 1998). Creativity isthe ability to produce work that is original, but still appropriate and useful (Berk, 2002), Most psychologists agree that there is no such thing as all-purpose creativity’ UTE ey The context or conditions in which the teaching procedures are implemented i also importat fo learning, succes. Teachets should examine the extent to which thie classroom climate: + provides an opportunity for self diven learning encourages students to earn spontaneously and to manage their learning increases student awareness ofthe range of available resources fosters students interest in others who are gifted and talented ‘encourages learning outside of school, work with similar thinking pees who can be models helps students keep their sensitivities in perspective helps students understand ther giftedness helps them improve their peer group social interaction skill + helps them extend and integrate ther knowledgepeople are creative i a particular ara, as John Irving was in writing fiction. But tobe creative, the invention’ must be intended. An accidental spilling of paint that produces a novel design js not ercative unless the artist recognises the potential of the ‘accident or uses the spilling technique intentionally to create new works (Weisberg, 1993), Although we frequently associate the arts with creativity, any subject can be approached in a creative manner. What Is the Source of Creativity? researchers have studied cognitive processes, personality factors, motivational patterns, and background experiences to explain creativity (Simonton, 2000). But to truly understand creativity, we must also look to the social environment and the intrapersonal (cognition, personality) and social factors that support creativity (Amabile, 1996; 20015 Simonton, 2000) ‘Teresa Amabile (1996) proposes a three-component model of creativity: 1. Domain-relevant skills including talents and competencies that are valuable for working in the domain, An example would be Michelangelo’ skills in shaping stone, developed when he lived with a stonecutter’s family asa child. 2, Creativity-relevant processes including work habits and personality traits such as a John its of working 10-hour days to write and rewrite and rewrite until he perfected Intrinsic task motivation of a deep curiosity and fascination with the task. This aspect of creativity can be greatly influenced by the social environment (as we will see in Chapter 10), by supporting autonomy, stimulating curiosity, encouraging fantasy, and providing challenge. ‘Another social factor that influences creativity is whether the field is ready and willing to acknowledge the creative contribution (Nakamura & Csikszentmibalyi, 2001). History i filled iwith examples of creative breakthroughs rejected at the time (for example, Galileo's theory of the sun at the centre of the solar system) and of rivalries between creators that led each to push the edges of creativity (the friendly and productive tivalry between Picasso and Matisse). Creativity and Cognition. Having a rich store of knowledge in an area is the basis for creativity, but something more is needed. For many problems, that ‘something more’ involves restructuring the problem to see things in a new way, which leads to a sudden insight. Often this happens when a person has struggled with a problem or project, then set it aside for a while, Some psychologists believe that time away from the problem allows for incubation, a kind of unconscious working through the problem. It is more likely that leaving the problem for a time interrupts tigid ways of thinking so you can restructure your view of the situation (Gleitman, Fridlund, & Reisberg, 1999), So it seems that creativity requires extensive knowledge, flexibility, and the continual reorganising of ideas. Creative processes are also enhanced by motivation, persistence and social support. Creativity and Diversity. Even though creativity has been studied for centuries, ‘psycholo- {ists still have a long way to go before they come anywhere close to understanding creativity in ‘Women and minorities’ (Simonton, 2000, p. 156). The focus of creativity research and writing, cover the years has been white males. Patterns of cteativity in other groups are complex— sometimes matching and sometimes diverging from patterns found in traditional research. As ‘with many areas of research, women and ethnic minority groups have been underrepresented in many studies In another connection between creativity and culture, research suggests that being on the outside of mainstream society, being bilingual, or being exposed to other cultures might encourage creativity (Simonton, 1999, 2000), In fact, true innovators often break rules ‘Creators have a desire to shake things up. They are restless, rebellious, and dissatisfied with the status quo’ (Winner, 2000, p. 167). Restructuring Conceiving ofa problem in anew or diferent wayergent thinking Coming up many possible solutions, Convergent thinking Narrowing possiblies toa single instorming, Generating ideas without stopping t evaluate them. Assessing Creativity SEQ mSTLALE ow many uses can you ist fora brick? Take @ moment and brainstorm anita ‘down as many as you can. How do we assess creativity? One answer has been to equate creativity with divergent thinking. Divergent thinking is the ability to propose many different ideas or answers. Convergent thinking is the more common ability to identify only one answer. E, P, Torrance has developed two types of creativity tests: verbal and graphic (Torrance, 19725 Torrance & Hall, 1980). In the verbal test, you might be instructed to think up as many "uses as possible for a brick (as you did above) or asked how a particular toy might be changed to make it more fun, On the graphic test, you might be given 30 circles and asked to create 30 different drawings, each drawing including atleast one circle. Figure 4.3 shows the creativity of an 8-year-old girl in completing this task Responses to all these tasks are scored for originality, fluency, and flexibility, three aspects of divergent thinking, Originality is usvally determined statistically. To be original, a response must be given by fewer than five or 10 people out of every 100 who take the test. Fluency is the number of different responses, Flexibility is generally measured by the number of different categories of responses. For instance, if you listed 20 uses of a brick, but each was to build something, your fluency score might be high, but your flexibility score would be low, Of the three measures, fluency—the number of responses—is the best predictor of divergent thinking, but there is more to real-life creativity than divergent thinking (Bjorklund, 1989). ‘Teachers are not always the best judges of creativity. In fact, Torrance (1972) reports data froma 12-year follow-up study indicating no relationship between teachers judgments of their students’ creative abilities and the actual creativity these students revealed in theit adult lives A few possible indicators of creativity in your students are curiosity, concentration, adaptability, high energy, humour (sometimes bizarre), independence, playfulness, nonconforiity, risk taking, attraction to the complex and mysterious, willingness to fantasise and daydream, intolerance for boredom, and inventiveness (Sattler, 1992). Creativity in the Classroom Today’s and tomorrow's complex problems require creative solutions. How can teachers promote creative thinking? All too often, in the crush of day-to-day classroom life, teachers stifle creative ideas without realising what they are doing, Teachers are in an excellent position to encourage or discourage creativity through their acceptance or rejection of the unusual and imaginative. The Guidelines on the p. 168, adapted from Frederiksen (1984) and Sattler (1992), describe other possibilities for encouraging creativity. Brainstorming. In addition to encouraging creativity through everyday interactions with students, teachers can try brainstorming. The basic tenet of brainstorming is to separate the process of creating ideas from the process of evaluating them because evaluation often inhibits creativity (Osborn, 1963). Evaluation, discussion, and criticism are postponed until all possible suggestions have been made. In this way, one idea inspites others; people do not withhold potentially creative solutions out of fear of criticism. John Baer (1997, p. 43) gives these rules for brainstorming: 1. Defer judgment, 2. Avoid ownership of ideas. When people fel that an idea is ‘theirs egos sometimes get in the way of creative thinking, They ave likely to be The focus of eet roearch and writing inthe past more defensive later when ideas are critiqued, and they are less willing has Deon on wnt als. This underepresents and to allow their ideas to be modified. misunderstand the nature of o ttle minority oroues. yn women andFeel free to ‘hitchhike’ on other ideas, This means that its okay to borrow elements from ideas already on the table, or to make slight modifications of ideas already suggested. Encourage wild ideas. Impossible, totally unworkable ideas may lead someone to think of other, more possible, more workable ideas. Its easier to take a wildly imaginative bad idea and tone it down to fit the constraints of reality than to take a boring bad {dea and make it interesting enough to be worth thinking about, Take Your Time—and Play! Years ago, Sigmund Freud (1959) linked creativity and play: ‘Might we not say that every child at play behaves like a creative writer, in that he creates a world of his own, of rather, rearranges the things of his world in a new way which pleases him? The creative writer does the same as the child at play. He creates ‘a world of phantasy which he takes very seriously—that is, which he invests with large amounts of emotion’ (pp. 143-144). There is some evidence that preschool children who spend more time in fantasy and pretend play are more creative, Infact, playing before taking a creat test resulted in higher scores on the test for the young students in one study (Berk, 20015 Bjorklund, 1989). Teachers can encourage students of all ages to be more reflective—to take time for ideas to grow, develop, and be restructured. here are a number of students with IQ scores over 140—in the top 1 per cent of the population. These students may grow up to be experts and_ high-achieving, professionals—but they do not innovate. They lack innovation that establishes a new field or revolutionises an old one, Even child mastered well-established domains very early, but innovators change the entire domain. Innovators often are rebellious, restless, disstis- Source: et or cop © 1980 by Sclastc estng Serie, fied, courageous and independent. ‘Individuals who ultimately make | I Rented by prrsten of cholic Tsing Seve, ne cteative breakthroughs tend from their earliest days to be explorers, | prr“p'woranae 02 "2" Me (zane Tests of Cestwe rinking innovators, and tinkerers. ..Often this adventurousness is interpreted. as insubordination, though more fortunate tinkerers receive frOm gy Figure 4.3 A Graphic Assessment ofthe Creativity teachers or peers some form of encouragement for their experimen- tation’ (Gardner, 1993a, pp. 32-33). What can parents and teachers do, to encourage these potential creators? Winner (2000) lists four dangers to avoid: of an Eight-Year-Old 1. Avoid pushing so hard that the child’s intrinsic passion to master a field becomes. craving for extrinsic rewards. 2. Avoid pushing so hard that the child later looks back on a missed childhood. 3. Avoid freezing the child into a safe, technically perfect way of performing that has led to lavish rewards. 4. Be aware of the psychological wounds that can follow when the child who can perform perfectly becomes the forgotten adult who can do nothing more than continue to perform perfectly—without ever creating something new. Finally teachers and parents can encourage students with outstanding abilities and creative talents to give back to the society that has provided the extra support and resources that they needed. Service learning, discussed earlier in the book, is one opportunity. * What is creativity and how is it assessed? PRES « tow can teachers support creativity inthe classroom? Describe tachniques that toacrs can uso to enhance creative thirking in the classroom.UIDELINES Encouraging Creativity ‘Accept and encourage divergent thinking. Examples 1. During class discussion, ask Can anyone suggest diferent ‘way o looking at this question?” 2, Reinforce attempts at unusual solutions to problems, even if the final producti not perfect. | Emphasis that everyone is capable of creativity in some form. Examples | 1. Avoid describing the feats of grat artists or inventors a if they vere supethutnan acomplishimens | Recogoie rte ellos in cach student work Have a | separte rade fr originality on some asignments, | | | Tolerate dissent. Examples 1. Ask students to support dissenting opinions. 2. Make sure nonconforming students receive an equal share of classroom privileges and rewards Be a stimulus for creative thinking. Examples 1. Usea class brainstorming sesion whenever possible, 2, Model creative problem solving by suggesting unustal solutions for cass problems. 3. Encourage students to delay judging a particular suggestion for solving a problem until all the possiblities have been considered. Encourage students to trust their own judgment. Examples 1. When students ask questions you think they can answer rephrase coda the questions and diet them backto the students. 2. Give ungraded assignments from time to time.
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