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Peer reviewedKing, James Roy – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1995
This article offers guidelines for applying creative thinking to modern life stresses, focusing on the organization of experience into meaningful patterns. Suggestions are drawn from typical adult life stages, changes in role perception, mental effects of physical exercise, the use of suggestive fiction, mental classification of experience, and…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Coping, Creative Thinking
Peer reviewedWilson, Meena – Educational Leadership, 1993
Interviews with 400 high school teachers nominated by colleagues suggest teacher leaders seek challenge, change, growth; are supportive of colleagues; serve as role models for students but not for other teachers. Interviewees felt their influence in the high school was curtailed by school-culture and professional norms, as well as self-imposed…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Creative Thinking, High Schools, Interviews
Peer reviewedHerrmann, Ned – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1991
This article describes the development of a metaphorical whole brain model and its application to Applied Creative Thinking (ACT) Workshops to enhance individuals' capability for full creative functioning. The design of ACT workshops, the learning model used, and workshop components are described. (JDD)
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Creative Development, Creative Thinking, Creativity
Peer reviewedGrossman, Stephen R.; Wiseman, Edward E. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1993
Seven principles are presented for improving creative thinking, based on assumptions of creativity as a perceptual shift resulting from a metamorphic mental image. Principles include (1) the future initiates and pulls creative thought; (2) initial fact finding is best postponed; (3) problem redefinition is often retrospective; and (4) metaphors…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Development, Creative Thinking, Creativity
Peer reviewedHunkins, Francis P. – Education and Urban Society, 1991
Curriculum and teaching should be dialogic, multifaceted, critical experiences, not merely exchanges of information. Discusses the teacher's role in stimulating thinking processes and getting urban students to ask questions about class material and their own world. (CJS)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Design, Discovery Learning
Peer reviewedBradshaw, Lynn K.; Buckner, Kermit G. – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
The NASSP Taking the Initiative program was created to help principals and school leadership teams develop essential skills, such as the ability to give meaningful feedback, think creatively, function as a team member, gather resources, deal with resistance to change, and launch an initiative. This article describes the program's success in a…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Feedback
Peer reviewedSimonton, Dean Keith – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1998
This introductory article discusses a blind-variation and selective-retention model of the creative process developed by Donald Campbell. According to Campbell, creativity contains three conditions: a mechanism for introducing variation, a consistent selection process, and a mechanism for preserving and reproducing selected variations. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Creative Development, Creative Thinking, Creativity
Peer reviewedBarron, T. A. – Journal of Youth Services in Libraries, 1999
Discusses the importance of imagination and the power of stories. Draws on insights gained from visits with children growing up in difficult environments, and shares examples from the author's own works written for young adults. (AEF)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Books, Childhood Needs, Children
Peer reviewedReimer, Bennett – Music Educators Journal, 1997
Contends that only students with performance or composing abilities are given a chance to explore music in their education. Stresses the importance of teaching all students how to listen to music in an active, "minds-on" way instead of only teaching hands-on activities. Challenges the traditional music curriculum by refuting five myths…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education, Improvisation, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedGallucci, Nicholas T.; Middleton, George; Kline, Adam – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2000
Thirty-four gifted children in Louisiana and 34 from Connecticut were administered the Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (MPS) and the Khatena-Torrance Creative Perception Inventory (KTCPI). The KTCPI included the What Kind of Person Are You (WKOPAY) subtest, a measure of creative striving. Perfectionistic traits were negatively correlated with…
Descriptors: Children, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Gifted
Peer reviewedReiner, Miriam; Gilbert, John – International Journal of Science Education, 2000
Suggests that scientific thought experiments (TEs) draw upon three epistemological resources: conceptual-logical inferences, visual imagery, and bodily-motor experience. Argues that TEs are powerful because of students' thought capabilities related to imagination and visual imagery. Claims that TEs are not currently exploited by school learning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Epistemology, Higher Education
Peer reviewedCohen, Claire – Management Learning, 1998
Suggests that management education should explore accommodation of individual expression and interpretation within a flexible and open teaching framework. Analysis of fiction may support a management education that questions its own content and context. Argues that management educators must employ a bold approach to literary criticism if use of…
Descriptors: Corporate Education, Creative Thinking, Divergent Thinking, Educational Objectives
Peer reviewedLeggo, Carl – Interchange, 1998
Preservice teachers must learn to seek ways to transform the pedagogic world rather than conform to it as it is written, with traditions, conventions, rules, and patterns. They are encouraged to try to write the pedagogic world of students and teachers and live un/grammatically, challenging the ways that the world has been written for them. (SM)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Inquiry
Peer reviewedHogan, Claudia; Howe, Nina – Canadian Journal of Research in Early Childhood Education, 2001
This study investigated the effects of prop realism on the play of 24 preschoolers. Observations of play sessions revealed that highly realistic props and low-realism props elicited equal amounts of group dramatic play. However, low- realism props generated greater diversity of play themes, more fantasy role enactments, and more nonintended use of…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creativity, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedPuccio, Gerard J.; Talbot, Reginald J.; Joniak, Andrew J. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2000
A modified version of Kirton's Adaptor-Innovator Inventory was used to operationalize the person-environment fit model and a self-report measure was used to assess creative productivity in 40 British adults. Results indicate that style match between the individual and the environment was associated with higher levels of product novelty and…
Descriptors: Adults, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Environmental Influences


