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Showing 1 to 15 of 37 results Save | Export
Dow, Gayle T.; Kozlowski, Katie – Educational Leadership, 2020
Gayle T. Dow and Katie Kozlowski, researchers at Creativity Research Lab at Christopher Newport University in Virginia, discuss how the brain makes us creative and what teachers can do to encourage creative learning in the classroom.
Descriptors: Brain, Creativity, Creative Development, Creative Thinking
Costa, Arthur L.; Kallick, Bena; McTighe, Jay; Zmuda, Allison – Educational Leadership, 2020
Students need specific thinking--or Habits of Mind--to engage with problems and become self-directed learners, write Arthur L. Costa, Bena Kallick, Jay McTighe, and Allison Zmuda. A curricular approach based on enhancing students' understanding of conceptually significant, transferable ideas can help schools teach these dispositions.
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Problem Solving, Independent Study, Transfer of Training
Beghetto, Ronald A. – Educational Leadership, 2018
Being creative always involves risk, and educators need to support students in taking "beautiful risks"--actions that have the potential to make a positive, lasting contribution to other's lives. To offer such support, educators must take risks too. Beghetto describes three "beautiful risks" educators can take to foster…
Descriptors: Creativity, Risk, Teaching Methods, Success
Spencer, John – Educational Leadership, 2018
Do your students occasionally seem bored? That's ok, says John Spencer. Doing tedious tasks or spending some time without stimulation can actually be great for creativity, freeing up your brain to make connections it might not otherwise have made. Spencer walks us through why our modern culture is so resistant to boredom and how we can cultivate…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Creativity, Psychological Patterns, Creative Thinking
Gao, Fang – Educational Leadership, 2020
Educators need to be wary of stifling imagination and creative thinking in our youngest learners. Education scholar Fang Gao discusses how it's not always about getting to the technically right answer, but allowing young learners to explore creative ways of thinking. She offers three ways to nurture this creativity.
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Mathematical Logic, Early Childhood Education, Grading
Spencer, John – Educational Leadership, 2017
Besides "thinking outside the box," the creativity needed to solve problems often involves thinking differently about the box, finding a new approach or off-beat way to use the materials, conditions, and even constraints that one has. Spencer discusses creative constraint--what happens when a problem solver runs into barriers that make…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Problem Solving, Barriers, Innovation
Roberts, Terry – Educational Leadership, 2020
Educators have long known that the Paideia Seminar format, an approach for close reading and class discussion, promotes critical thinking skills in young people and improves writing. Terry Roberts, director of the National Paideia Center, shows--with examples of actual Seminar dialogues--that these types of seminars also inspire creative and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 2, Group Discussion, Seminars
Borba, Michele – Educational Leadership, 2022
To prepare students for a tech-intensive future, educators cannot hold on to 20th-century learning practices. They must reimagine education and cultivate an updated skill set. Lessons led by caring educators will continue to help students be strong learners and critical thinkers; but "human" skills will equip them to handle an uncertain…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Development, Skill Development, Role of Education
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Ohler, Jason – Educational Leadership, 2013
This author contends that the United States neglects creativity in its education system. To see this, he states, one may look at the Common Core State Standards. If one searches the English Language Arts and Literacy standards for the words "creative," "innovative," and "original"--and any associated terms, one will…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Creativity, Literacy, Technology
Breiseth, Lydia – Educational Leadership, 2016
Most English language learners are from families that have recently immigrated to the United States-and many of those families traveled here at tremendous risk to seek better education for their children. It's important for classroom teachers to make building relationships with the families of ELLs a priority. Breiseth asserts that the most…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, Immigrants, Family School Relationship, Parent Teacher Cooperation
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Brookhart, Susan M. – Educational Leadership, 2013
Creativity is a simple concept that can be difficult to get one's head around. In its most basic sense, creative means "original and of high quality." Probably the foremost characteristic of creative students is that they put things together in new ways. Teachers can assess creativity at every grade level and in every subject, using both basic and…
Descriptors: Creativity, Feedback (Response), Evaluation Methods, Student Evaluation
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Garner, Betty K. – Educational Leadership, 2013
Students are so creative! How can teachers help them use that creativity to learn? This question haunted the author while she was teaching art in a K-8 public school. In art class, she frequently saw students demonstrate refreshingly original ideas in their drawings and paintings as well as innovative problem solving related to their projects.…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art, Creativity, Learning
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Berhrstock-Sherratt, Ellen; Rizzolo, Allison – Educational Leadership, 2014
Teacher collaboration and engagement in policy offer hope for improving teacher recruitment, retention, and morale-and for reenergizing the profession. Unfortunately, teacher engagement in education policy is woefully lacking. Research has shown that 70 percent of teachers feel out of the loop in district decision making. "Everyone at the…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Teacher Participation, Policy Formation, Teaching Conditions
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Roberts, Thomas B. – Educational Leadership, 1981
By encouraging students to use their minds in new ways, consciousness education enhances awareness and creativity. Examples include using guided cognitive imagery to introduce new material and using dreams for introducing students to poetry. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education, Imagination, Teaching Methods
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Treffinger, Donald J.; Ripple, Richard E. – Educational Leadership, 1971
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Instructional Programs, Problem Solving, Programed Instruction
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