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Bollen, Sharon Kesterson – 1981
This paper introduces an artistic model of planning and problem solving. The model is based on a case study of processes engaged in by a college art student during the course of producing a senior thesis in batik (a wax-resist fabric dyeing process). Based on the premise that knowledge of the creative process is essential to understanding the…
Descriptors: Art Products, Case Studies, Creative Thinking, Data Analysis
GUILFORD, J.P.; AND OTHERS – 1961
THIS PROJECT INVESTIGATED THE FACTORS OF "DIVERGENT PRODUCTIVE THINKING" WHICH CONTRIBUTE MOST TO CREATIVE BEHAVIOR. TWO JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLS WERE INVOLVED. ONE WAS RELATIVELY LARGE, IN A MODERATE-INCOME AREA. THE OTHER WAS SMALLER, AND WAS SITUATED IN A PROFESSIONAL COMMUNITY. IN THE SMALLER SCHOOL SOME 220 STUDENTS WERE TESTED IN TWO…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Creative Thinking, Factor Analysis, Gifted
1964
FIVE PRINCIPLES FOR ENCOURAGING CREATIVE THINKING ARE TO TREAT QUESTIONS WITH RESPECT, TO TREAT IMAGINATIVE IDEAS WITH RESPECT, TO SHOW PUPILS THAT THEIR IDEAS HAVE VALUE, TO PERMIT PUPILS OCCASIONALLY TO DO SOMETHING FOR FUN OR PRACTICE WITHOUT THREAT OF EVALUATION, AND TO TIE IN EVALUATION WITH CAUSE AND CONSEQUENCES. DR. E. PAUL TORRANCE'S…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Expression, Creative Thinking, High Schools
ZAHN, JANE C. – 1966
THIS COMMENTARY ON CREATIVITY RESEARCH DEFINES THE CREATIVE RESPONSE AND THE PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CREATIVE PERSON, AND OUTLINES THE CREATIVE PROCESS AND THE BARRIERS AND FACILITATORS TO IT. CREATIVE WRITERS AND PAINTERS ARE USED AS EXAMPLES. CERTAIN TEACHING METHODS ENCOURAGE CREATIVITY--(1) LEADING THE STUDENT TO QUESTION, (2) USING…
Descriptors: Administration, Administrator Role, Adult Education, Adult Educators
JENKINS, KENNETH D. – 1965
CREATIVE WRITING SHOULD BE GROUNDED IN THE EXPERIENCES OF THE WRITER. THUS, IN TEACHING CREATIVE WRITING, THE TEACHER MUST REALIZE (1) THAT HE IS NOT ABLE TO TEACH CREATIVITY, (2) THAT CREATIVITY IS NOT RESERVED FOR THE INTELLECTUALLY GIFTED, (3) THAT THE STARTING POINT FOR CREATIVE WRITING IS THE INDIVIDUAL'S EXPERIENCE, (4) THAT WRITING IS…
Descriptors: Assignments, Creative Expression, Creative Thinking, Creative Writing
Lutz, Kathryn A. – 1978
Research involving split-brain patients has shown that the two hemispheres of the brain process information differently. The left side of the brain is more analytical, the right side is more holistic, taking in overall characteristics rather than specific detail. This reserach can be applied to the educational process in several ways. The concepts…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Creative Thinking
Byrne, Anne; And Others – 1974
This curriculum guide was designed to improve creative problem-solving skills in children through the use of career concepts. It was the basis of the Career Awareness Program for fifth and sixth graders at a N.Y. elementary school. The concepts may be presented in sequence or integrated into existing programs and disciplines. Each worksheet…
Descriptors: Career Awareness, Career Education, Course Descriptions, Creative Thinking
Torrance, E. Paul – 1969
A creative-aesthetic approach to school readiness and beginning reading and arithmetic, as formulated by Fortson, was used with 24 kindergarten children. Two control groups included 39 children. Two replications of the study were made, each having two experimental groups. Experimentals scored signifcantly higher on tests of creative thinking,…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Creative Development, Creative Teaching, Creative Thinking
Aliotti, Nicholas C.; Blanton, William E. – 1969
The Picture Interpretation Test (Torrance and Grossman, 1967) was used in a battery of creative tests as part of a construct validity test. The test was administered to 46 boys and 37 girls in five first grade classrooms in a Clayton County, Georgia, elementary school. The purpose of the test was to measure the child's ability to "read a…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Creative Thinking, Creativity Research, Factor Analysis
Paffard, Michael – English: Literature, Criticism, Teaching, 1968
The primary concern of the English teacher should be to develop the unique potential every student has for imaginative thinking and creative expression. The ability to think creatively stimulates the student's intellectual curiosity, frees him from the rigidity of social class values, religious dogma, and historical precedent, and enables him to…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Expression, Creative Thinking, Creativity
Hibbs, Eleanore C. – 1973
In teaching students how to write, the utilitarian aspect does not need to be ignored, but--more important--the imaginative, expressive aspect should be emphasized. Since all writing depends on the full resources of the imagination, students need to be taught how to recreate or vivify people, objects, scenes, and feelings. A process which helps…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, College Instruction, Creative Thinking
Helleis, Shirley C.; And Others – 1970
Four booklets on the uses of newspapers in the elementary classroom are included. "Developing Creative and Critical Thinking Skills Through Use of the Newspaper in the Elementary Classroom" outlines how newspaper articles can provide a basis for discussions of issues, development of language skills and vocabulary, and composition assignments.…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, Educational Media, Elementary Education
Warren, Thomas F. – 1971
This dissertation reviews the literature on creative behavior and reports a study exploring the operational approach to creativity. One hundred and nineteen 6th-grade students were assigned randomly to 6 treatment levels. The Ss in 4 levels read booklets which described principles of creative thinking techniques, and which presented examples and…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Creativity Research
Williams, Frank E. – 1970
This volume, the final one in the series, presents about 400 ideas which teachers can use to teach creative thinking. The ideas are classified according to teacher behavior (strategies or modes of teaching) and by types of pupil behavior, as described in the rationale for the cognitive-affective instructional (CAI) model presented in volume 2. The…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Class Activities, Creative Activities, Creative Expression
Biddle, W. Barry; And Others – 1970
This study was conducted to determine whether efficiency in concept attainment can be increased as a function of the interaction of the use of good negative instances and increased attention as defined in terms of risk conditions. Subjects were 36 ninth-grade students of average problem solving ability as determined by IQ. Six treatment groups…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Creative Thinking
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