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Teaching for Creativity: Two Dozen Tips
By Robert Sternberg and Wendy M.
Williams
What makes a person creative? Why are some people more creative and
others less so? We often think that the creative people are the ones
who have some rare and unattainable ability, but it is not so.
Creative
people are ones who make a decision: They decide to buy low and sell
high in the world of ideas.
In this article, we first describe this
idea of creativity as a decision, which is formalized as an investment
theory of creativity. Then we describe 24 tips you can use in your
teaching in order to foster creativity in your students and in yourself.
The Investment Theory of
Creativity
Buying Low and Selling High
The investment theory of creativity (Sternberg & Lubart, 1995)
asserts that creative thinkers are like good investors: They buy low
and sell high.
Whereas investors do so in the world of
finance,
creative people do so in the world of ideas. Creative people generate
ideas that are like undervalued stocks (stocks with a low
price-to-earnings ratio), and both the stocks and the ideas generally
are rejected by the public.
When creative ideas are proposed, they
often are viewed as bizarre, useless, and even foolish, and summarily
are rejected. The person proposing them often is regarded with
suspicion and perhaps even with disdain and derision.
Creative ideas are both novel and valuable. Why, then, are they
rejected? Because the creative innovator stands up to vested interests
and defies the crowd.
The crowd does not maliciously or
willfully
reject creative notions; rather it does not realize, and often does not
want to realize, that the proposed idea represents a valid and superior
way of thinking. The crowd generally perceives opposition to the status
quo as annoying, offensive, and reason enough to ignore innovative
ideas.
Evidence abounds that creative ideas are rejected (Sternberg &
Lubart, 1995). Initial reviews of major works of literature and art are
often negative. Toni Morrison's Tar Baby received negative reviews when
it was first published, as did Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar.
The first
exhibition in Munich of the Norwegian painter, Edvard Munch, opened and
closed the same day because of the strong negative response from the
critics.
Some of the greatest scientific papers
are rejected not just
by one, but also by several journals before being published. John
Garcia, a distinguished biopsychologist, was summarily denounced when
he first proposed that a form of learning called classical conditioning
could be produced in a single trial of learning (Garcia & Koelling,
1966).
From the investment view, then, the creative person buys low by
presenting a unique idea and then attempting to convince other people
of its value.
After convincing others that the idea is
valuable, which
increases the perceived value of the investment, the creative person
sells high by leaving the idea to others and then moving on to another
idea.
Although people typically want others to
love their ideas,
immediate universal applause for an idea usually indicates that it is
not particularly creative.
You can foster creativity by buying low and selling high in the world
of ideas--defy the crowd.
Creativity is as much a decision about
and an
attitude toward life as it is a matter of ability. We routinely witness
creativity in young children, but it is hard to find in older children
and adults because their creative potential has been suppressed by a
society that encourages intellectual conformity.
We begin to suppress
children's natural creativity when we expect them to color within the
lines in their coloring books.
Balancing Analytic, Synthetic,
and Practical Abilities
Creative work requires applying and balancing three abilities that can
all be developed (Sternberg 1985; Sternberg & Lubart, 1995;
Sternberg & Williams, 1996).
Synthetic ability is what we typically think of as creativity. It is
the ability to generate novel and interesting ideas. Often the person
we call creative is a particularly good synthetic thinker who makes
connections between things that other people do not recognize
spontaneously.
Analytic ability is typically considered to be critical thinking
ability. A person with this skill analyzes and evaluates ideas.
Everyone, even the most creative person you know, has better and worse
ideas. Without well-developed analytic ability, the creative thinker is
as likely to pursue bad ideas as to pursue good ones.
The creative
individual uses analytic ability to work out the implications of a
creative idea and to test it.
Practical ability is the ability to translate theory into practice and
abstract ideas into practical accomplishments. An implication of the
investment theory of creativity is that good ideas do not sell
themselves.
The creative person uses practical
ability to convince
other people that an idea is worthy. For example, every organization
has a set of ideas that dictate how things, or at least some things,
should be cloned.
To propose a new procedure you must sell
it by
convincing others that it is better than the old one. Practical ability
is also used to recognize ideas that have a potential audience.
Creativity requires a balance among synthetic, analytic, and practical
abilities. The person who is only synthetic may come up with innovative
ideas, but cannot recognize or sell them.
The person who is only
analytic may be an excellent critic of other people's ideas, but is not
likely to generate creative ideas.
The person who is only practical may
be an excellent salesperson, but is as likely to sell ideas or products
of little or no value as to sell genuinely creative ideas.
Encourage and develop creativity by teaching students to find a balance
among synthetic, analytic, and practical thinking. A creative attitude
is at least as important as are creative thinking skills (Schank 1988).
The majority of teachers want to
encourage creativity in their
students, but they are not sure how to do so. Those teachers and you
can use the 15 strategies presented below to develop creativity in
yourselves, your students, and others around you.
Although we present
the strategies in terms of teachers and students, these strategies
apply equally to administrators working with teachers, parents working
with children, or people trying to develop their own creativity.
Twenty-Four Tips for Developing
Creativity
1. Model Creativity
The most powerful way to develop creativity in your students is to be a
role model. Children develop creativity not when you tell them to, but
when you show them.
The teachers most of you probably remember from your school days are
not those who crammed the most content into their lectures. The
teachers you remember are those whose thoughts and actions served as
your role model. Most likely they balanced teaching content with
teaching you how to think with and about that content.
Occasionally, we'll teach a workshop on developing creativity and
someone will ask exactly how to develop creativity. Bad start. You
cannot be a role model for creativity unless you think and teach
creatively yourself. So think carefully about your values, goals, and
ideas about creativity and show them in your actions.
2. Build Self-Efficacy
The main limitation on what students can do is what they think they can
do. All students have the capacity to be creators and to experience the
joy associated with making something new, but first we must give them a
strong base for creativity.
Sometimes teachers and parents
unintentionally limit what students can do by sending messages that
express or imply limits on students' potential accomplishments.
Instead, help students believe in their own ability to be creative.
3. Question Assumptions
We all have assumptions. Often we do not know we have these assumptions
because they are widely shared. Creative people question those
assumptions and eventually lead others to do the same.
When Copernicus
suggested that the Earth revolves around the sun, the suggestion was
viewed as preposterous because everyone could see that the sun revolves
around the Earth. Galileo's ideas, including the relative rates of'
falling objects, caused him to be banned as a heretic.
Sometimes it is not until many years later that the crowd realizes the
limitations or errors of their assumptions and the value of the
creative person's thoughts. The impetus of those who question
assumptions allows for cultural, technological, and other forms of
advancement.
Teachers can be role models for questioning assumptions. You can show
students that what they assume they know, they do not really know.
Of course, students shouldn't question every assumption. There are
times to question and then to try to reshape the environment and there
are times to adapt to it. Some creative people question so many things
so often that others stop taking them seriously.
Everyone has to learn
which assumptions are worth questioning and which battles are worth
fighting. Sometimes it's better to leave the inconsequential
assumptions alone so that you have an audience when you find something
worth the effort.
Make questioning a part of the daily classroom exchange. It is more
important for students to learn what questions to ask-and how to ask
them-than to learn the answers.
Help your students evaluate their
questions by discouraging the idea that you ask questions and they
simply answer them. Avoid perpetuating the belief that your role is to
teach students the facts. Instead, help the students understand that
what matters is their ability to use facts. Help your students learn
how to formulate good questions and how to answer questions.
We all tend to make a pedagogical mistake by emphasizing the answering
and not the asking of questions. The good student is perceived as the
one who rapidly furnishes the right answers. The expert in a field thus
becomes the extension of the expert student-the one who knows and can
recite a lot of information.
As John Dewey (1933) recognized, how we
think is often more important than what we think. We need to teach
students how to ask the right questions (good, thought-provoking, and
interesting ones) and lessen the emphasis on rote learning.
4. How to Define and Redefine Problems
Promote creative performance by encouraging your students to define and
redefine problems and projects. Encourage creative thinking by having
students choose their own topics for papers or presentations, choose
their own ways of solving problems, and sometimes choose again if they
discover that their selection was a mistake.
Allow your students to
pick their own topics, subject to your approval, on at least one paper
each term. Approval ensures that the topic is relevant to the lesson
and has a chance of leading to a successful project.
A successful project (1) is appropriate to the course's goals, (2)
illustrates a student's mastery of at least some of what has been
taught, and (3) can earn a good grade. If a topic is so far from the
goals that you will feel compelled to lower the grade, ask the student
to choose another topic.
You cannot always offer students choices, but giving choices is the
only way for them to learn how to choose. A real choice is not deciding
between drawing a cat or a dog, nor is it picking one state in the USA
to present at a project fair.
Give your students latitude in making
choices to help them to develop taste and good judgment, both of which
are essential elements of creativity.
Sometimes we all make mistakes in choosing a project or in the way we
select to accomplish it. Just remember that an important part of
creativity is the analytic part, learning to recognize a mistake. Give
your students that chance and the opportunity to redefine their choices.
5. Encourage Idea Generation
Once the problem is defined or redefined, it is time for students to
generate ideas and solutions. The environment for generating ideas must
be relatively free of criticism. The students may acknowledge that some
ideas are better or worse, but you must not be harsh or critical.
Aim
to identify and encourage any creative aspects of the ideas presented
and suggest new approaches to any ideas that are simply uncreative.
Praise your students for generating many
ideas, regardless of whether
some are silly or unrelated, while encouraging them to identify and
develop their best ideas into high-quality projects.
Your students can use project planning in and out of school and in the
future. Questions about marriage, family, and careers are best answered
after thoroughly considering many ideas. Teaching students the value of
generating numerous ideas enhances their creative-thinking ability and
benefits them now and in the future.
6. Cross-Fertilize Ideas
Stimulate creativity by helping students to think across subjects and
disciplines. The traditional school environment often has separate
classrooms and classmates for different subjects and seems to influence
students into thinking that learning occurs in discrete boxes-the math
box, the social studies box, and the science box.
But creative ideas
and insights often result from integrating material across subject
areas, not from memorizing and reciting material.
Teaching students to cross-fertilize draws on their skills, interests,
and abilities, regardless of the subject. For example, if your students
are having trouble understanding math, you might ask them to draft test
questions related to their special interests-ask the baseball fan to
devise geometry problems based on the game.
The context may spur
creative ideas because the student finds the topic (baseball) enjoyable
and it may counteract some of the anxiety caused by geometry.
Cross-fertilization motivates students who aren't interested in
subjects taught in the abstract.
One way to enact cross-fertilization in the classroom is to ask
students to identify their best and worst academic areas. Then ask them
to come up with project ideas in their weak area based on ideas
borrowed from one of the strongest areas.
Explain to them, for example,
that they can apply their interest in science to social studies by
analyzing the scientific aspects of trends in national politics.
7. Allow Time for Creative Thinking
Ours is a society in a hurry. We eat fast food, we rush from one place
to another, and we value quickness. Indeed, one way to say someone is
smart is to say that the person is quick (Sternberg, 1985), a clear
indication of our emphasis on time. Just take a look at the format of
our standardized tests. Lots of multiple-choice problems are squeezed
into a brief time slot.
Most creative insights, however, do not happen in a rush (Gruber,
1986). We need time to understand a problem and to toss it around. If
we are asked to think creatively, we need time to do it well. If you
stuff questions into your tests or give your students more homework
than they can complete, then you are not allowing them time to think
creatively.
8. Instruct and Assess Creatively
If you give only multiple-choice tests, students quickly learn the type
of thinking that you value, no matter what you say. If you want to
encourage creativity, you need to include at least some opportunities
for creative thought in assignments and tests. Ask questions that
require factual recall, analytic thinking, and creative thinking. For
example, students might be asked to learn about a law, analyze the law,
and then think about how the law might be improved.
9. Reward Creative Ideas and Products
It is not enough to talk about the value of creativity. Students are
used to authority figures who say one thing and do another. They are
exquisitely sensitive to what teachers value when it comes to the
bottom line, namely, the grade or evaluation. If you do not put your
money where your mouth is, they will go with the money--that is, the
grade.
Reward creative efforts. For example, assign a project and remind
students that you are looking for them to demonstrate their knowledge,
analytical and writing skills, and creativity. Let them know that
creativity does not depend on your agreement with what they write, only
that they express ideas that represent a synthesis between existing
ideas and their own thoughts.
You need to care only that the ideas are
creative from the students' perspectives, not necessarily creative with
regard to the state of the art. Students may generate an idea that
someone else has already had.
Some teachers complain that they cannot grade creative responses with
as much objectivity as they can apply to multiple-choice or
short-answer responses. They are correct in that there is some
sacrifice of objectivity. However, research shows that evaluators are
remarkably consistent in their assessments of' creativity (Amabile,
1983; Sternberg & Lubart, 1995).
If the goal of assessment is to
instruct students, then it is better to ask for creative work and
evaluate it with somewhat less objectivity than to evaluate students
exclusively on uncreative work. Let your students know that there is no
completely objective way to evaluate creativity.
10. Encourage Sensible Risks
Creative people take risks and defy the crowd by buying low and selling
high. Defying the crowd means risking the crowd's wrath. But there are
sensible-and less sensible-reasons to defy the crowd. Creative people
take sensible risks and produce ideas that others ultimately admire and
respect as trend setting. In taking these risks, creative people
sometimes make mistakes, fail, and fall flat on their faces.
We emphasize sensible risk-taking because we are not talking about
risking life and limb. To help students learn to take sensible risks,
encourage them to take some intellectual risks with courses,
activities, and teachers-to develop a sense of how to assess risks.
Nearly every major discovery or invention entailed some risk. When a
movie theater was the only place to see a movie, someone created the
idea of the home video industry: Skeptics wondered if anyone would want
to see videos on a small screen.
Another initially risky idea was the
home computer: Would anyone have enough use for a home computer to
justify the cost? These ideas were once risks that are now ingrained in
our society.
Given the learning opportunities that derive from taking risks and the
achievement that learning makes possible, why are so few children
willing to take risks in school? The reason is that perfect test scores
and papers receive praise; failure may mean extra work.
Failure to
attain a certain academic standard is perceived as a lack of ability
and motivation rather than as reflecting a desire to grow. Teachers
advocate playing it safe when they give assignments without choices and
allow only particular answers to questions.
11. Tolerate Ambiguity
People like things to be in black and white. We like to think that a
country is good or bad (ally or enemy) or that a given idea in
education works or doesn't work. The problem is that there are a lot of
grays in creative work. Artists working on new paintings and writers
working on new books often report feeling scattered and unsure in their
thoughts. They need to figure out whether they are even on the right
track.
A creative idea tends to come in bits and pieces and develops over
time. But the period in which the idea is developing tends to be
uncomfortable. Without time or the ability to tolerate ambiguity, you
may jump to a less than optimal solution.
Tolerating ambiguity is uncomfortable. When a student has almost the
right topic for a paper or almost the right science project, it's
tempting to accept the near miss. To help students become creative,
encourage them to accept and extend the period in which their ideas do
not quite converge. Ultimately, they may come up with better ideas.
12. Allow Mistakes
Buying low and selling high carries a risk. Many ideas are unpopular
simply because they are not good. People often think a certain way
because that way works better than other ways. But once in a while a
great thinker comes along -- a Freud, a Piaget, a Chomsky, or an
Einstein -- and shows us a new way to think. These thinkers made
contributions because they allowed themselves and their collaborators
to take risks and make mistakes.
Many of Freud's and Piaget's ideas are wrong. Freud confused Victorian
issues regarding sexuality with universal conflicts and Piaget
misjudged the ages at which children could perform certain cognitive
feats. Their ideas were great not because they lasted forever, but
because they became the basis for other ideas. Freud's and Piaget's
mistakes allowed others to profit from the ideas and go beyond the
earlier ideas.
Schools are often unforgiving of mistakes. Errors on schoolwork are
often marked with a large and pronounced X. When children respond to
questions with incorrect answers, some teachers pounce on the students
for not having read or understood the material and other students
snicker.
When children go outside the lines in
the coloring book, or
use a different color, they are corrected. In hundreds of ways and in
thousands of instances over the course of a school career, children
learn that it is not all right to make mistakes. The result is that
they become afraid to risk the independent and the sometimes-flawed
thinking that leads to creativity.
When your students make mistakes, ask them to analyze and discuss these
mistakes. Often, mistakes or weak ideas contain the germ of correct
answers or good ideas. In Japan, teachers spend entire class periods
asking children to analyze the mistakes in their mathematical thinking.
For the teacher who wants to make a difference, exploring mistakes can
be a learning and growing opportunity.
13. Identify and Surmount Obstacles
Creative thinkers almost inevitably encounter resistance. The question
is whether the creative thinker has the fortitude to persevere. We
understand why so many young and promising creative thinkers disappear.
Sooner or later, they decide that being creative is not worth the
resistance and punishment. The truly creative thinkers pay the
short-term price because they recognize that they can make a difference.
Describe obstacles that you, friends, and famous people have faced
while trying to be creative; otherwise your students may think that
obstacles confront only them. Include stories about people who weren't
supportive, bad grades for unwelcome ideas, and cool receptions to your
ideas.
To help your students deal with
obstacles, remind them of the
many creative people whose ideas were initially shunned and help them
develop an inner sense of awe of the creative act. You can suggest that
they reduce their concern over what others think, but it is tough for
students to lessen their dependence on their peers.
When a student attempts to surmount an obstacle, praise the effort,
whether or not the student is entirely successful. Point out aspects of
the student's attack that were successful and why, and then suggest
other ways to confront similar obstacles.
You can also tactfully
critique counterproductive approaches by describing a better approach,
as long as you praise the attempt. Ask the class to brainstorm about
ways to confront a given obstacle to get them thinking about the many
strategies we can use to confront problems. Consider the student who
has always been too nervous to act in school plays or to sing a solo.
Spend a half-hour asking students to
generate strategies for dealing
with performance anxiety and to chronicle personal examples that show
how nervousness can be disabling. List ideas on the board and ask the
class to critique them.
Encourage students to try a couple of
the
strategies and praise them for any attempts at overcoming performance
anxiety. The emphasis on tackling obstacles should help students focus
on solving problems instead of being limited by them.
14. Teach Self-Responsibility
Part of teaching students to be creative is teaching them to take
responsibility for both success and failure. Teaching students how to
take responsibility means teaching students to (1) understand their
creative process, (2) criticize themselves, and (3) take pride in their
best creative work. Unfortunately, many teachers and parents look
for-or allow students to look for-an outside enemy responsible for
failures.
It sounds trite to say that you should teach students to take
responsibility for themselves, but sometimes there is a gap between
what we know and how we translate thought into action. In practice,
people differ widely in the extent to which they take responsibility
for the causes and consequences of their actions. Creative people need
to take responsibility for themselves and for their ideas.
15. Promote Self-Regulation
You cannot help each student during each creative process. Your
students must take control of the process. After forming initial
creative products and awakening the joy of creating in your students,
teach them strategies for self-regulation, Self-directed creating is
how most of us work throughout our lives-and especially in our lives
outside of school.
Here are some things students can do to
promote
their self-regulation: 1. List multiple ideas for an assignment, 2.
Assess ideas for creativity and pursue one, 3. Defend your choice, 4.
Develop plans for completing the assignment, including how and where to
find information, and how and when you will finish the project, 5. Keep
a daily log of progress, roadblocks, and how you surmounted problems,
6. Participate in daily class discussions regarding progress on the
report and physical distractions (e.g., being hungry or tired), 7.
Discuss teacher feedback on finished projects, and 8. Assess a
classmate's project and review and discuss peer evaluations.
16. Delay Gratification
Part of being creative means being able to work on a project or task
for a long time without immediate or interim rewards. Students must
learn rewards are not always immediate and that there are benefits to
delaying gratification.
Many people believe that they should reward children immediately for
good performance, and that children should expect rewards. This style
of teaching and parenting emphasizes the here and now and often comes
at the expense of what is best in the long term.
An important lesson in life-and one that is intimately related to
developing the discipline to do creative work-is to learn to wait for
rewards. The greatest rewards are often those that are delayed. Give
your students examples of delayed gratification in your life and in the
lives of creative individuals and help them apply these examples to
their lives.
Hard work often does not bring immediate rewards. Children do not
immediately become expert baseball players, dancers, musicians, or
sculptors. And the reward of becoming an expert seems far away.
Children often succumb to the temptations of the moment-watching
television or playing video games.
The people who make the most of
their abilities are those who wait for a reward and recognize that few
serious challenges are met in a moment. Ninth-grade students may not
see the benefits of hard work, but the advantages of a solid academic
performance will he obvious when those students apply to college.
The short-term focus of most school assignments does little to teach
children the value of delaying gratification. Projects are clearly
superior in meeting this goal, but it is difficult to assign home
projects if you are not confident of parental involvement and support.
By working on a task for many weeks or months, a student learns the
value of making incremental efforts for long-term gains.
17. Encourage Creative Collaboration
Creative performance often is viewed as a solitary occupation-we
picture the writer sitting alone with her writing pad, the artist
painting feverishly at 4 a.m., or the musician playing for his cats
into the wee hours. In reality, people often work in groups.
Collaboration can spur creativity.
Encourage your students to
collaborate with creative people because we all learn by example.
Students benefit from seeing the techniques, strategies, and approaches
that others use in the creative process. Also, students absorb the
enthusiasm and joy many creative people exude as they go about the
business of making something new.
Finding practical ways to encourage creative performance in groups of
students is essential because you cannot work with students one-on-one
all of the time. Because life often involves working with others, it is
worthwhile to give students the chance to work collaboratively and to
make the process of collaboration more creative.
18. Imagine Other Viewpoints
An essential aspect of working with other people and getting the most
out of collaborative creative activity is to imagine ourselves in other
people's shoes. We broaden our perspective by learning to see the world
from a different point of view, and that experience enhances our
creative thinking and contributions.
Encourage your students to see the
importance of understanding, respecting, and responding to other
people's points of view. Many bright and potentially creative children
never achieve success because they do not develop practical
intelligence (Sternberg 1985, 1997; Sternberg et al., in press). They
may do well in school and on tests, but they never learn how to get
along with others or to see things and themselves as others see them.
19. Recognize Person-Environmental Fit
What is judged as creative is an interaction between a person and the
environment (Csikszentmihalyi, 1988; Gardner, 1993; Sternberg, in
press; Sternberg & Lubart, 1995). The very same product that is
rewarded as creative in one time or place may be scorned in another.
In The Dead Poets' Society, a teacher whom the audience might well
judge to be creative is viewed as incompetent by the school's
administration. Similar experiences occur many times a day in many
settings.
There is no absolute standard for what
constitutes creative
work. The same product or idea may be valued or devalued in different
environments. The lesson is that we need to find a setting in which our
creative talents and unique contributions are rewarded or we need to
modify our environment.
By building a constant appreciation of the importance of
person-environment fit, you prepare your students for choosing
environments that are conducive to their creative success. Encourage
your students to examine environments to help them learn to select and
match environments with their skills.
20. Find Excitement
To unleash your students' best creative performances, you must help
them find what excites them. Remember that it may not be what really
excites you. People who truly excel in a pursuit, whether vocational or
avocational, almost always genuinely love what they do. Certainly the
most creative people are intrinsically motivated in their work
(Amabile, 1996). Less creative people often pick a career for the money
or prestige and are bored or loathe their career. These people do not
do work that makes a difference in their field.
Helping students find what they really love to do is often hard and
frustrating work. Yet, sharing the frustration with them now is better
than leaving them later to face it alone. To help students uncover
their true interests, ask them to demonstrate a special talent or
ability for the class. Explain that it does not matter what they do
(within reason), only that they love the activity.
21. Seek Stimulating Environments
Help your students develop the ability to choose environments that
stimulate their creativity. Although you try to present a stimulating
classroom environment every day, your students spend many hours outside
of school, eventually graduate, and either stagnate or grow in their
creative development. Adults who continue to grow creatively visit and
immerse themselves in environments that foster creativity.
To encourage students to develop skills in selecting environments that
enhance creativity, choose some environments for the class to explore
and help your students connect the environments with the experiences,
creative growth, and accomplishment. Show students that creativity is
easier with environmental stimulation.
Plan a field trip to a nearby museum, historical building, town hall,
or other location with interesting displays and ask your students to
generate and examine creative ideas for reports. Read excerpts from a
book about a creative pioneer in the discipline being studied or the
fieldtrip destination you have targeted-a great paleontologist if the
focus is on dinosaurs, or a great astronaut if the focus is on space
travel. Get students involved in role-playing.
You cannot reach into every nook of students' lives, nor can you
directly control their creative development in the years to come. But
give them a lifelong gift by teaching them how to choose creative
environments that help ideas flow. Knowing how to choose a creative
environment is one of the best long-term strategies for developing
creativity.
22. Play to Strengths
Show students how to play to their strengths. Describe your strengths
to your students and ask them to declare their strengths. As a group,
brainstorm about how best to capitalize on these strengths. Let your
students know that they facilitate creative performance by merging
talent and preparation with opportunity. By helping students identify
the exact nature of their talents, you create opportunities for them to
express and use their talents.
Any teacher can help students play to their strengths. All you need is
flexibility in assignments and a willingness to help reluctant students
determine the nature of their interests and strengths.
23. Grow Creatively
Once we have a major creative idea, it is easy to spend the rest of our
career following up on it. It is frightening to contemplate that the
next idea may not be as good as the last one, or that success may
disappear with the next idea. The result is that we can become
complacent and stop being creative.
Sometimes, as experts, we become complacent and stop growing. Teachers
and administrators are susceptible to becoming victims of our own
expertise-to becoming entrenched in ways of thinking that worked in the
past, but not necessarily in the future (Frensch & Sternberg,
1989). Being creative means stepping outside the boxes that we-and
others-have created for ourselves.
24. Proselytize for Creativity
Once you have mastered a few of these techniques to develop creativity
and made them part of your daily teaching routine, spread the word. The
virtues of teaching your students in order to develop their creativity
and your own multiply from reinforcement. Make the difference by
telling your colleagues, associates, administrators, principal, school
board members, and everyone else how important it is to develop
creativity in students.
Use examples of creative student work, particularly from students who
are not gifted in traditional academic abilities, to demonstrate the
difference it makes to teach for creativity.
Describe how every student
can be reached with patience and a few techniques for developing
creativity. Tell your colleagues that student projects are more
interesting once students have experienced explicit creativity
training. Richer, funnier, wilder, and generally far more interesting
assignments, book reports, and projects make our lives less boring.
It
is, in fact, a good example of enlightened self-interest for teachers
to give students creativity training, because creative students are
more motivated and more involved with their schoolwork, and their work
becomes more interesting.
If you spread the word about the importance of teaching for creativity
in schools, homes, and communities, this approach to teaching will
become more common and benefit teachers and students everywhere.
Small
changes in the way questions are asked, assignments are worded, and
tests are crafted can make big differences in the lives of students. We
hope that we have provided ideas you can use immediately to start
teaching for creativity.
References
Amabile, T. M. (1983). The social psychology of creativity. New York:
Springer-Verlag.
Amabile, T .M. (1996). Creativity
in context. Boulder, CO: Westview.
Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1988). Society, culture, and person: A systems
view of creativity. In R. J. Sternberg (Ed.), The Nature of Creativity.
New York: Cambridge University Press.
Dewey, J. (1933). How we think: A restatement of the relation of
reflective thinking to the educative process. Boston: Heath.
Frensch, P.A., & Sternberg, R. J. (1989). Expertise and intelligent
thinking: When is it worse to know better? In R. J. Sternberg (Ed.),
Advances in the psychology of human intelligence. Vol. 5. Hillsdale,
NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Garcia, J., & Koelling, R. A. (1966). The relation of cue to
consequence in avoidance learning. Psychonomic Science, 4, 123-124.
Gardner, H. (1993). Creating minds. New York: Basic Books.
Gruber, H. E. (1986). The self-construction of the extraordinary. In R.
J. Sternberg & J. E. Davidson (Eds.), Conceptions of giftedness.
New York: Cambridge University Press.
Schank, R. C. (1988). The Creative Attitude: Learning to Ask and Answer
the Right Questions. New York: Macmillan.
Sternberg, R. J. (1985). Beyond IQ: A Triarchic theory of human
intelligence. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Sternberg, R. J. (1997). Successful
intelligence. New York: Plume.
Sternberg, R. J. (in press). A propulsion model of types of creative
contributions. Review of General Psychology.
Sternberg, R. J., & Lubart, T. I. (1995). Defying the crowd:
Cultivating creativity in a culture of conformity. New York: Free Press.
Sternberg, R. J., & Williams, W. M. (1996). How to develop student
creativity. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
Sternberg, R. J. Wisdom,
Intelligence, and Creativity Synthesized
Sternberg, R. J. The
Psychology of Abilities, Competencies, and
Expertise
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Robert J. Sternberg is the IBM professor of psychology and education at
Yale University, the director of the Yale Center for the Psychology of
Abilities, Competencies, and Expertise (PACE Center). He is a member of
the CDL Professional Advisory Board.
Wendy M. Williams is an associate professor in the Department of Human
Development at Cornell University, where she studies the development,
assessment, training, and societal implications of intelligence and
related abilities.
Article from The Center for Development and Learning page
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related pages :
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articles: giftedness /
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